Day Two of the Egyptian elections looks promising after the first day passed peacefully
Egypt’s voting continues for a second day on Tuesday, after a high turnout and peaceful atmosphere on Monday in a parliamentary election that could loosen the army’s grip on power and sweep
long-banned Islamists into the legislature.
Egyptians swarmed to the ballot box peacefully in their first election since a popular revolt toppled former president Hosni Mubarak, confounding fears of violence after a week of riots in which 42 people were killed. Up to 40 million voters are being asked to choose a new parliament.
"It was no use to vote before. Our voices were completely irrelevant," Mona Abdel Moneim, one of several women who said they were voting for the first time, told AFP in the Shubra district of Cairo.
Polling stations in nine provinces across Egypt closed at 9pm on Monday after a two-hour extension due to the high turnout in the first stage of the country's historic parliamentary elections.
"Today, nearly 1,000 voters cast their votes here," said a judge at a polling station specially for women in downtown Cairo on Monday evening. "No violations were reported."
By Monday evening, many electoral workers were still busy receiving voters despite a slight decline in the turnout. Abdel Ibrahim, chairman of the High Judicial Elections Commission, told reporters late Monday that the voting was smooth except that three polling stations were closed due to clashes.
Voters are expected to go to 3,809 polling stations in the nine governorates in the first stage. Around 2,357 independent candidates will contest 57 seats, while 1, 452 party candidates will compete for 112 seats.
Voters in nine provinces, including Cairo, Port Said, Alexandria and Assiut are voting in the first stage of a process extending until March.
The 508-member People's Assembly polls are held over three stages, each with a run-off one week after the vote. The whole vote will be finished on January 10 and the final results will be announced by January 13
Voting for the upper house, or Shura Assembly, of parliament takes place after that and the presidential election is supposed to be held by mid-2012.
The Tahrir movement, named after the square where protests began against Mubarak, is divided over whether to take part in the elections and lend legitimacy to the military rulers.
By contrast, the Muslim Brotherhood has supported a poll from which it expects to capitalise.
Many protesters occupying Cairo's Tahrir Square have boycotted the vote. There had been fears the vote might be delayed after deadly protests against the interim military rulers who replaced Mubarak.
Mubarak, who is on trial for murder and corruption along with his two sons, is expected to be following events from a Cairo military hospital where he is reportedly being treated for cancer.
The protesters fear the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces led by Field Marshal Hussein Tantawi, which is overseeing the transition to democracy after decades of authoritarian rule, is trying to retain power.
The military will retain executive power for now, but the election will resuscitate a parliament that had acted as no more than a rubber stamp for Mubarak, who choked political life during his 30-year tenure.
Monday saw long queues form outside polling stations in Cairo before the polls opened and in places queues were said to have stretched up to 3km (two miles).
"We must take part, we must vote, even if we stand here for five hours, so that Egypt can go forward," voter Hoda Abdel Hamid, 43, told Reuters news agency.
"I am voting for the future of my children," she said as she queued in Cairo's Shubra district.
Officials blamed a delay to the voting in some Cairo constituencies on the late arrival of ballot papers and a shortage of ink and administrative officers.
Some judges observing the process got lost on their way to polling stations.
State-run TV reported that 25 people were injured in election-related violence, but monitors reported no major violence or irregularities.
The new parliament is expected to have a strong Islamist bloc led by the Muslim Brotherhood, liberal groupings and some reconditioned elements of Hosni Mubarak's old party.
Much remains unclear about how the new parliament will function and whether it will be able to resolve a standoff with the armed forces over how much power they will retain under a new constitution to be written next year.
Official results from the first phase of voting should be announced on Wednesday, but the final make-up of the lower and upper house of parliament will not be clear until March.
“The Muslim Brotherhood are the people who have stood by us when times were difficult,” said Ragya el-Said, a 47-year-old lawyer in Alexandria, a stronghold for the Brotherhood. “We have a lot of confidence in them.”
“I have hope this time,” Amal Fathy, a 50-year-old government employee who wears the Islamic veil, as she patiently waited in Cairo to vote, told The Associated Press. “I may not live long enough to see change, but my grandchildren will.”
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Maintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2021 ©
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