2011年12月14日星期三

We have to try Islamic rule to be able to decide

Two Islamist blocs won close to 70 percent of seats in the first round on Nov. 28-29, according to an AP tally compiled from official results. moncler jackets The secular and liberal forces that largely drove Egypt's uprising were trounced, failing to turn their achievement into a victory at the polls.

The second round of voting, taking place Wednesday and Thursday, and the third round in early January are not expected to dramatically alter the result and could strengthen the Islamists' hand.

"We have to try Islamic rule to be able to decide if it's good for us," said 60-year-old voter Hussein Khattab, an accountant, waiting to vote Wednesday at a polling station near the famous pyramids in Giza province on the western outskirts of Cairo. "If not, we can go back to Tahrir," he said, referring to the Cairo square that was the focus of the uprising in January and February that ousted longtime President Hosni Mubarak.

He said he planned to vote for the Muslim Brotherhood, the country's most organized and well-known party. Its Freedom and Justice party took 47 percent of contested seats, while the even more conservative Al-Nour bloc won 21 percent.

The election is the first since Mubarak's Feb. 11 ouster and is the freest in Egypt's modern history. The parliament will be tasked, in theory, with forming a 100-member assembly to draft a new constitution.

But its actual role remains unclear. The military council that has ruled since Mubarak's fall says the parliament will not be representative of all of Egypt, and should not have sole power over the drafting of the constitution. Last week, the military appointed a 30-member council to oversee the process.

Nearly 19 million of Egypt's 50 million eligible voters can participate in the second round, which will decide 180 seats in the 498-seat People's Assembly, the parliament's lower house.

So far, many voters say they are just happy to participate in a real election after decades of fraud and vote-rigging by Mubarak's party. Lines were so long at some polling stations that vendors set up shop to sell tea and snacks to voters during their wait.

The Islamists' strong showing has raised questions about the future of a country that has faced deteriorating security and economic free fall since the uprising.

The Brotherhood faces its stiffest competition from Al-Nour, the party of Salafi Muslims whose ultraconservative interpretation of Islam is similar to that practiced in Saudi Arabia.

The Brotherhood is sending mixed messages about how much it will push to limit personal freedoms such as women's dress. Some have tried to assure the public they do not intend to strictly impose Islamic law, or Shariah. But other Brotherhood leaders have indicated a more hard-line direction,cheap moncler jackets for example by suggesting tourists don't need to drink alcohol while they are in Egypt.

The Salafis say openly they will push for strict enforcement of Islamic law, and some have railed against tourists who wear bikinis at beach resorts popular with foreigners. At a recent campaign rally in the coastal city of Alexandria, Salafis covered mermaid statues with cloth.

Some voters worried about the growing clout of Islamists turned out to support the liberal and secular parties that performed poorly in the first round. The liberal Egyptian Bloc came in a distant third with just nine percent.

"I was worried about all their statements about sex segregation, tourism and beaches," said Giza voter Omniya Fikry.

Islamist parties appealed to voters who believe they'll run a clean government. Public anger over rampant corruption under Mubarak was a major impetus behind the uprising. The Islamist groups are also known to many for providing social services, especially to the poor.

In the city of Suez on the southern end of the Suez Canal, voters waiting in lines on garbage-strewn, unpaved streets complained of neglect by the Mubarak regime and hoped the new leadership would fix the economy.

Suez was one of the first cities to join the anti-Mubarak uprising and saw some of the most violent clashes between security forces and protesters.

Reflecting the trend throughout Egypt, however, most Suez voters supported Islamists, saying they expected them to avoid corruption and make life better for the poor.

Other residents bemoaned the liberal parties' weak organization.

"I would have wished that the liberal parties had united so we could vote for them, but they are all over the place thinking of their own good," said Ali el-Genadi, whose 24-year-old son Islam was shot dead by security forces during the uprising.

He also criticized Islamist parties for not supporting the uprising from the start and chose to vote for no one.

Scattered reports emerged during the day of problems at voting sites, most involving clashes between supporters of different parties. Five people were injured in a gunfight in the central province of Sohag, and police chased off a group of women elsewhere in the same province after voters complained they were trying to buy votes. But mostly, voting appeared smooth.

Throughout the country, activists for all main parties violated the ban on campaigning on election day, distributing fliers outside of polling stations.

Many voters said they had little knowledge about the parties or candidates _ even the ones they voted for, prompting many to worry that last minute campaigning could easily affect confused citizens,cheap moncler especially in a country where almost one-third of the population can't read.

Outside a polling station in Giza, a bearded man grabbed an elderly man on his way to vote and told him "Al-Nour party, OK?"

In another polling station, a reporter from The Associated Press saw a judge overseeing the vote fill out a ballot for an old man. When the judge noticed the reporter, he shouted, "Why are you here, old man, if you don't know who to vote for?"

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