CAIRO
— Early results from Egypt’s election showed President Abdel Fattah
el-Sisi headed for a landslide victory with 92 percent of the vote,
state media reported Thursday, an unsurprising margin in a race where he
eliminated all serious opposition months ago.
Mr.
Sisi’s token opponent, Moussa Moustapha Moussa, received just 3 percent
of the vote, less than the number of spoiled ballots, state media said.
With his main rivals in jail or forced from the contest,
Mr. Sisi relied on voter turnout to demonstrate his popularity. State
media said that about 40 percent of voters cast ballots during the three
days of voting that ended Wednesday, down from 47 percent in the 2014
election that formalized Mr. Sisi’s power.
State
television said the preliminary results were based on counts in 24 of
27 governorates. It did not say what proportion of the vote had been
tallied. Official results are expected on Monday.
Voters
were subject to bribes, blandishments and threats in an effort to get
them to the polls. Some said they had been promised bags of free groceries
or payments of as little as $3 for casting their ballot. Others were
lavished with promises of improved municipal services, or tempted with a
chance to win a pilgrimage to Mecca.
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On
Wednesday, the election authority repeated a threat to impose a $28
fine on voters who failed to cast their ballot. Voting was extended by
an hour on Wednesday after a sandstorm lashed Cairo, keeping some people
from polls, officials said.
Coverage
of those tactics in the international news media drew harsh criticism
from the government and its supporters, who accused reporters of
presenting a distorted picture of the election.
“So
the foreign media chose darkness,” wrote Hany Assal, a columnist with
the state-run Ahram newspaper. “It reported and searched for the
negative and worked hard to emphasize it.”
The State Information Service warned foreign reporters of unspecified consequences for “unprofessional” coverage of the election.
Mr.
Sisi’s Western allies have been largely silent through the campaign,
offering little or no criticism even as journalists were being arrested
and the military jailed a former army chief who tried to run against Mr.
Sisi.
In
a message posted to the United States Embassy’s Twitter feed on Monday,
the first day of the vote, the United States chargé d’affaires in
Cairo, Thomas H. Goldberger, said: “As Americans we are very impressed
by the enthusiasm and patriotism of Egyptian voters.”
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