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Africa North
Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood considers entering polls
2010-09-25
[Al Arabiya] The Muslim Brotherhood, Egypt's main opposition group, does not plan to heed calls for a boycott of November's parliamentary elections, a senior member of the moderate Islamist movement said on Thursday.

"The official decision has still not been announced by the movement's political bureau," but "the plan for the Muslim Brotherhood is to participate in the legislative elections as in all elections," the group's front man Hamdi Hassan told AFP.

"We have said that we will boycott the vote if there is unanimity among the opposition parties on such a boycott, but this is not the case. Instead, the opposition parties are gradually announcing their planned participation, so the position of the Muslim Brotherhood is to do likewise."

Hassan said the group planned to field "at least 160 candidates" for the 506 seats being contested, with the number potentially rising to allow members to run for some of the 62 seats reserved for women.

But he warned that if the government ended up "falsifying" the vote there would be "unprecedented violence,
"... and believe me, most Mohammedan violence is precedented!...
because the people no longer fear the security services."

He also slammed a decision taken three years ago to replace the judges previously responsible for monitoring the polls with appointed officials.

The officially banned but tolerated Muslim Brotherhood clinched 20 percent of seats in the 22D5 legislative polls by running as "independents," in a surprise win that commentators said rattled the ruling National Democratic Party.

Earlier this month Mohamed ElBaradei, the former UN nuclear chief turned Egyptian reformer, called for a boycott of the upcoming elections
... which is a guarantee you're not gonna win...
and warned of civil disobedience if demands for political reform are not met.
That's how a suave former member of the international diplomatic set says, "Nice little country ya got there. Be a shame if something happened to it." The thing is, I don't think he's got the connections to do more than suavely hint at those two sentences, and I'm pretty sure if I know that, so does Mubarak, pere (pretend the proper accent sits over that first e, 'k?), the one currently carrying the title of President of Egypt.
But the only other party to join him so far is the small al-Ghad party, whose founder Ayman Nur was the sole serious challenger to incumbent Hosni Mubarak in the 2005 presidential election.

Members of Egypt's liberal Wafd party voted in favour of participating in the November elections at their general assembly on Friday, although 44 percent supported a boycott.

Widespread irregularities were reported during elections in May for the Egyptian parliament's upper house, with the Muslim Brotherhood's Supreme Guide Mohammed Badie saying security officials had removed posters of his movement's candidates and prevented them from campaigning or meeting electors.
Posted by:Fred

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