Egypt’s Sisi Sweeps To Third Term As President
Abdel Fattah al-Sisi has swept to a
third, six-year term as Egypt’s president, winning 89.6% of votes in an
election in which he faced no serious challengers, the National Election
Authority announced on Monday.
The election took place as Egypt
struggles with a slow-burning economic crisis and tries to manage the risk of
spillover from the war in Gaza, which borders Egypt’s Sinai Peninsula.
Some voters said the eruption of
conflict in Gaza had encouraged them to vote for Sisi, who has long presented
himself as a bulwark of stability in a volatile region - an argument that has
also proved effective with Gulf and Western allies providing financial support
to his government.
Voting in Egypt was held over three
days on December 10-12, with the state and tightly controlled domestic media
pushing hard to boost turnout, which the election authority said had reached
66.8% - above the 41 percent recorded at the last presidential election in
2018.
The election featured three other
candidates, none of them high profile. The most prominent potential challenger
halted his run in October, saying officials and thugs had targeted his
supporters - accusations dismissed by the National Election Authority.
“There were no elections, Sisi used
the entire state apparatus and security agencies to prevent any serious
contender from even running,” said Hossam Bahgat, head of the Egyptian
Initiative for Personal Rights (EIPR), an independent group.
“Just like last time he handpicked his
opponents who only went through the motions of running against the president
with either muted or almost no criticism of his disastrous policies.”
Egypt’s state media body has said the
vote was a step towards political pluralism and authorities have denied
violations of electoral rules.
Sisi, a former general, has overseen a
sweeping crackdown on dissent across the political spectrum since leading the
2013 overthrow of Egypt’s first democratically elected leader, Mohamed Mursi of
the Muslim Brotherhood.
He was elected to the presidency in
2014, and re-elected in 2018, both times with 97% of the vote. The constitution
was amended in 2019, extending the presidential term to six years from four,
and allowing Sisi to stand for a third term.
Some admire an infrastructure drive
including a new capital built from scratch in the desert east of Cairo. Others
see the city as a costly extravagance at a time when Egypt’s debt has swollen
and prices have soared.
Sisi’s backers say security is
paramount, and that some groups have benefited under his rule.
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