Counsellor Tahani el-Gebaly, the deputy chief of the Supreme Constitutional Court, has warned that Egypt is in a great risk as the current political crisis divided the country into two parts. "Our country is in danger and there is an increasing violence that no one can deny," Gebaly said in an interview with French newspaper Le Figaro. Protesters for the first time march toward presidential palace in great numbers, repeating the same slogans they chanted against the Mubarak regime and this means that they feel betrayed, she said. She warned of the Muslim Brotherhood's attempts to "kidnap the revolution" and seize all State institutions, including the Supreme onstitutional Court. Gebaly said the new constitution, that was drafted by Islamists-dominated Constituent Assembly, undermines powers of the Supreme Constitutional Court and declines the number of judge panel to get rid of eight judges, including her. About the suspension of the court sessions, she said this is an arbitrary one because pro-Morsi supporters are surrounding the headquarters, saying that "whenever she tries to get in the building, she is prevented by protesters who call her bad names.