Opposition groups quit Egypt runoff
02/12/2010| IslamWeb
The Muslim Brotherhood and a secular party, Wafd, both withdrew on Wednesday from Egypt's election after a crushing first-round defeat by the president's ruling party in a poll marred by alleged fraud and violence.
The main opposition party will boycott the second stage of parliamentary voting after a first round that critics said was rigged in favor of the ruling party, a Brotherhood source said on Wednesday.
"Sunday was marked by fraud, terrorism and violence carried out by police and thugs," the Muslim Brotherhood said in a statement, adding "the Brotherhood refuses to react to such violence."
Despite the boycott, "We still plan to take all legal measures to invalidate this pseudo-parliament," they said.
Essam El-Erian, spokesman for the Muslim Brotherhood, said that his party participated in the elections in the national interest and then pulled out in the national interest.
"I think public opinion accepted our decision, and they congratulated us for our historical decision," El-Erian said.
"[The Brotherhood] doesn't attribute the results to bad policies or bad campaigning," Al Jazeera's Ayman Mohyeldin, reporting from Cairo, said of the Brotherhood's accusations against Hosni Mubarak's party.
He also said that most of the voters who supported opposition candidates were not surprised by the decision to withdraw from the second round. Moreover, he said many Egyptians had hoped the Brotherhood would boycott the elections even before the first round.
"We are looking at an incoming parliament that will be beyond dominated by the National Democratic Party," he said.
"There is concern as to whether it has simply become a rubber-stamp parliament and what that means for determining the future leadership of the country."
Egypt's ruling party captured nearly all seats in parliament in the first round of the disputed elections, according to official results.
The National Democratic Party won 209 of 221 seats in Sunday's polls, but the Muslim Brotherhood, the country's largest opposition group, failed to win a single seat.
The Muslim Brotherhood is outlawed in Egypt under a ban on religious parties and fields candidates as independents.
Fraud claims rejected
But the electoral commission dismissed the Brotherhood's claim that the vote was "rigged and invalid".
"The commission categorically rejects the allegations that the election was marred by fraud," Sameh el-Kashef, a commission spokesman, told a news conference.
"While the commission regrets that certain irregularities took place, it is satisfied with the fact that these irregularities did not impact on the transparency of the first round of the election."
Kashef said that only 1,053 ballot boxes out of 89,588 had been discarded and put turnout at 35 per cent.
Hafez Abu Saada, the head of the Egyptian Organization for Human Rights, said voter turn out was no more than 15 per cent.
Four small legal opposition parties won five seats between them, and seven went to independents who are not affiliated with the Brotherhood.
Analysts said the government wants to push the Brotherhood to the margins of formal politics before next year's presidential race.
The group won a fifth of the seats in parliament in the last election in 2005, but a sustained government crackdown has since weakened the group.
PHOTO CAPTION
Mohammed Badie (left), the head of Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood, holds a press conference about the parliamentary election in Cairo.
Al-Jazeera