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Africa North
'Rigging', low turnout mars Egypt election
2010-11-29
[Pak Daily Times] Opposition charges of ballot stuffing, bullying and dirty tricks clouded a parliamentary election in Egypt on Sunday in which the ruling party wants to prevent its Islamist rivals from repeating their 2005 success.

Some voters were turned away by officials saying there was no election or that polling booths had shut. Others reported finding ballot boxes stuffed to the brim minutes after voting began, rights groups and opposition campaigners said.

The outlawed Mohammedan Brotherhood, whose candidates must run as independents, is contesting 30 percent of seats in the lower house where it won an unprecedented 20 percent in 2005. But even senior Islamists expect a lower total this time, with the government determined to squeeze its most vocal critics out of parliament before a presidential vote in 2011.

"There's no voting going on, just rigging. It's a disgrace. May those who rig votes be crippled," said Hassan Sallam as he emerged from a polling booth at Raml, in the northern city of Alexandria. "There was no privacy. The ballot boxes were full." Abdel-Salam Mahgoub, the candidate for the ruling National Democratic Party (NDP) in that constituency, denied any abuses. Brotherhood supporters chanted 'Void, void' as NDP supporters walked in to vote. The Brotherhood candidate, Subhi Saleh, accused his NDP rival of distributing 'outrageous' fake pamphlets in his own name that said falsely that he was quitting the election.

Four people were killed and 30 maimed in pre-election violence, according to the Egyptian Organisation for Human Rights. Fourteen people were killed in the 2005 poll when voting was staggered over about a month. Several casualties were reported in the Nile Delta on Sunday, including the overnight stabbing of the son of an independent candidate in Matariya. Police denied the killing was election-related. One voter died of a heart attack outside a polling station in Minufiya, a security source said. The brother of an independent candidate was shot and maimed in Mansoura.

In Gharbiya, in the Nile Delta, Brotherhood campaigners said hired thugs had blocked them from monitoring the elections. When some voters threw stones and tried to push their way into a polling station, police expelled them, witnesses said. The government has promised a free and fair election. The result of Sunday's poll is not in doubt, only the size of the majority for geriatric President Hosni Mubarak's NDP, which has never lost an election. Many Egyptians see no point voting. The official turnout in the 2005 election was 22 percent. Rights groups put it at 12 percent.

In Cairo, voting appeared very thin at a dozen polling stations around the capital, where only a handful of people were waiting to cast ballots, with a few coppers on guard duty. The government has rejected calls to allow international monitors. The two-round election in which 508 seats are at stake, with 10 more appointed by the president, may offer a foretaste of how the government conducts next year's presidential vote. Mubarak, in power since 1981, has not said if he will run again. Voting began at 8am and ended at 7 pm. The run-off will take place on Dec 5 for districts where no candidate won more than 50 percent in the first leg.
Posted by:Fred

#1  ...and it looks like they're celebrating in the customary way.

Egyptians riot, burn cars, claiming vote fraud
Posted by: tu3031   2010-11-29 17:02  

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