by Reuters and Israel Hayom Staff
Polls open in Egypt's presidential election, which Abdel Fatah el-Sissi is widely expected to win • While result may be a foregone conclusion, a big turnout by voters would be seen as a strong mandate for Sissi's rule.
A banner in Cairo showing presidential candidate Abdel Fatah el-Sissi
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Photo credit: AP |
Egyptians were set to vote on Monday in a presidential election that is expected to sweep former army chief Abdel Fatah el-Sissi into office, reviving strongman rule three years after the country's popular uprising raised hopes of democracy free from military influence.
Sissi has been widely regarded as Egypt's de facto leader since he toppled Islamist President Mohammed Morsi last July and cracked down on his Muslim Brotherhood in the bloodiest chapter of the country's modern peacetime history.
Credit: Reuters
The Muslim Brotherhood and its Islamist allies have vowed to escalate a "revolutionary wave" this week, though it has been many months since they were able to mobilize large numbers in the streets. The Brotherhood has urged its supporters to boycott the election.
Credit: Reuters
He has acknowledged the scale of Egypt's problems, including an energy crisis and Islamist militant violence that has driven away foreign investors and tourists, hammering the economy.
"The challenges present in Egypt are so many," he told Reuters in an interview this month. "I believe that within two years of serious, continuous work we can achieve the type of improvement Egyptians are looking for."
Sissi's sole competitor is Hamdeen Sabahi, a leftist politician who finished third in the 2012 election that brought Morsi to power. Polling stations open at 9 a.m. Egypt time (2 a.m. U.S. Eastern time), and although the result appears a foregone conclusion, a big turnout would be seen as a strong mandate for Sissi's rule.
Supporters regard Sissi, who resigned from the military earlier this year, as a decisive figure who can stabilize Egypt, a strategic U.S. ally in the heart of the Arab world. His opponents, mostly in the Islamist opposition, say he is the mastermind of a coup that robbed Egypt's first freely-elected leader of power.
They fear Sissi will rule Egypt with an iron fist just like other former military men did, and say he will protect the political and economic interests of the generals and businessmen who amassed fortunes before the 2011 uprising which toppled autocrat Hosni Mubarak but remain influential.
Security forces have largely driven the Brotherhood underground after hundreds were killed and thousands arrested. More than a thousand Brotherhood supporters have been sentenced to death on charges including inciting violence after the army overthrew Morsi.
Foreign governments condemned the rulings but none has taken concrete steps to pressure Egypt into improving its human rights record.
"Egypt's presidential elections will not wipe the country's human rights record clean after 10 months of gross violations," said a statement by rights group Amnesty International.
Members of the pro-democracy movement that led the protests against Mubarak in 2011 have also been jailed, and many cases of torture by the security services have been reported by human rights groups.
Sissi must tread cautiously. Abuse by police was one of the triggers for the 2011 revolt. Although supporters hailed Sissi as a hero when he removed the Brotherhood from power, there is growing discontent over rights abuses in the streets.
Secular activists have become more vocal since the security crackdown against Islamists was expanded to include liberal groups, including the April 6 movement which helped to start the 2011 uprising but has since been banned.
On Saturday, hundreds of people marched through downtown Cairo calling for an end to what they called military rule.
"Down with the military regime! The voice of the revolution is coming from the streets and the factories," screamed mostly young men and women.
"Bread! Freedom! Social justice!" they chanted, echoing more of the rallying cries of the 2011 uprising.
Mahmoud Omran, a 23-year-old student who spent four months in Cairo's Tora Prison after participating in street clashes in 2011, called the election "pointless."
"Why vote? No matter what percentage Sissi wins by, he will be president after spilled blood," he said.
Though Sissi's support appears to be shrinking, many Egyptians worn down by three years of political turmoil still view him as a hero for ending Morsi's divisive time in office.
"Sissi saved us from the Brotherhood and what they were doing to us," said Ibrahim, 47, who works for an import-export company in Cairo.
Monitors from the European Union and U.S.-funded Democracy International are observing the vote, and more than 400,000 security forces have been deployed to secure polling stations across the country.
Sissi secured 95 percent of votes cast in advance by Egyptians overseas, but an opinion poll by the Washington-based Pew Research Center suggests a more mixed picture inside Egypt, with Sissi viewed favorably by 54 percent and unfavorably by 45 percent.
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