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The Muslim Brotherhood claimed Friday its candidate had secured a spot in the second round of Egypt's first free presidential election, with most of the ballots counted, and expected to meet ex-PM Ahmed Shafiq in the June run-off.
CAIRO (Reuters) - The Muslim Brotherhood is reaching out to rivals including politicians knocked out of the presidential race in an attempt to rally support around its own candidate who faces a runoff against Hosni Mubarak's last prime minister, Ahmed Shafiq.
CAIRO (Reuters) - The Muslim Brotherhood said on Friday its candidate was leading the early count in Egypt's first free presidential election that exposed a rift in the nation between supporters of Islamists and backers of men who served deposed autocrat Hosni Mubarak. The Brotherhood said Mohamed Mursi was ahead based on a small sample of results shortly after voting ended in an election th
Egyptians continued to cast ballots across the country on Thursday as voting in the country’s historic presidential election entered a second day. Twelve candidates are vying to succeed Hosni Mubarak, who was ousted by a popular revolt last year.
The Muslim Brotherhood claimed Friday its candidate was leading in Egypt's historic presidential election, with approximately half the ballots counted. Official election results are not due until Sunday.
Egyptians formed long queues at polling stations across the country on Wednesday as they voted in the historic presidential election. Twelve candidates are vying to succeed Hosni Mubarak, who was ousted by a popular revolt last year.
Egyptians are set to vote in the country's first-ever competitive presidential elections on Wednesday. With 12 names on the ballot and unreliable opinion polls, the highly-anticipated race is looking as unpredictable as it is historic.
The deal between Fatah and Hamas outlines work on registering voters for elections that would bring in a new unity government.
Three days before Egypt’s presidential elections, a combination of high stakes, suspense and confusion has made for a heady atmosphere.
As Manchester City's delirious fans spilled onto the pitch to revel in their team's remarkable English title win on Sunday, the celebrations also kicked off thousands of miles away in Abu Dhabi.
Field Marshal Mohamed Hussein Tantawi spoke amid concerns about the potential for voting fraud and the military’s willingness to shift to civilian control.
As Egypt prepares for elections - the first truly free poll for a national leader in the country's 5,000 year history - Colin Freeman talks to voters in Cairo.
Amr Moussa, a former Egyptian foreign minister who served under President Hosni Mubarak, is trying to make a strength from the liability of his long government career.
Amr Moussa (right) and Abdel Moneim Abol Fotouh (left), the two frontrunners among Egypt's 13 presidential candidates, discussed their pasts, Islamic law and relations with Israel in a heated TV debate on Wednesday.
The main candidates have said that security and the economy are the most important issues to voters, but a debate returned repeatedly to questions about religious influence.
One person was killed and several injured in Libya’s capital Tripoli on Tuesday after clashes erupted outside interim Prime Minister Abdurrahim El-Keib’s office, highlighting instability in the country a month before its first election in decades.
The generals’ willingness to submit to civilian authority will determine whether last year’s uprising lives up to its billing as a democratic revolution or amounts instead to a coup.
Egyptian authorities have detained at least 179 people after a soldier was killed and almost 300 people were injured on Friday as security forces clashed with protesters demanding an end to military rule in Cairo.

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