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Related: Egypt kicks off presidential election
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| Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak
casts his vote in Cairo in Egypt's first multi-candidate presidential
elections September 7, 2005. (Xinhua
Photo) | CAIRO, Sept. 9
(Xinhuanet) -- Egypt's incumbent president Hosni Mubarak is seen taking an
overwhelming lead in the country's first multi-candidate presidential election,
the Egyptian Gazette daily reported Friday.
With votes counted in half of the country's polling
stations, Mubarak, candidate of the ruling National Democratic Party (NDP),
garnered at least 84 percent of the votes, according to unofficial estimates.
The remaining votes were shared between the two
principal challengers, Ayman Nour of the Ghad (Tomorrow) Party and Noaman Gomaa
of the el-Wafd Party.
A request by Nour to hold a re-run due to what he
called irregularities in the election has been turned down by the Presidential
Election Commission (PEC), PEC spokesman Osama Attawaiya told a press conference
late Thursday.
The PEC is the sole authority that can announce
official results.
The elected president will be sworn in front of an
emergency parliamentary session next week.
As polls closed late Wednesday, the government did
not have turnout figures. But officials said a large number of people were seen
at some polling stations, although several independent monitoring groups said
they expected turnout to be low.
The government played down reports of fraud, saying
they did not diminish the electoral reforms that it called a major step toward
democracy.
Meanwhile, the European Union and the United States
welcomed Egypt's first competitive polls. The EU lauded the general atmosphere
of election campaigning as calm.
Washington said it was following the election closely
and calledthe vote "a beginning".
In the past, Egypt's president was not elected
directly by the people. Instead, the parliament chose a sole candidate who would
belater put to a referendum. Enditem |