Islamists expected to fare poorly in Egypt election
27 Nov 2010 18:12:39 GMT
Source: Reuters
* Muslim Brotherhood seen losing some of its 2005 gains

* Says pushing it out of formal politics would be dangerous

* Vote seen as litmus test for 2011 presidential vote

By Marwa Awad and Yasmine Saleh

CAIRO, Nov 27 (Reuters) - Victory is assured for Egypt's ruling party in 
Sunday's parliamentary election, which is expected to shunt the opposition 
Muslim Brotherhood further to the margins of mainstream politics.

The Brotherhood is targeting 30 percent of the lower house where it won a fifth 
of seats in 2005 -- its best result -- but analysts say the government wants to 
squeeze its most vocal critic out of parliament before a presidential vote in 
2011.

The election in which 508 seats are at stake, including for the first time 64 
reserved for women, may offer a foretaste of how the government conducts the 
presidential poll.

President Hosni Mubarak, 82, has not said whether he will seek to extend his 
29-year tenure. After he had gall-bladder surgery in March, speculation grew 
that he might step down.

If he does so, many Egyptians see a likely successor in his 46-year-old son 
Gamal, the ruling National Democratic Party's (NDP) policy chief. Gamal's 
allies include business leaders seeking further economic liberalisation, 
resisted by the NDP's statist old guard.

Analysts say the next president will be an NDP stalwart who would preserve a 
peace treaty with Israel and close ties with Washington that have ensured 
billions of dollars in U.S. aid.

With the outcome of Sunday's vote in little doubt, the authorities may face a 
sterner challenge from a workforce frustrated with low pay and food inflation 
now at 22 percent. Several union protests have turned violent in recent years.

Online dissent has also grown, highlighting alleged abuses by security forces 
and publicising calls for constitutional reform by Mohamed ElBaradei, former 
head of the U.N. nuclear watchdog, without gelling into a coherent opposition 
movement.

"I can't change anything, because every time a project for change comes out, we 
all watch it desperately fail. Those who talk about change left the country and 
are sitting comfortably abroad," said Ghadeer, a 22-year-old arts graduate who 
only gave her first name.

The NDP says the electorate hands it crushing majorities because it is the 
natural party of government and voters approve policies which brought several 
years of strong economic growth.

"The party also has financial abilities that allow it to provide the services 
it promises, unlike the other parties," said a ruling party candidate in Cairo, 
Abdel Ghani Gamal.

TELEVISIONS, BLANKETS AND CASH

Critics say the NDP hogs the media, hands out gifts and pressures voters at 
polling stations.

State-owned newspaper Al Ahram listed methods voters use to get ink off 
fingers, such as rubbing them with orange peel, baking powder or herbs, so that 
they can cast multiple ballots.

A retired army colonel who asked not to be named said NDP campaigners in Cairo 
had been buying votes with television sets, blankets, 500 pounds ($87) in cash 
or even offers of state jobs.

"There was more popular trust in the 2005 election because it was supervised by 
judges. Now there is mistrust," said Hafez Abou Saeda of the Egyptian 
Organisation of Human Rights. "There is more control of media. Fifteen channels 
have been shut down."

The government has rebuffed a call by Washington for international election 
monitors as unwelcome interference.

It says the voting will be free and fair, and blames sporadic pre-election 
violence on rivalry between candidates and clan loyalties. Clashes are common 
in Egyptian elections.

The NDP and the Brotherhood have swapped accusations of intimidation and 
violence, said to have included kidnappings and fights between rival groups 
using machetes, chains and knives.

Four people have already been killed and 30 wounded in electoral violence, 
according to the Egyptian Organisation for Human Rights. Fourteen people were 
killed during the 2005 poll.

An Alexandria court sentenced 12 Brotherhood supporters to two years in prison 
on Thursday for using Islamist campaign slogans and the NDP has called on the 
public prosecutor to block Brotherhood candidates from running as independents.

The NDP is fielding far more candidates than there are seats available in an 
effort to crowd out the Brotherhood.

The Islamist movement skirts a ban on religious parties by running candidates 
as independents and has carved out a broad grass-roots following by offering 
health and social services.

Despite its substantial presence, it had scant influence on legislation during 
parliament's last five-year term and has made no gains in municipal or upper 
house elections since 2005.

Brotherhood leaders say it would be perilous to push it out of mainstream 
politics as this would play into the hands of more radical Islamists bent on 
overthrowing the government by force. 



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