An anti-government protester stands next to a roadsign reading "Egypt's Parliament Street" during a rally against a new law restricting demonstrations in CairoBy way of Omar Fahmy CAIRO (Reuters) – Egyptians will vote on a new structure on January 14 and 15, pushing on with the army-backed govt's plan for transition back to democracy after its overthrow of elected Islamist President Mohamed Mursi. The brand new file is designed to replace one passed by using Mursi, deposed by means of the army in July after mass protests towards his rule. It must pave the way in which for brand spanking new parliamentary and presidential elections to happen subsequent 12 months. It isn’t clear how Mursi's Muslim Brotherhood, outlawed through a courtroom in September and under drive from a large-ranging security crackdown on leaders and activists, will react.