Egypt concludes Senate election

Egyptian President Abdel-Fattah al-Sisi. (Xinhua/MENA/IANS)

Egypt concluded the two-day election for its first Senate on Wednesday, amid anti-COVID-19 precautionary measures at polling stations nationwide. The governmental body was created in a 2019 constitutional amendment.

Vote counting started right after the closure of polling stations, after the voting process took place in over 14,000 balloting stations under the supervision of about 20,000 judges across the country, Xinhua news agency reported on Wednesday.

Some 63 million eligible voters had the right to take part in the election but the turnout hasn’t yet been announced.

eople wait to cast their ballots outside a polling station in Cairo, Egypt, on Aug. 12, 2020. The voting for the Egyptian Senate, the upper chamber of parliament, continued on Wednesday. The voting was held on Tuesday and Wednesday in 11,500 polling stations under the supervision of 20,000 judges across the country.

Diaa Rashwan, head of Egypt’s State Information Service (SIS), told a local TV channel on Wednesday that the Senate election was also monitored by 564 foreign correspondents representing 163 foreign media institutions.

“All international media confirmed the strength of security and precautionary measures during the Senate election,” the SIS chief added.

The newly created Council of Senators will be an advisory body without legislative authorities. Two thirds of the 300-member Senate will be elected while the other 100 will be appointed by the president.

The new Senate, whose term is five years, is to replace the Shoura Council, the upper house of Egypt’s parliament that was dissolved in 2014.

The results of election are expected to be announced on August 19.

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