EGYPT’S FARMERS RALLY FOR EL SISI AS POLLS CLOSE
▶ Rural voters cite president’s positive role in grain, dairy, cotton and social security, writes Jacob Wirtschafter
From the wheat fields of the Nile Delta to the soybean farms in Upper Egypt, President Abdel Fattah El Sisi’s twin promise of economic development and enhanced security rallied the conservative countryside.
Yesterday was the third and final day of a public mobilisation exercise that has been more about voter turnout than a choice between candidates.
“I voted for El Sisi because there is no alternative,” said Mohammed Yousef Falah, 37, owner of a four-acre farm on the outskirts of Bassioun, a village in Gharbia, a Nile Delta governorate.
“Not going to the polls will bring the Muslim Brotherhood back and they eradicated agriculture and worsened the conditions of the peasants,” he said.
Despite the cultural dominance of metropolitan Cairo, rural governorates comprise a majority, with 57.8 per cent of Egypt’s estimated 94.8 million citizens living outside cities.
Mr El Sisi and his supporters are counting on the countryside to validate the incumbent president’s mandate for a second four-year term.
“Rural areas can boast of higher participation numbers than cities,” said Samir Al Bahy, head of the Council of State Club, a professional association for Egyptian judges.
The final results of the national election will be announced on Monday.
Mr El Sisi worked hard to secure rural support, said Hussain Abdulrahman, general secretary of Egypt’s Farmer’s Union.
“Half a million acres of cotton seeds have been provided to restore [cotton] to its ‘throne’ as the king of Egypt’s agriculture, and the president dedicated many new silos to store wheat and grain in Upper Egypt,” said Mr Abdulrahman.
Mr El Sisi, he said, also spearheaded projects that contributed to an increase in the production of meat, milk and dairy products.
But it is a raft of new social protection and income security measures for rural residents that drew Egypt’s previously neglected countryside to the former general.
“Unlike [former president Hosni] Mubarak, President Sisi is committed to our wellbeing,” said Awatef Gerges, a 71-year-old smallholder in the agricultural village of Bani Mazar.
“Mubarak had 30 years and did nothing, so I would support another two terms for El Sisi, who is actually getting things done.”
The owner of a 12-acre plot, Yusuf Adel exemplifies the countryside’s private sector campaign for El Sisi.
“Helping the people of the village vote is the least I can do for the country,” said Mr Adel, 54, who volunteered to chauffeur less prosperous peasants to the polling station in his 17-yearold Toyota Avalon.
Despite Mr El Sisi’s seemingly successful attempts to woo the country’s farmers, last year’s huge currency devaluation and the consequent rise in the cost of fertiliser and fuel has dented the president’s popularity among some farmers.
“Chemical, pesticide and agricultural fertilisers have soared in price since last year,” said Radi Al Oun, a resident of Al Kosheh, a farming village in Sohag governorate. As in previous elections, officials have raised the spectre of a financial penalty for citizens who fail to participate in the balloting.
“The authority maintains its legal right to impose a fine of EGP 500 (Dh104) on those who abstain from voting in the ongoing presidential elections,” said Mahmoud Al Sherif, a spokesman for the National Electoral Commission.
That’s too hefty a price for Amal Abdul Aziz, a 53-year-old housewife in Singot.
“Nobody here knows anything about the man running against El Sisi,” said Mrs Abdul Aziz in reference to Moussa Mustafa Moussa, who registered at the last minute and had announced his support for the president.
“And since [Mr El Sisi] is going to win anyway, the only reason I’m voting is to avoid the penalty.”
Despite attempts to woo farmers, last year’s currency devaluation led to rising costs in fertiliser and fuel for some