Your Mail

ÚŃČí

 

Counseling:

Ask the Scholar

|

Ask About Islam

|

Hajj & `Umrah

|

Cyber Counselor

|

Parenting Counselor

 

Wednesday, October 18, 2000
Egypt's Month-Long Elections Begin Wednesday Without Islamist Element

CAIRO (AFP) - A month of Egyptian legislative elections get underway Wednesday, but without the participation of what political observers call the country's largest opposition force - the Muslim Brotherhood.

Egypt's Islamists, who are prevented by law from evoking religion in their politics, have accused the government of "rigging the elections in advance" by arresting members of the banned Brotherhood who intended to run as independent candidates for some of the parliament's 454 seats.

Around 1,000 of their members are currently being held without trial, the movement claimed in a statement issued on the eve of the vote.

An administrative court in Alexandria appeared to back up the Brotherhood's shouts of foul-play on Tuesday by ordering the elections not to take place in one constituency of the Mediterranean city after security forces arrested the electioneering aides of one Brotherhood candidate a day earlier.

Judicial sources said the government was working on legal measures to block the ruling.

The country's largest legal opposition party, Al-Wafd, which has repeatedly accused the government of rigging past votes, has also urged the authorities "not to resort to fraud, like usual, to gain the majority of seats."

In its daily newspaper of the same name, the liberal party has said it could sweep around 100 seats "if the freedom of the vote is guaranteed."

The opposition denounced the previous parliamentary elections in 1995 for massive fraud which they said permitted President Hosni Mubarak's ruling National Democratic Party (NDP) to take all but 13 of the seats in the chamber.

The current elections will have a member of the judiciary in every polling station in accordance with electoral laws that were amended in July following a lengthy lawsuit filed by a disgruntled former parliamentary candidate.

With some 15,251 polling stations and just 9,000 members of the judiciary, the country has been split into three zones, with voting taking place in three stages for the first time.

Nearly 25 million voters are entitled to cast their votes for the 4,134 candidates for 444 seats up for grabs, according to official figures. The final results will be announced in mid-November.

Parliament comprises a total 454 members, 10 of whom are appointed directly by President Hosni Mubarak, who generally compensate for the under representation of Coptic Christians and women in parliament.

The five-year term will begin with the new parliament's first session on December 13.

Summit Ends With Call For End Of Violence
Hamas Pledges To Continue Uprising Regardless Of Summit Results
Pro-Palestinian Protestors Hit The Streets In Toronto
South Florida Protest Calls For Jihad
Indonesia Urges U.N. To Revamp And CGI To Separate Politics From Economics
Rabbi Says Muslim Religious Sensitivities Must Be Addressed
Navy Recovers Seven Bodies As U.S. Sees Good Start To Yemen Blast Probe
Iraq Will Not Extradite Hijackers To Saudi Arabia
Turkey Urges "Immediate" Implementation Of Sharm El-Sheikh Accords
Russian Security Services Uncover Muslim Brotherhood Operations
Clan Leader Backs Off From Reconciliation Bid
Nigerian Army Sent In To Quell Clashes As More Than 100 Die
Iran Press And Officials Blast Egypt, Israel, U.S. Peace Summit
Health Workers Mobilize To Contain Horror Disease In Uganda
Two Kashmiri Fighters Killed In Kashmir Gunbattle
U.N. Mission Offers Helping Hand To Displaced People In The Horn Of Africa
EU In $1.7 Million Deal To Promote West African Common Market


Top News

News | Shari`ah | Health & Science | Politics in Depth | Reading Islam | Family | Culture | Youth | Euro-Muslims

About Us | Speech of Sheikh Qaradawi | Contact Us | Advertise | Support IOL | Site Map