Egypt’s Sisi secures third term in widely expected election win

Egypt’s Sisi secures third term in widely expected election win

Egypt’s President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi has won a third term with 89.6 per cent of the vote in the Arab world’s most populous country, the national election authority said Monday.

The outcome of the December 10-12 poll was widely expected after the former army chief with a fondness for infrastructure mega-projects campaigned against a small field of relative unknowns.

It secures 69-year-old Sisi his third and, according to the Egyptian constitution, final term in office, starting in April and set to run for six years.

His victory comes despite a painful economic crisis, marked by a currency plunge and runaway household prices, and heightened regional tensions sparked by the Israel-Hamas fighting in neighbouring Gaza.

Annual inflation is running at 36.4pc, sending up prices of some food staples by the week and hurting household budgets in the country of nearly 106 million.

Even before the current economic crisis, about two-thirds of Egypt’s population lived on or below the poverty line.

A decade-long crackdown on dissent had eliminated any serious competition for Sisi, Egypt’s fifth president to emerge from within the ranks of the military since 1952.

It was the third time in a decade Sisi won a landslide victory, albeit with his smallest margin. In 2014 and 2018, Sisi won over 96pc of the vote.

overthrow of elected president Mohamed Morsi in 2013.

He later extended the presidential mandate from four to six years and amended the constitution to raise the limit on consecutive terms from two to three years.

His administration has overseen the imprisonment of tens of thousands of political opponents as the space for dissent has been progressively curtailed.

The all-but-decimated opposition had built momentum this year before the election before media and public attention were diverted by the Gaza crisis.

For a brief while, some expected the election to include two main opposition figures who — despite having no real hope of winning — were intended to highlight dissident voices.

Today, one is in prison and the other is awaiting trial.

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