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Behold the naivety of the liberal West.
Democracy has never replaced a dictatorship in the Middle East. It's invariably the fundamentalists that take over and make things even worse.
Islamists sweep early results in Egypt election
Published on Dec 4, 2011
Early results from Egypt's first post-revolution election showed Islamist parties sweeping to victory on Saturday, including hardline Salafists, with secular parties trounced in many areas. -- PHOTO: AFP
CAIRO (AFP) - Early results from Egypt's first post-revolution election showed Islamist parties sweeping to victory on Saturday, including hardline Salafists, with secular parties trounced in many areas.
Partial figures trickled in for the areas of the country that voted in record numbers on Monday and Tuesday, confirming earlier predictions that Islamist parties would win at least two-thirds of ballots cast.
In northern Port Said, the moderate Islamist alliance led by the previously banned Muslim Brotherhood triumphed with 32.5 per cent of votes for parties, while the hardline Al-Nur party gained 20.7 per cent, Al-Ahram newspaper said.
The liberal Wafd party won 14 per cent, while another Islamist party, Al-Wasat recorded 12.9 per cent, according to the state-run daily. In the southern Red Sea district, the Brotherhood's alliance won 30 per cent, while secular coalition the Egyptian Bloc came in second with 15 per cent, it said.
Democracy has never replaced a dictatorship in the Middle East. It's invariably the fundamentalists that take over and make things even worse.
Islamists sweep early results in Egypt election
Published on Dec 4, 2011

Early results from Egypt's first post-revolution election showed Islamist parties sweeping to victory on Saturday, including hardline Salafists, with secular parties trounced in many areas. -- PHOTO: AFP
CAIRO (AFP) - Early results from Egypt's first post-revolution election showed Islamist parties sweeping to victory on Saturday, including hardline Salafists, with secular parties trounced in many areas.
Partial figures trickled in for the areas of the country that voted in record numbers on Monday and Tuesday, confirming earlier predictions that Islamist parties would win at least two-thirds of ballots cast.
In northern Port Said, the moderate Islamist alliance led by the previously banned Muslim Brotherhood triumphed with 32.5 per cent of votes for parties, while the hardline Al-Nur party gained 20.7 per cent, Al-Ahram newspaper said.
The liberal Wafd party won 14 per cent, while another Islamist party, Al-Wasat recorded 12.9 per cent, according to the state-run daily. In the southern Red Sea district, the Brotherhood's alliance won 30 per cent, while secular coalition the Egyptian Bloc came in second with 15 per cent, it said.