An Egyptian court ordered an end to a state of emergency Tuesday, two days ahead of schedule and three months after it was imposed during a crackdown on Islamist protesters. The cabinet said in a statement it would respect the ruling but would wait for official notification from the court before implementing it. The state of emergency, accompanied by a night time curfew, had been scheduled to expire on Thursday.
"The government is committed to implement judicial rulings...the government is waiting for the text of the ruling," it said in a statement. Interim president Adly Mansour declared the state of emergency on August 14, as violence gripped Egypt after police dispersed two large protest camps in Cairo set up by supporters of ousted Islamist president Mohamed Morsi. Hundreds of people, mainly Morsi supporters, were killed in the crackdown, while Islamists elsewhere in the country retaliated by attacking security forces and Coptic Christian churches and homes.
The administrative court said in its ruling, which had dismissed an appeal against the state of emergency, that it ended on Tuesday according to its calculation, the official MENA news agency reported. Both the interior ministry and the military said they would implement the curfew until they received official notification. "The armed forces have not been officially notified of any court rulings, and are committed to implementing the curfew within designated hours," it said in a statement.