Former Presidential candidate and a leftist leader Hamdeen Sabahy (Image: Egypt Today) |
Reuters - CAIRO:
A prominent opponent of President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi said Egypt's fragmented
pro-democracy opposition parties had "failed" the country and he
vowed to forge a new movement able to provide a genuine alternative to the
current government.
Hamdeen Sabahy,
like many other leftists and nationalists, backed Sisi's 2013 overthrow of
Egypt's first democratically elected president, Mohamed Mursi of the Muslim
Brotherhood, and the subsequent ban on the group.
Sabahy then
became the only candidate to run against Sisi in the 2014 presidential election
but won only 3 percent of the vote. He has since criticized Sisi's crackdown on
democratic freedoms including the right to protest.
Sabahy told
Reuters in an interview this week that Egypt's non-Islamist opposition
groupings needed to bury their differences and forge a new united force that
could offer a more democratic alternative to Sisi's government.
"We failed
the Egyptian people. We were unable to form a serious organized body to
represent them," he said, lamenting the lack of democracy and civic
freedoms in Egypt five years after a 2011 uprising ended the 30-year rule of
Hosni Mubarak.
"Egypt
needs alternatives. When Egyptians realize that five years after the revolution
the answers they are offered are the same ones they have always been offered
then our job isn't just to point that out but to provide alternatives."
This week the
center-left Popular Current and some independent politicians merged with the
Arab Nationalist Karama Party founded by Sabahy in a revived push to attract
ordinary Egyptians disenchanted with Sisi's economic policies and crackdown on
freedoms.
RESENTMENT
Sisi, who
initially enjoyed strong support from Egyptians opposed to the Muslim
Brotherhood, has seen his popularity begin to wane in recent months as the
economy teeters on the verge of crisis and resentment builds over a series of
police abuses.
Sabahy said the
political environment was not conducive to organized protests or strikes,
though he added this might change. The movement is considering running in local
elections as a first step.
Several leftist
and liberal parties initially planned to run in Egypt's parliamentary election
late last year, but most dropped out as alliances crumbled and under-funded
parties imploded. The result is a parliament dominated by Sisi supporters,
Mubarak-era faces and big business.
Many opposition
groups and activists snubbed the parliamentary poll, calling it a sham.
Sabahy himself
has lost credibility among both loyalist and opposition Egyptians since he ran
against Sisi. Dissidents said his candidacy gave political legitimacy to the
poll, while Sisi supporters scorned what they saw as his failed act of
defiance.
Sabahy said the
new initiative, which has come under fierce attack from both sides, was not
aimed at removing Sisi.
"The core of what we are offering is
alternatives to how Egypt is governed, not who governs Egypt," he said.
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