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Egypt presidential vote a two-man race

Ex-army chief Abdel Fattah al-Sisi and leftist Hamdeen Sabbahi will contest Egypt's presidential election in a two-man race.

Leftist Egyptian presidential candidate Hamdeen Sabbahi
Abdel Fattah al-Sisi and Hamdeen Sabbahi (pic) will contest Egypt's presidential election. (AAP)

Egypt's presidential election next month is set to be a contest between ex-army chief Abdel Fattah al-Sisi and leftist Hamdeen Sabbahi, after nobody else entered the race by Sunday's cut-off.

The lack of other candidates means the poll will be held over one round on May 26 and 27, with Sisi expected to easily win after he led the ousting of divisive Islamist president Mohamed Morsi last July.

Sisi's campaign submitted almost 200,000 signatures backing his candidacy, well over the 25,000 required endorsements.

Sisi's support dwarfed Sabbahi's, who gathered around 30,000 signatures. They were the only two candidates to submit the endorsements before Sunday's deadline.

"Every candidate can now appeal against the other. We have two who requested candidacy," electoral committee official Abdel al-Aziz Salman told a news conference.

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The final list of candidates will be confirmed on May 2.

Sisi, who resigned from the army last month to contest the election, is riding a wave of popularity for ending the divisive presidency of Morsi after days of mass protests.

But Morsi's supporters accuse Sisi of leading a coup against the country's first elected and civilian president after only a year in office.

The Islamist's supporters continue almost daily small protests, while militants have unleashed a deadly campaign against policemen and soldiers.

Sabbahi, who had supported Morsi's overthrow, had placed third in the 2012 election that Morsi won.

He has since styled himself as a "revolutionary" opposed to the powerful military's role in politics.


2 min read

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Source: AAP



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