Jake, there are several bits I find rather worrying. Here are a few.
//…Human Rights Watch noted that it provides for basic protections against arbitrary detention and torture and for some economic rights but fails to end military trials of civilians or to protect freedom of expression and religion.
…says that the legal code stems from “the principles of Islamic law,” wording that is broad enough to allow for individual rights and freedoms. But in an attempted compromise between the ultraconservatives and their liberal opponents, the proposed constitution added a new article defining those principles in accordance with established schools of Sunni Muslim thought.
…The constitution calls for freedom from discrimination, but does not specify whether women or religious minorities are protected. A provision on women’s equality was left out to avoid a dispute after ultraconservatives insisted that women’s equality should be qualified by compliance with religious laws.
…other checks on presidential power remain ill-defined.
…Believers in any of the three Abrahamic religions — Islam, Christianity and Judaism — are guaranteed the freedom of worship, but only those three.
…Human Rights Watch said. Article 10 says: “The state shall provide free motherhood and childhood services and shall balance between a woman’s obligations toward the family and public work. //
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2012_Draft_Constitution_of_Egypt