Egyptian election front runner Abdel Fattah al-Sisi calls for big turnout
Former Egyptian army chief Abdel Fattah al-Sisi has called for a big turnout in a presidential election he is expected to win easily, countering a call for a boycott by allies of deposed Islamist president Mohammed Mursi.
Former Egyptian army chief Abdel Fattah al-Sisi has called for a big turnout in a presidential election he is expected to win easily, countering a call for a boycott by allies of deposed Islamist president Mohammed Mursi.
Sisi (pictured), who deposed Mursi after mass protests against his rule last July, faces only one competitor in the May 26 to 27 election, leftist Hamdeen Sabahi. He came third in the 2012 election won by Mursi of the Muslim Brotherhood.
Sisi on Sunday called on Egyptians to vote in "unprecedented numbers for the sake of Egypt", according to an official statement outlining comments he made during a meeting on Sunday with investors in the tourism industry.
An alliance of Islamist parties opposed to last year's military takeover had earlier issued a statement declaring their boycott of the election, describing it as "a farce" designed to appoint "the coup orchestrator" as president.
Sisi, who has been lionised by the Egyptian media, was widely seen as Egypt's de facto leader after deposing Mursi. He stepped down from his position as head of the military and defence minister last month in order to run in the election.
His supporters see him as the kind of strong figure needed to stabilise a country in crisis. His opponents, mostly in the Islamist opposition, see him as the mastermind of a bloody coup that robbed power from Egypt's first freely elected leader.