Kuwait Times

Egypt starts voting in first stage of parliament­ary polls

Pro-government coalition Unified National List among top contenders

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CAIRO: Egyptians voted yesterday in a parliament­ary election in which there was little doubt of a sweeping victory for supporters of hardline President Abdel Fattah Al-Sisi. Some 63 million voters out of Egypt’s more than 100 million people are eligible to elect 568 of the 596 lawmakers in the lower house, widely seen as a rubberstam­p body for executive policies.

The remaining deputies will be appointed by former army general-turned-president Sisi, whose government has over the past six years silenced any serious political opposition to its rule. The elections will be held in two phases, with the first covering 14 provinces yesterday and today. The second, on Nov 7-8, will cover 13 provinces including the capital Cairo.

Yesterday morning, mini-buses were seen driving around parts of Giza province, south of Cairo, bearing photos and banners of some candidates to draw support as voters trickled into polling stations, an AFP reporter said. Giant billboards and banners have sprung up across the bustling capital Cairo and elsewhere urging Egyptians to vote, while some candidates have released online music video clips to draw support.

Many of the candidates also stood for election five years ago in a political landscape marked by the presence of dozens of parties with little weight and influence on the ground. The outgoing parliament, elected in 2015, was packed with Sisi supporters and featured only a small opposition bloc known as 25/30. The new parliament will be the second to convene under Sisi, who took office in 2014 after leading the military ouster of Islamist president Mohamed Morsi. Run-offs will be held in November, and final results are to be announced in December.

Possible fines?

A woman in Giza said she was casting her ballot under pressure from the authoritie­s. “I am only taking part in the elections because I am afraid if I don’t vote I will be fined by the government,” she said, declining to be named for security reasons. During Senate elections in August, the election commission said citizens who fail to vote could face fines of up to 500 Egyptian pounds ($31). Neverthele­ss those elections were marked by a low voter turnout of around 14 percent.

The parliament vote is the second to be held since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic which has so far infected more than 105,000 people and killed nearly 6,200 in Egypt. Over 4,000 candidates, believed to be mostly pro-government, are competing for 284 of the 568 seats reserved for individual­s. Eight party lists are running for the remaining 284 seats.

Among the top contenders is a political coalition known as the Unified National List, led by the pro-government Mostakbal Watan, or Nation’s Future, Party. The party, including top businessme­n and public figures, has grown since 2014 to become one of Egypt’s dominant political forces. It swept the August Senate elections, and its leader Abdelwahab Abdelrazek was named the upper house’s head last Sunday.

The reinstatem­ent of the upper house - which had been abolished after Morsi’s ouster - was among constituti­onal amendments which included potentiall­y extending Sisi’s rule until 2030. Other changes were to boost the president’s control over the judiciary and granting the army even greater influence in political life.

Sisi’s government has for years launched a severe crackdown on dissent, ensnaring journalist­s, bloggers, lawyers and intellectu­als. Protests have been effectivel­y banned under a restrictiv­e 2013 law, and a renewable state of emergency has been in place since 2017. — AFP

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 ??  ?? EL-AYYAT, Egypt: A man casts his ballot at a polling station south of Cairo yesterday during the first stage of lower house elections. — AFP
EL-AYYAT, Egypt: A man casts his ballot at a polling station south of Cairo yesterday during the first stage of lower house elections. — AFP

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