Polls open in second round of Egypt vote (AP) Updated: 2005-11-20 17:10 Egyptians in nine provinces
began voting Sunday in the second round of a parliamentary election, balloting
that so far has produced a surprisingly strong showing for candidates of the
opposition Muslim Brotherhood.
There are 1,706 candidates competing in 72 constituencies in this round. As
polling places opened, there were early complaints of irregularities.
In Port Said, at the Mediterranean end of the Suez Canal, Mustafa Saber, a
poll monitor from the Egyptian Organization for Human Rights, said he was
prevented from entering the polling station at el-Sabahiya school south of the
city. He said there were about 150 police at the station and only voters
supporting President Hosni Mubarak's ruling National Democratic Party were being
allowed in.
Candidates associated with the Brotherhood, banned in 1954 after trying to
assassinate President Gamel Abdel Nasser, won 34 seats in the first round of the
elections on Nov. 9, more than doubling its representation in the outgoing
parliament.
While prohibited from formally becoming a political party, the Brotherhood
fields candidates as nominal independents. The candidates sympathies for the
banned organization, however, are widely known to the electorate.
The NDP garnered 112 seats in the first round. All 454 places in the
parliament are up for election in the three-stage process that concludes Dec. 1.
The Brotherhood calls for implementing Islamic law but is vague about what
that means. It advocates the veil for women and campaigns against perceived
immorality in the media. But the group insists it represents a more moderate
face of Islam than that followed in deeply conservative Saudi
Arabia.
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