Egypt

Muslim Brotherhood will work with rivals, says leader

The Islamist Muslim Brotherhood was edging toward a dominant role in Egypt's first free parliament in decades on Wednesday, but said it would not impose its will over a new constitution and would work with all political rivals on the blueprint.

Egyptians went to the polls for a second day in the final stage of the election for People's Assembly, the parliament's lower house, in the first free legislative vote since military officers overthrew the monarchy in 1952.

The vote is part of the ruling army council's plan to hand power to civilians before July, ending its turbulent interregnum that began with the overthrow of President Hosni Mubarak in February in a popular uprising.

Welcomed then as heroes who helped nudge the autocratic leader from office, the generals now face anger over their handling of protests that have left 59 dead since mid-November, and an economic crisis that is worsening the plight of the poor.

Raids last week on NGOs monitoring the vote by police who sought evidence of foreign funding for political parties have incensed rights activists and drawn a rebuke from Egypt's long-time ally, the US.

The Brotherhood's Freedom and Justice Party (FJP) has led the polls after two of the three rounds of voting, which has prompted Western concern for the future of Egypt's close ties to Washington and peace with Israel.
 
The party has surfed the wave of hostility to its long-time foe Mubarak. For millions of poor Egyptians, its record for charitable work in neighborhoods ignored by his government suggests it would care for their needs if it won power.

In the working class suburb of Shubra al-Kheima on the outskirts of Cairo, citizens lined up to vote in pot-holed streets littered with rubbish.

"Under the former regime, my ballot was already marked for me," said Sherif, a 42-year-old mechanic. "I've come here today, knowing that my vote will count."

"I've voted for the Muslim Brotherhood. They have experience in running politics and I am convinced they will start implementing serious reforms," said pensioner Fawzy Mohamed.

Founded in 1928, the Brotherhood is Egypt's best organized political force, emerging stronger than others from three decades of Mubarak rule. The new parliament will pick a 100-member assembly to write a new constitution.

"The party's winning of the majority in the new parliament does not mean going it alone in writing the constitution without consideration for the rights of other Egyptians, or ignoring the political forces which did not get a majority or failed in the parliamentary elections," said FJP President Mohamed Morsy.

"All political forces and intellectuals in Egypt, regardless of their political and religious allegiances, will take part in writing the constitution," said Morsy, whose comments were published on the Muslim Brotherhood's website on Tuesday.
 
The more hardline Islamist Nour Party has come second in the voting so far. It is a Salafi group promoting a strict interpretation of Islamic law, and its success has raised the prospect of a chamber dominated by Islamists.

Some analysts believe, however, that the Muslim Brotherhood may seek to build a coalition with secular groups.

That could ease concerns at home and in the West about the rise of the Islamists in a country whose economy is propped up by tourism.

The staggered lower house election concludes with a runoff vote on 10 and 11 January, with final results expected on 13 January. Voting for the upper house will be held in January and February.

The election will produce the first Egyptian parliament with popular legitimacy in decades, raising the possibility of friction with the army.

The army has been the focus of the street protests, held by activists who accuse it of seeking to hold on to power and privilege. The generals say they do not want to govern, but some still doubt their intentions.

In an echo of the Mubarak years, four activists were detained on Tuesday for putting up posters critical of the military council, activists and a source in the public prosecutor's office said.

They were detained while hanging posters comparing images of soldiers after the 1973 war with Israel with pictures of troops beating women in Cairo during protests last month, said Amr Ezz, an organizer of the movement to which the four belonged.

"The activists were subject to continued beatings and torture," said the group, April 6 Youth Movement-Democratic Front. "Continuing to deal with activists in this way reminds us of the pre-revolution period, as if nothing has changed."

Human rights campaigners said the arrests were part of a trend including the raids last week against 17 pro-democracy and human rights groups.

The US criticized the authorities over the raids, part of what Cairo said was an investigation into foreign funding. The US said Egypt had failed to resolve the stand-off over the US-backed NGOs.

"We had been assured by leaders within the Egyptian government that this issue would be resolved … it is frankly unacceptable to us that that situation has not been returned to normal," a US State Department spokesperson said.

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