Egypt's mindboggling first time choosing a leader

Samedi 12 Mai 2012

Egyptians are for the first time getting a taste of how it is to choose a president— with groundbreaking presidential debates, face-to-face encounters with candidates on the campaign trail, and chances to question their programs, political history and even personal lives.
Egypt's mindboggling first time choosing a leader
The official campaigning period has been limited to a brief three weeks, and the election process has been marred with legal  pitfalls, violence and even threats of postponing of the vote due to begin May 23.

But the campaign for the election definitely marks one real change: Whoever becomes president will no longer be an untouchable and unquestionable pharaoh like ousted leader Hosni Mubarak was during his 29 years of authoritarian rule.

During a late night debate between two top candidates, the first ever in Egypt and the Arab world, crowds gathered around TV screens at outdoor cafes for the unprecedented sight of their potential leaders grilling each another over their political affiliations and pasts.

For four hours, lasting until early Friday, Abdel-Moneim Abolfotoh — a moderate Islamist who was a dissident during the regime of Mubarak and his predecessor Anwar Sadat — faced off against Amr Moussa, a former foreign minister who was amongEgypt's most popular politicians because of his vocal criticism of Israel.

A simple question showed how unimaginable the debate would have been only a year and half before: The moderator asked the two to tell their health conditions and wealth. Mubarak's health was considered a state secret — one journalist was sentenced to  prison for speculating about it — and inquiring into his finances was unthinkable.

Prepared, Abolfotoh pulled out copies of his medical records and said he has slightly high blood pressure and diabetes.

Moussa, 75, was more elusive. "If there was wood here, I would knock on it," he joked. "When I am elected, I have no objection to offering a medical report." He then waded into Abolfotoh, accusing him of questioning his competitors' health just to seem like the more transparent candidate.

"You have hidden the state of your health and your wealth," the 60-year-old Abolfotoh shot back. His backers in a young crowd at a downtown Cairo cafe broke out in applause.

Moussa drew cheers when he accused his rival of paying homage only to the Muslim Brotherhood, the Islamist group to which Abolfotoh belonged until last year, instead of to the cause of the nation. At one particularly heated point when Abolfotoh questioned his legacy as foreign minister, Moussa hopped with anger behind his podium and barked, "You don't understand these things, you just don't want to believe!"

"The debate exposes the faults of both," said Mohammed el-Doh, a 28-year old medical equipment engineer at the cafe. "People  have never seen this before. We are not used to it, and the candidates are taking jabs at one another. It chips away at the politician's respectability."

On the campaign trail, all the 13 candidates have had to face public exposure, often more focused on the personal than on their economic or social programs. That could be a sign of how their programs had few clear differences on tackling Egypt's  myriad of woes — but also a reflection of the new fixation of finding out as much as possible about the new leader.

"We are in a state of conflict between the new culture and the original one that put the ruler in an exceptional place, above  the state and politics, a pharaoh who embodies divine and earthly rule," said Wael Abdel-Fattah, a cultural commentator and  columnist.

"Mubarak was everything.There are people who defended him as a leader, a father. Now this is disintegrating, and will fall."


During Mubarak's rule, most of his campaigns were state-organized and tightly controlled with audiences selected by security agents to ensure they adhere to a strict script of shouted praise and poetry for the leader during his appearances. In one incident, in 1999, during a visit to the Suez canal city of Port Said, a man approaching with a petition and a complaint was  shot dead.

It wasn't until 2005 that Mubarak even had to face a competitor, since previously he ran in yes-or-no referendums. That elect ion was Mubarak's last, before he was toppled on Feb. 11, 2011.

In contrast, the current candidates at their rallies face crowds mixed with supporters, the undecided and opponents — who don't hesitate to ridicule the man on stage. Moussa was heckled at a university in south Egypt and called "feloul," or "remnants of the old regime."



Source : https://www.marocafrik.com/english/Egypt-s-mindbog...

AP