I think it's important to understand that insofar as the reference to sharia, this is nothing new. The previous Egyptian constitution had it as well. So this doesn't represent a change in terms of drafting the new constitution.
That is an important preface to what I'm about to say, which is that although in the west, as we were just discussing, there is a tendency to focus on very particular aspects of the Islamic sharia, aspects that we in the west find very difficult to accept—notably, some of the provisions relating to women, some of the provisions relating to kinds of punishments, and so on, for criminal offences, etc.—in fact sharia is a very large body of law that deals with a whole vast array of things in the areas of criminal law, family law, property law, and all these kinds of things.
You know, in a way, it leaves the legislators free to pick and choose which of the various aspects of sharia they will implement, as Egypt has already done, and indeed as have most of the other countries in the region that are Muslim—which, with one exception, they all are. They have all done the same thing. They will all tell you that, oh yes, sharia is important, but as I say, they tend to pick and choose those aspects of it that they're going to implement or not.