By AFP
CAIRO: Islamists seized most seats in the two-stage vote for Egypt’s upper house of parliament, the Shura Council, the electoral commission said on Saturday.
The results cap landmark legislative elections that saw Islamists propelled to the center stage of Egyptian politics.
A commission official said the Muslim Brotherhood’s Freedom and Justice Party (FJP) secured 105 seats or about 58 percent, the Salafi Al-Nour Party took 45, the liberal Al-Wafd won 14, and the Egyptian Bloc eight. Another eight seats went to smaller factions.
The vote, which began on Jan. 29, was for 180 seats in the 270-seat chamber in which the remaining third of seats are allocated by the head of the state.
Electoral commission chief Abdel Moez Ibrahim told reporters on Saturday the turnout in voting for the Shura was not more than 10 percent.
Many polling stations were empty on Wednesday, the final day of voting for the Shura, in sharp contrast to the long queues and active campaigning that marked the People’s Assembly vote.
Members of both houses of parliament will now choose a panel to draft a new constitution.
The elections are part of a roadmap for a transition to democratic rule laid out by the ruling military council that took power after the popular uprising that overthrew president Hosni Mubarak last year.
Under the complex system adopted after Mubarak’s ouster, two thirds of the Shoura’s 180 elected members are elected via a party-list system, while one third are elected directly.
The powerful Brotherhood’s FJP won a crushing victory in the lower house elections, contested over three months, to clinch 47 percent of seats.
Al-Nour, representing the ultra-conservative Salafi current of Islam, came second, with liberal parties trailing far behind.
The election comes amid nationwide protests calling for the ouster of the SCAF led by Tantawi, who was also Mubarak’s long-time defense minister.
Protesters accuse the military council of mismanagement and of human rights abuses.
The SCAF has vowed to cede power to civilian rule by June when a new president is elected, but there is a widespread belief it seeks to maintain some degree of control even afterwards.