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Four dead in last round of violent Egyptian vote
(Reuters)
Updated: 2005-12-08 09:02

Police fired tear gas and rubber bullets in election clashes that killed at least four people in Egypt on Wednesday, and the Islamist opposition said it won nine new seats despite police actions to prevent voting.

President Hosni Mubarak's ruling party has maintained its majority in a month of voting but the Muslim Brotherhood has surprised the country by winning more than five times the number of seats it had in the last parliament.

At least seven people have been killed since the staggered parliamentary election started on November 9 and which ended on Wednesday in violence that has marred the whole process.

Police firing live rounds killed two men north of Cairo, raising Wednesday's death toll to four, a security source said. Interior Ministry officials, who have denied police used live rounds in past incidents, could not be reached for comment.

The government pledged to hold free and fair elections, but rights groups have accused the authorities of widespread abuses throughout the month-long elections, including blocking access to polling stations, vote-buying and fabricating results.

The Brotherhood, which fielded candidates as independents because the government bans it from forming a party, said it had expected to win 15 to 20 more seats on Wednesday, but said this would depend on the extent of any security crackdown.

Residents of the Aziziyah village in Zagazig City clash with the police as they try to enter a sealed off voting station.
Residents of the Aziziyah village in Zagazig City clash with the police as they try to enter a sealed off voting station. [AFP]
"What happened today represents a tragic and dramatic course in the election process," Brotherhood deputy head Mohamed Habib told Reuters.

"(The ruling party) does not want reform. It does not want a democratic climate. It wants to keep the political situation completely frozen, stagnant and paralysed," he said.

The group's Web site said it had won nine seats counted so far on Wednesday night, taking its total to 85 in the 454-seat parliament. The Brotherhood was competing for more than 30 of the roughly 120 seats contested on Wednesday.

The Brotherhood and witnesses said a pattern had emerged in which security forces blocked access to polling stations where the group did well in last week's voting.

An Interior Ministry statement denied security forces had barred voters and blamed the Brotherhood for violence. It said security forces were seeking "to ensure the security of voters."
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