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Aspiring Egypt leaders launch campaigns
Campaigning in Egypt's first multi-candidate presidential election kicked off Wednesday with President Hosni Mubarak �� unchallenged for 24 years and almost certain to win �� trying to depict himself as just another competitor in a 10-man race, reported AP. The Sept. 7 election is the cornerstone of Mubarak's reform program, and his government is trying to show it will be a fair race to convince skeptical Egyptians it is serious about greater democracy.
Several major opposition parties are boycotting the vote, saying claims of open competition are a sham. The overpowering edge Mubarak's ruling National Democratic Party enjoys in organization and influence was clear from the first day of campaigning, when billboards praising him cropped up overnight across the Egyptian capital. No opposition ads were to be seen.
"I will work hard to earn the support and the confidence of every one of you, the children of our people in Egypt's hamlets, villages and towns," he said. "There are still more constitutional and legislative amendments to complete building our democracy. We still have more economic and social reforms to reach the modern society we dream of." TV screens beside the podium showed a short campaign film on Mubarak, highlighting his private side. In the film, his wife talked about "the eye contact" that brought her and her future husband together when they first met. "He is a man anybody gets attracted to, elegant, balanced, handsome, full of confidence and greatness," Suzanne Mubarak said. Trying to portray an image of a middle-class family, Mubarak revealed he didn't buy a car until few months after marriage. He even talked about crying when his political duties prevented him from accompanying his older son, Alaa, to Washington for back surgery. The speech was aired live on a privately owned Egyptian satellite station, and his campaign said parts of it would be run on state-run television in the airtime slots allocated each candidate. The campaign has said Mubarak will abide by all campaign finance and media rules.
Nour laid out his own political agenda in a speech just after Mubarak, arriving in a horse-drawn carriage to his campaign headquarters in an impoverished neighborhood of central Cairo. Nour promised that as president he would abolish emergency laws, free all political prisoners and establish a human-rights ministry. The first two years would be a transitional period "to move on from totalitarian rule to sensible rule and from tyrannical rule by one person to the rule of the homeland," he said. "We shouldn't let defeat seep into hearts by assuming Mubarak will win. He's not going to win," Nour said to a roar of applause. While the government has depicted the opening of the race to competitors as a major step toward democracy, the opposition has dismissed the vote as a sham, saying it is heavily stacked against them on nearly every level.
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