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Egyptians Go to Polls Amid Protests

Polling stations opened Monday for the first round of Egypt’s parliamentary elections, the first since former president Hosni Mubarak’s overthrow in February.

About 17.5 million Egyptians are eligible to vote in the first round that runs for two days, according to government figures.

Voting did not get off to a completely smooth start on Monday morning, with complaints of delays in the opening of voting, despite the fact that Interior Ministry teams were in place to ensure that voting went smoothly.

According to reports, nearly half of Egypt’s polling stations opened late, or had still not opened to the public by mid-morning. It was not clear what caused the delay.

Long lines formed at the polling stations that did open, with some Egyptians getting ready to vote for the first time in their lives. At a polling station in a local school in Cairo’s Zamalek neighborhood, 500 people were standing in line.

“I am voting in the name of liberty, until today we lived in slavery. Now we want justice and freedom,” one 50-year old voter told the Associated Press.

“We are afraid of the Muslim Brotherhood, but we lived under Mubarak’s rule for 30 years, we will also survive with them,” she added.

The number of seats up for grabs in the first round is 168, contested by 3,809 candidates. Polling stations are scheduled to close at 7 P.M. local time

Islamist parties, which had all been officially licensed after Mubarak’s ouster, are expected to make big wins in the three-round elections that run through until January 10.

The new parliament will be tasked with setting up a committee to draft a new constitution before the presidential election by the end of June.

Egypt’s military rulers and Islamists both called Sunday on Egyptians to go to the polls for the country’s first election since former president Hosni Mubarak’s overthrow, as thousands of protesters gathered in central Cairo for one more rally against the junta.

The head of the ruling military council, Hussein Tantawi, pledged that parliamentary elections, scheduled for Monday, would not be postponed and would be taking place amid “maximum security.”

For more, go to Haaretz.com

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