Minutes after the results were announced, Sisi commented in a tweet, thanking the Egyptian people for voting
"Yes": "Wonderful scene done by Egyptians who took part in the referendum, will be written down in our nation's historical record."
The New Arab reported: "Pro-government media, business people and lawmakers had pushed for a
"Yes" vote and a high turnout, with many offering free rides and food handouts to voters, while authorities threatened to fine anyone boycotting the three-day referendum."
Amnesty International and the
International Commission of Jurists had previously urged the Egyptian government to withdraw the amendments, for they "would undermine judicial independence and expand military trials for civilians. If adopted, the amendments would weaken the rule of law, further erode fair trial guarantees and enshrine impunity for members of the
Egyptian Armed Forces." While National Election Authority chairman Lashin Ibrahim talked about "forces of darkness and evil" which boycotted the referendum in order "to destroy the democratic atmosphere in which it took place," prominent Egyptian writer
Alaa Al-Aswany, in an opinion piece on
Deutsche Welle Arabic, provided reasons for why the referendum was "void, unconstitutional and undemocratic, describing el-Sisi as a "military dictator (
Arabic: ) exercising unprecedented repression upon people." The BBC stated that the Egyptian authorities did not give the corporation accreditation to report on the vote. ==References==