Members of the Egyptian constitutional panel vote on a new constitution at the Shura council in Cairo.
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- The 50-member committee working on the new constitution approves 247 articles
- It now has to be approved by interim president Adly Mansour
- The new constitution will replace the one suspended in 2011
The next steps in the  process for the the draft to become law are for Egypt's interim  President Adly Mansour to ratify the charter on Tuesday and then  announce a date for it to be put to a popular referendum.
The constitution will replace the one suspended in 2011, al-Ahram reported.
Egypt's new constitution  would ban religious parties and put more power in the hands of the  military, according to a draft posted on state media earlier Sunday.
"The constitution brings  back soft power to Egypt. It's the real power that gave Egypt influence  and a role and glory," Amr Moussa, head of the assembly, said at a news  conference on Saturday. "It deals with the dangerous circumstance  through which Egypt passes."
The new constitutional  articles come months after a military coup unseated elected President  Mohamed Morsy in July and touched off a series of protests that ended in  violence.
The painstaking process of approving the draft of the new constitution started Saturday.
Also on Saturday, security forces dispersed protesters who were demonstrating against Egypt's anti-protest law.
U.S. Defense Secretary  Chuck Hagel on Saturday called his Egyptian counterpart, Gen. Abdel  Fattah al-Sisi, to express concerns over the law restricting  demonstrations and protests, among others.
Hagel told him that  Egypt's response to free expression will demonstrate the interim  government's commitment to a nonviolent democratic transition, according  to a statement from the Pentagon.
 
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