Tuesday, June 19, 2012

Vote in Egypt within 1% one way or the other

 

 

Campaign claims Mubarak's ex-PM won Egypt's president vote

The rival claims carry the potential for a new chapter of unrest at a time when opposition already is growing against a "constitutional declaration" announced by the military on Sunday which robbed the next president of many powers and gave the generals who succeeded Mubarak last year legislative powers as well as control over the process of drafting a constitution.
Shafiq's campaign spokesman, Ahmed Sarhan, told a televised news conference that Shafiq won 51.5% of the vote and that the claim of victory by Shafiq's rival Mohammed Morsi was "false."
"Gen. Ahmed Shafiq is the next president of Egypt," said Sarhan. He said Shafiq won some 500,000 votes more than Morsi, of the fundamentalist Brotherhood.
The official result of the two-day, weekend vote will be announced on Thursday.
The Shafiq campaign's claim came just hours after Morsi's campaign repeated their claims of victory, saying Morsi had won 52% of the vote compared to 48% by Shafiq.
The Brotherhood first announced Morsi's victory early Monday, around six hours after polls closed from voting. It said its claim was based on returns announced by election officials from each counting center around the country. Each campaign has representatives at every center, who compile the individual returns. The Brotherhood's compilation during the first round of voting last month proved generally accurate and, when it announced its victory early on in that race, it raised no objections.
But this time, Shafiq's campaign countered quickly, saying early Monday that its ongoing count showed their man ahead. Tuesday's announcement was its first claim that it had won.
The Brotherhood is already gearing up for a confrontation with the ruling military. It has called for mass demonstrations in Cairo and elsewhere on Tuesday to protest the interim constitution issued by the military as well as a court ruling last week that dissolved parliament, where the Brotherhood controlled nearly half the seats.
The court ruling has been endorsed by the military, whose leader, Field Marshal Hussein Tantawi, issued a decree dissolving the legislature. The Brotherhood and its Islamist allies dismissed the decree on the ground that the military ruler had no right to issue it less than two weeks before the scheduled transfer of power to civilians.
Already, several thousand protesters have gathered in Cairo's Tahrir Square, birthplace of the uprising that toppled Mubarak 16 months ago. The crowd was expected to be in the tens of thousands by evening, when the summer heat is expected to ease. 
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Mubarak's ex-PM counters Muslim Brotherhood's election win claim

In some ways the military position makes more sense when the vote was this close. There are bound to be more conflicts in Egypt given this close an election. Even though the Egyptian people want democracy it takes a long time to get used to democracy in action which is very different than democracy in theory. Even in Europe and the United States democracy is still a very messy business a couple of hundred years later. However, there doesn't seem to be a better system for creating equality and justice that I have seen or heard of.

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