THU 28 - 11 - 2024
 
Date: May 2, 2012
Source: The Daily Star
Moussa, Abol Fotouh front-runners in Egypt presidency race
CAIRO: Egypt entered the last stage of its first democratic presidential race Monday with its field narrowing to a two-horse race between the urbane former head of the Arab League and a charismatic Islamist medic jailed for years under Hosni Mubarak.
 
A poll published in state-run Al-Ahram daily Monday showed veteran diplomat Amr Moussa in the lead, followed by Abdel-Moneim Abol Fotouh, who has emerged in recent days as the leading Islamist candidate after securing the support of the ultraconservative Salafist movement.
 
Gamaa Islamiyya – a radical Islamist group involved in the assassination of late President Anwar Sadat – and Internet activist Wael Ghonim threw their support behind Abol Fotouh Monday.
 
Both Moussa and Abol Fotouh are well ahead of 11 other candidates and, for now, look the most likely to face each other in a second round. That would give Egyptians a stark choice about the future of the Arab world’s most populous state.
 
Moussa, 75, served for a decade as Mubarak’s foreign minister before taking over the leadership of the Arab League, and must win over voters skeptical of the old elite.
 
Abol Fotouh, 60, grew to prominence in the 1970s as a student activist opposing Egypt’s military rulers and was jailed in the 1990s as a member of the Muslim Brotherhood, which he split from last year. He needs to maintain the support of Islamists, while reassuring secular Egyptians he will not impose a radical transformation on society.
 
Monday marked the official start of campaigning for the election, although candidates have been canvassing voters for months. A first round will be held on May 23-24, followed by an expected second round runoff in June. Though they appear to be the clear leaders, it is still not certain Moussa and Abol Fotouh will make it to the second round: many voters are undecided and polls have no track record of accuracy. The Muslim Brotherhood has a candidate challenging Abol Fotouh for Islamist votes, and can never be written off.
 
“Nobody can talk about forecasts because in Egypt there are no scientific opinion polls. They are all impressions,” senior Brotherhood official Essam al-Erian told reporters.
 
Moussa has generally led in the polls till now, benefitting from better name recognition than others. Abol Fotouh’s growing appeal could make the race tighter. Some may yet be swayed by the unprecedented spectacle of a televised debate between the top candidates, the first of which is scheduled for Thursday.
 
Abol Fotouh broke away from the Muslim Brotherhood last year when it initially said it would not field a candidate.
 
He has solidified his position as the leading Islamist in the race by securing the backing of the ultraconservative Salafists, but portrays himself as a moderate, keen to reassure secular Egyptians and Christians they have nothing to fear. He has played up issues of economic and social justice and promised to increase health and education spending.
 
“It’s the Egyptian mainstream I am banking on, the ones I have been working to win over since I started my campaign, who make up more than 90 percent of Egyptians ... who understand Shariah (Islamic law) correctly,” he said in an April 23 television interview.
 
Abol Fotouh long clashed with the Brotherhood’s leadership by advocating a more open approach to Egyptians from different social, political and religious backgrounds. Leading Salafists have acknowledged ideological differences with him, but have been drawn to a charismatic figure whose break with the Brotherhood gave him credibility as an independent voice.
 
Some liberals and more secular-minded Egyptians have also rallied behind him. Unlike Moussa, he has no links to Mubarak’s era. But many Egyptians remain suspicious that he still holds ties to the Brotherhood that could surface in his presidency.
 
The Brotherhood reversed its decision not to field a candidate, but its first choice was barred from standing. Its replacement candidate, Mohammad Mursi, has a low profile so far and starts well behind in polls, but stands yet to gain from the support of the Brotherhood’s unrivalled grassroots organization.
 
Senior Brotherhood official Mahmoud Ghozlan said rank and file Salafists could still back Mursi, even though their leaders picked Abol Fotouh.
 
Moussa, who became popular with ordinary Egyptians as head of the Cairo-based Arab League, has to fight accusations by Islamists that he is a member of Mubarak’s old guard.
 
“The question is not old guard or new guard. The question is either you were part of the corrupt people that have done a lot of harm to the country or among the people who have worked and done their duty according to the highest standard they could do,” Moussa told Reuters last year early in campaigning. He benefits from fear of religious radicalism.


 
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