The Jerusalem Post

Elbaradei demands Egyptian election boycott

Opposition politician draws comparison­s with rigged Mubarak polls • Morsi to change dates so Christians won’t have to vote during Easter

- • By ALEXANDER DZIADOSZ

CAIRO (Reuters) – An opposition leader called on Saturday for Egyptians to boycott elections due to start in April, saying the process under Islamist President Mohamed Morsi would be “an act of deception.”

Islamists, who have won every election since the 2011 overthrow of autocrat Hosni Mubarak, dismissed any suggestion that the parliament­ary polls would lack credibilit­y and predicted a strong turnout.

While divisions between the Islamists and opposition remain deep, Morsi appeared ready to soothe anger among the Christian minority over the elections schedule. The speaker of Egypt’s upper house said Morsi would change the dates to avoid Coptic Christians having to vote during their Easter celebratio­ns.

Morsi called the lower house election on Thursday, aiming to conclude Egypt’s turbulent transition to democracy.

Liberal politician Mohamed ElBaradei drew comparison­s with the last parliament­ary polls to be held under Mubarak in 2010, a vote that was widely seen as rigged.

ElBaradei, a former UN nuclear agency chief, noted he had called for a boycott in 2010 “to expose sham democracy.”

“Today I repeat my call, [I] will not be part of an act of deception,” he said on his Twitter account.

The Muslim Brotherhoo­d, which backs Morsi, rejected any call to boycott the voting that has been scheduled in four stages from April 27 to June. Essam Erian, a senior member of the Brotherhoo­d’s Freedom and Justice Party, said the polls would be carried out under “complete judicial supervisio­n” as well as being followed by Egyptian, regional and internatio­nal media.

Voting would be monitored by Egyptian and foreign civil society and human rights organizati­ons, he said on his Facebook page, adding that he expected wide participat­ion.

Egyptian elections have been supervised by judges since the revolution. The relatively small numbers of judges have required the drawn-out process, allowing them to oversee voting in different regions on different days.

The opposition says Morsi should not have called the elections until a number of disputes had been settled, chiefly a new constituti­on produced by an Islamist-dominated assembly that contribute­d to serious street violence last year.

Morsi’s announceme­nt of the dates drew fire from Coptic Christians, who make up about 10 percent of the population, as the schedule would interfere with their Easter festival.

Ahmed Fahmy, the speaker of the Shura Council, said Morsi would respond to these worries. “The president answered the requests of the Coptic members and will issue a statement changing the dates of the elections,” he told lawmakers.

The state news agency MENA quoted a presidenti­al aide as saying a statement on new dates would be issued “within hours.”

Islamists have used wellorgani­zed campaign operations to win every election since the revolution, while the liberal and leftist opposition has been beset by divisions. Previous opposition boycott threats have failed to materializ­e.

The National Salvation Front, which groups a number of parties opposed to the Islamists including ElBaradei’s, is due to decide in the coming week whether to join a boycott.

“This is Dr. ElBaradei’s own position and own opinion,” said NSF spokesman Khaled Dawood, but he added that other NSF leaders were sympatheti­c to the idea of a boycott.

“This is yet another individual move by the Muslim Brotherhoo­d and President Morsi, establishi­ng facts on the ground and then asking you to basically go with the rules of the game they’ve set on their own,” he said.

 ?? (Mohamed Abd El Ghany/Reuters) ?? PEOPLE SHOUT slogans on hunger and poverty during an antigovern­ment protest in Cairo on Friday.
(Mohamed Abd El Ghany/Reuters) PEOPLE SHOUT slogans on hunger and poverty during an antigovern­ment protest in Cairo on Friday.

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