EL-BARADEI CALLS FOR EGYPT ELECTION BOYCOTT

Nobel laureate and Egypt’s leading democracy advocate Mohammed El-Baradei has made a forceful call for the nation to boycott November’s parliamentary election and urged his young supporters to be patient and plan for a lengthy struggle.

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August 16, 2022

Nobel laureate and Egypt’s leading democracy advocate Mohammed El-Baradei has made a forceful call for the nation to boycott November’s parliamentary election and urged his young supporters to be patient and plan for a lengthy struggle. He told about 200 activists gathered on September 6 for a Ramadhan meal that participating in the vote would go against “the national will” to transform Egypt into a genuine democracy. “If the whole people boycott the elections totally, it will be in my view the end of the regime,” he told reporters afterward. Egypt’s opposition groups are divided over the issue of a boycott and it is not clear how many would heed a call not to contest or vote in the election. The largest opposition force, Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhood, for example, is unlikely to boycott, although it backs El-Baradei and his demands for change. El-Baradei, who served as the chief of the UN nuclear agency, returned home in February to a hero’s welcome. Supporters have rallied behind him to press for democratic reforms and urged him to run in the 2011 presidential election. El-Baradei, whose campaign has provoked government anger, said he would only run if there were constitutional changes and guarantees of free elections. In six months, his campaign has gathered around 800,000 signatures on a petition calling for such changes – a force that seems to have encouraged El-Baradei to attack the government more forcefully.