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Egyptian protesters rally to keep Islamist in race

Last Updated 04 May 2018, 05:49 IST

Thousands rallied in Cairo today in support of an ultraconservative Islamist presidential hopeful who may be disqualified from the race after it was announced that his mother was an American citizen.

The protesters carried photos and campaign posters of Hazem Abu Ismail, a 50-year-old lawyer-turned-preacher who in recent months vaulted to become one of the strongest contenders for president, with widespread backing from ultraconservative Muslims known as Salafis.

The showdown between Abu Ismail's supporters and the government has shaken-up a race that includes former regime officials and Islamists competing against one another in the first presidential election since last year's ouster or Hosni Mubarak.

The balloting is slated for the end of May.

Egypt's election commission, which announced Thursday that Abu Ismail's mother was a U.S. citizen, did not outright disqualify him because it has yet to start vetting would-be candidates' applications.

A law put in place after Mubarak's fall stipulates that a candidate may not have any other citizenship than Egyptian -- and that the candidate's spouse and parents cannot have other citizenships as well.

As his disqualification looked increasingly likely, Abu Ismail said Thursday he faces an "elaborate plot" against him and insisted his mother only had a Green Card to visit her daughter, who is married to an American and lives in the United States.

The announcement about his mother is particularly embarrassing for Abu Ismail, who has used anti-US rhetoric in his campaign speeches and says he rejects "dependency" on America.

His campaign team claims the country's military rulers, who took over after Mubarak's ouster, are looking for ways to disqualify him as a candidate. As his supporters began marching after Friday prayers down a main Cairo street toward the central Tahrir Square, his campaign chief, Gamal Saber, said the ruling military council is "lying about the sheik.""We have proof that his mother is not American," Saber said, adding that their supporters are prepared "to die in Tahrir Square" to fight the "fraud".

A follower of the ultra-conservative Salafi trend of Islam, Abu Ismail has been among the front-runners in the race. If he is disqualified, it opens the door for Muslim Brotherhood candidate Khairat el-Shater to win a greater number of Islamist votes.

Another Islamist in the race is Abdel-Moneim Abolfotoh, a reform minded physician who was expelled from the Brotherhood last year and is trying to appeal both to religious and more secular-minded Egyptians.

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(Published 06 April 2012, 16:29 IST)

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