The File News
هل تريد التفاعل مع هذه المساهمة؟ كل ما عليك هو إنشاء حساب جديد ببضع خطوات أو تسجيل الدخول للمتابعة.
The File News

موقع الملف الاخباري اخبار التعليم العربي اخبار اقتصاديه في الوطن العربي لحظه بلحظخ اخبار اليوم بدقيقه بدقيقه واحده

google adv

سحابة الكلمات الدلالية

كيف وصلت الينا


أهلا وسهلا بك زائرنا الكريم, أنت لم تقم بتسجيل الدخول بعد! يشرفنا أن تقوم بالدخول أو التسجيل إذا رغبت بالمشاركة في المنتدى

Islamist rivals in Egypt election stand-off

اذهب الى الأسفل  رسالة [صفحة 1 من اصل 1]

Admin

Admin
الاداره
الاداره

Related Content



  • Islamist rivals in Egypt election stand-off 2011-12-05T235413Z_1_BTRE7B41UEG00_RTROPTP_2_INTERNATIONAL-US-EGYPT-ELECTIONEnlarge PhotoA woman casts her vote during the first day of the parliamentary run-off election …





CAIRO
(Reuters) - Rival Islamists in Egypt's parliamentary election played up
their differences in a first-round run-off vote, with the top-placed
Muslim Brotherhood anxious to show a moderate face to Egyptians hungry
for stability.

Hardline Salafis were the surprise runner-up in last week's opening
stage, the biggest test of the public mood since street protests ended
Hosni Mubarak's three-decade rule in February.

But during the run-offs that conclude on Tuesday, both the Salafis
and the Brotherhood are sounding lukewarm on the chances of forming a
dominant Islamist bloc if they repeat their early success in subsequent
voting rounds ending on January 11.

"There were attempts to unite but Salafis are very difficult," said
Mohamed Hussein, 20, as he distributed leaflets for the Brotherhood's
Freedom and Justice Party (FJP) in front of a polling station in the
port city of Alexandria.

"We may agree on certain things but we are different in vision and
strategy," he said. "It is easier for me to talk with a liberal or a
socialist than a Salafi."

The Salafi al-Nour's Party's leader Emad Abdel Ghaffour said the
Brotherhood may try to paint the Salafis as troublemakers. "We hate
being followers," he told Reuters.

Army generals have ruled a restive Egypt for nine months promising a
transition to democratic civilian rule. Mass protests and street clashes
in the run-up to the parliamentary vote forced them to bring forward
their departure date.

The elected assembly, with its fresh popular mandate, will loom over
the ruling military council until the army hands power to an elected
president in mid-2012.

Despite its early electoral success, the Brotherhood seems unlikely
to seek a showdown with the generals. Egypt's oldest Islamist group
renounced violence long ago and has tended to avoid confrontation in
furthering its aims.

Its chosen pitch for now is likely to be a new constitution that the
new parliament will influence by appointing the assembly that will draft
the document.

ISLAMIST-LIBERAL ALLIANCE?

Voting was slow in Cairo, Alexandria and Port Said as the run-offs
began on Monday, in contrast to the crowds at polling stations last
week.

After the opening round, the FJP's party list won 36.6 percent of
valid first-round votes, with al-Nour's list winning 24.4 percent and a
liberal Egyptian Bloc on 13.4 percent.

But one fifth of the FJP's list included a variety of smaller parties
that included the liberal al-Ghad (Tomorrow) party and the left-leaning
Karama (Dignity), a precedent for possible cooperation between the
Brotherhood and liberals.

Al-Nour - which wants to stop visitors wearing bikinis on the beach
and ban alcohol, a death knell for tourism - quit an electoral alliance
with the FJP before the vote, accusing the FJP of hogging too many seats
on the list.

The Brotherhood's rivals say it bent campaigning rules by lobbying
for votes outside polling stations. The movement said its rivals should
accept the result as the will of the people.

Its early success was no surprise given its large network of activists and decades of grass-roots charity work.

But the strong showing by Salafis was a shock for many liberal
Muslims and for Coptic Christians, who make up a tenth of Egypt's
80-million population.

"We still have high hopes that the silent majority in the coming two
phases will go to the ballot boxes and we still rely on a comeback by
the liberal wing," said Youssef Sidhom, editor-in-chief of Orthodox
Coptic newspaper al-Watani.

Even if the Brotherhood consolidates its first-round success, Sidhom said, its more moderate members may prevail.

"They know they cannot honor the responsibility that has been
bestowed upon them by the people by only preaching Islamic beliefs and a
fundamentalist Islamic way of life," he said.

Under a complex system, two-thirds of the 498 elected lower house
seats go proportionately to party lists, with the rest going to
individual candidates, who must win more than 50 percent of votes in the
first round to avoid a run-off.

Only four seats were won outright in the first round, leaving 52 to
be decided in the run-off voting on Monday and Tuesday, 24 of them
contested between the FJP and al-Nour. Other seats will be decided in
later rounds.

(Additional reporting by Tamim Elyan, Maha Dahan and Edmund Blair; Writing by Tom Pfeiffer; Editing by Louise Ireland)

الرجوع الى أعلى الصفحة  رسالة [صفحة 1 من اصل 1]

صلاحيات هذا المنتدى:
لاتستطيع الرد على المواضيع في هذا المنتدى