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WSWS : News
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East :
Egypt
President Mubarak's party sustains significant losses in Egyptian
elections
By Brian Smith
16 November 2000
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President Hosni Mubarak's ruling party has held its majority
in parliament, but the Islamic opposition made significant gains
in the Egyptian elections that concluded earlier this week. The
National Democratic Party (NDP) won 388 of the legislature's 444
elected seats, legal opposition parties took 17 seats and candidates
backed by the outlawed Muslim Brotherhood gained 17 seats.
The opposition has doubled its seats in the 454-member legislature.
In total 95 independent candidates were elected, but 75 of these
had switched their allegiance to the NDP in the three-stage elections,
which began October 18. The candidates backed by the Muslim Brotherhood
will be the largest single opposition bloc. The NDP held 97 percent
of the outgoing parliament, formed in 1995 after elections in
which 87 people were killed and more than 1,500 wounded.
Electoral casualties included several high profile government
stalwarts and many long-serving NDP parliamentarians. There was
a larger turnout than normal, with each stage of the election
having a larger vote than the last as the masses were inspired
by the NDP's setbacks.
Many people were stopped from voting, particularly in areas
of strong opposition to the government. Methods employed by security
forces and government heavies included the use of tear gas, threats,
beatings, confiscation of ID cards, police cordons and random
gunfire. Prior to the elections, the regime had also rounded up
and arrested many activists who were allied to independent candidates.
Polling in two constituencies was postponed by court order
in an electoral process characterised by violence and state repression
that led to 10 deaths. In the last of three runoffs on Tuesday,
five people were killed and 40 wounded when police fired bullets
and tear gas at those protesting against the exclusion of independent
and opposition candidates from polling stations.
The Palestinian Intifada against Israel has ignited simmering
social discontent amongst working people towards Mubarak's corrupt
regime in recent weeks. Broad layers of the population, including
hundreds of thousands of youth, have engaged in protests demanding
Egypt take action against Israel and break from its role as a
key US ally in the Middle East. There were massive street demonstrations
during the Arab Summit in Cairo on October 21-22, called to discuss
the Palestinian-Israeli conflict. The demonstrations were the
first of this character since before the Arab-Israeli conflict
of 1973.
The main beneficiary of the growing social and political discontent,
the Muslim Brotherhood, was founded in 1928 and advocates the
creation of an Islamic state by peaceful means. It has traditionally
drawn its support from the educated middle and upper classes and
has been an illegal, though tolerated, organisation since the
1950s. The organisation does not represent a major threat to Mubarak.
Its victorious candidates have declared the elections as fair
and gone so far as to say that they trust Hosni Mubarak.
Nevertheless the discontent shown by workers and youth in Egypt
and elsewhere in the region has sent a sharp warning to Mubarak
and all the Arab leaders. They are acutely aware that unrest over
Israeli repression of the Palestinians could easily ignite more
general opposition to the appalling economic conditions and denial
of democratic rights that confront the masses throughout the Middle
East.
In what is just as much an attempt to project a measure of
independence from the US as it is to gain economic advantage from
exploiting trade in oil, Egypt has recently begun measures to
restore diplomatic relations with Iraq. Egypt is now calling for
an end to economic sanctions against Saddam Hussein's Ba'athist
regime.
The Egyptian Chamber of Commerce has also taken the unprecedented
step of calling for a boycott of trade with Israel. This follows
popular boycotts of US and Israeli goods throughout the region.
See also:
See also:
Egypt's
President Mubarak appoints new prime minister to speed up privatisation
[5 November 1999]
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