(Reuters) - The
defeated candidate in Egypt's presidential election, Hamdeen Sabahi,
appealed on Friday against results that gave former army chief Abdel
Fattah al-Sisi victory, saying election rules had been broken. Leftist politician
Sabahi won 3 percent of votes in the election against more than 93
percent of votes cast for Sisi, judicial sources said. Official results
have yet to be announced. The
election took place against the background of a crackdown against
supporters of Mohamed Mursi, deposed as president by the army last July,
which has seen his Muslim Brotherhood outlawed, hundreds killed and
thousands arrested. On
Thursday, Sabahi conceded defeat but said the official turnout figures
was too high and were "an insult to the intelligence of Egyptians". Sabahi's
campaign said in a statement it had made a legal complaint to the
elections committee objecting to "the existence of campaigning inside
polling stations" by Sisi supporters, among other abuses. It also appealed to the committee to nullify all votes cast on the third day of polling. Authorities
extended voting by one day at the last minute on Tuesday, an
extraordinary measure that observer missions said raised questions about
the integrity of the electoral process although it was not an illegal
move. Sisi led the
overthrow of Mursi after mass protests against his rule. Sabahi came
third in 2012 elections that brought Mursi to power as Egypt's first
freely elected leader.
Egypt's Sabahi contests presidential elections results
Reuters
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