Montreal Gazette

From pharaohs and dictators to a king’s ‘secret son’

EGYPT’S FIRST ELECTION IN 7,000 YEARS draws a thousand applicants, including man claiming to be Farouk’s offspring

- DINA ZAYED and YASMINE SALEH

CAIRO - Adel Abdeen says he is the secret son of Farouk, the last king of Egypt, who was overthrown in a 1952 coup and succeeded by military leaders who, he says, don’t have a clue.

Secure in the belief that he can do a better job, Adel aims to throw the illustriou­s name into the running in Egypt’s first democratic presidenti­al election in 7,000 years of Pharaohs, monarchs and army strongmen.

He joins nearly 1,000 other Egyptians of all stripes and background­s – electricia­ns, office workers, journalist­s and even an undertaker –who have queued for election papers in a bid to replace Hosni Mubarak, the former air force commander whose three decades in power ended last year in a popular uprising.

“The revolution started because the army can’t run the country. This was never their job. They have nothing to do with politics,” Adel, who is using the Farouk name in his campaign, told Reuters, holding the green flag of the monarchy. “Those who turned on the king were the army.”

Adel says his actress mother, who died when he was a child, had an affair with King Farouk. The clean-cut 66-year-old, whose Facebook page has 130 members and who calls himself the “King of Egypt and Sudan,” promises to revive the monarchy if he wins.

Although Adel may be mocked by many and laughed off by the media, his concerns are real. Like many Egyptians, he speaks of frustratio­ns at how the country has been led and of disappoint­ment that a military council is managing the transition to democracy.

Few will secure the 30,000 registered supporters needed to contest the election, which will be held in May and June. But their determinat­ion to get involved speaks volumes about the change in Egyptians.

While they are unlikely to stand a chance against the dozen heavyweigh­t politician­s who have declared their intention to run, like former Arab League chief Amr Moussa and former Muslim Brotherhoo­d leader Abdel Moneim Abol Fotouh, their humble background­s haven’t stopped them having a vision for their country.

In front of election committee headquarte­rs, wouldbe candidates try to win a bit of media attention.

One tells Reuters he wants to restore the rule of the Pharaohs. Another says he is just following his destiny. A third, who shows up in slippers and a torn garment stained with mud and says he is a rag-andbone collector, says the poor will relate to him better than they ever could to suit-and-tie politician­s.

Election committee secretary general Judge Hatem Begato said they have been overwhelme­d by the number of applicatio­ns, which are free, and have had to print out more forms.

“Some of those who withdraw the applicatio­ns want to test if there is democracy, while others believe that if given the opportunit­y, they can do something,” he told Reuters. He admitted that some of the hopefuls seemed to have delusions of grandeur, however.

Ahmed Mansour, an employee at an agricultur­al bank, said he took a bus from Qena, 450 kilometres south of Cairo, to pick up his documents.

“This country has been done a great injustice – an era of darkness that stretched 30 years. Now, after the revolution, everyone has a right to run. That is what freedom means,” he said.

But not everyone seems motivated by the same lofty ideals. One convicted thief, now reformed, said he was campaignin­g on the platform that he had the experience and ability to solve the country’s security problems. When contacted by Reuters for an interview, he asked for cash in return.

Many of those who picked up applicatio­ns say they are not inspired by the high-profile presidenti­al candidates who declared their intentions to run months ago.

“All the candidates are clinically unfit to run because of their age,” said Hoda Farrag, a 42-year-old journalist from the coastal city of Alexandria. Moussa, for example, is 75. “I want to say that Egypt has plenty of alternativ­e candidates.”

Christian Waguih Botros, 56, an electricia­n and father of four, wants a better alternativ­e to fix the main problem keeping him up at night: a faltering economy.

“I waited for a candidate to show up with a strong economic program. I don’t see anyone offering any deeprooted change,” he said in his apartment, dotted with porcelain dolls and Jesus portraits, in a working-class neighbourh­ood of Cairo.

Botros said the media were not giving candidates like him a real chance. He is convinced that if Egyptians listened to his platform, they would rally behind him.

“Millions of people wake up everyday with nothing to eat and with no jobs,” he said. “These hungry people need to be fed. We need dramatic solutions immediatel­y.”

 ?? MOHAMED ABD EL GHANY REUTERS ?? Hazem Salah Abu Ismail is one of the mainstream candidates in Egypt’s first presidenti­al election in 7,000 years, but some of his opponents have reached back that far to claim connection­s to the pharaohs as almost 1,000 Egyptians have registered to be...
MOHAMED ABD EL GHANY REUTERS Hazem Salah Abu Ismail is one of the mainstream candidates in Egypt’s first presidenti­al election in 7,000 years, but some of his opponents have reached back that far to claim connection­s to the pharaohs as almost 1,000 Egyptians have registered to be...

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