Another Sisi Rival at Risk of Exiting Egypt Election Race

General Sami Anan has been accused of breaking the law right his bid to run for presidency, argues the current president Abdel Fattah el-Sisi. Photo: AFP

Another potential challenger to Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi appeared in danger Tuesday of dropping out of the election race after he was accused of breaking the law with his candidacy announcement.

The allegations against General Sami Anan, a former armed forces chief of staff, mean that Mr. Sisi seems to be heading towards the March polls with most of his possible rivals already out of the running.

The general command of the Egyptian armed forces, in a video posted on Facebook, accused Mr. Anan of crimes including forgery.

Mr. Anan’s campaign team said he had been arrested.

While there was no official confirmation of that, the armed forces said in the video that “all legal procedures must be followed regarding infractions and crimes committed that require his appearance before the relevant investigating bodies.”

Several prominent figures who had been seen as potential challengers to Mr. Sisi had already either ruled themselves out or were sentenced to prison even before registrations opened on Saturday.

Mr. Sisi was elected president in 2014, a year after leading the military ouster of Islamist president Mohamed Morsi when he was himself commander in chief.

The video accused Mr. Anan of announcing his intention to run in the election “without getting the approval of the armed forces or following the required procedures to end his service in the military.”

It also said Mr. Anan’s announcement on Saturday “constitutes direct incitement against the armed forces with the intent of causing a rift between it and the great Egyptian people”.

Mr. Anan was accused of forging official documents to erroneously suggest that his service in the armed forces had ended.

His candidacy announcement had come just hours after Mr. Sisi confirmed he would seek a second term in the March 26-28 election, the third since the 2011 overthrow of strongman Hosni Mubarak.

One of Mr. Anan’s top campaign aides, Hisham Geneina, told AFP that the presidential hopeful was arrested on Tuesday morning.

His detention came before the armed forces’ statement, added Mr. Geneina, the former head of the Central Auditing Authority (CAA) who was sacked by Mr. Sisi in 2016 after he was accused of exaggerating the cost of corruption.

Mustafa Elshall, Anan’s campaign manager, also reported the arrest on his Twitter account.

Ali Taha, a lawyer, said he was asked by the campaign to defend Anan, who in his announcement speech said he had already put in place a team of civilians to support his bid, including Mr. Geneina.

Mr. Anan served as armed forces chief of staff from 2005 until he was retired by Mr. Morsi in 2012.

When the longtime strongman was forced to step down by the Arab Spring protests of 2011, he ceded power to the Supreme Council of Armed Forces (SCAF), an interim executive made up of 20 generals in which Mr. Anan served as number two.

Mr. Anan’s spokesman Hazem Hosni, a political science professor at Cairo University, said he had been meeting with the presidential hopeful and Mr. Geneina for months to discuss the country’s situation and potential solutions.

“He sees that the state must have space for civil freedoms, political participation, and that killing politics this way in Egypt is not right,” Mr. Hosni told AFP on Tuesday before the armed forces’ video was posted.

Would-be candidates for the presidency must register with the National Elections Authority by January 29, but some have already stepped aside.

Former prime minister Ahmed Shafiq said on January 7 that he would not stand, reversing a pledge he made from the United Arab Emirates in November.

Mr. Shafiq had disappeared for 24 hours after being deported to Egypt last month following years in exile in the UAE.

Last week, Mohamed Anwar Sadat, a dissident and nephew of the late president of the same name, said he too would not run because the climate was not right for free elections.

Other potential candidates include Khaled Ali, a rights lawyer and 2012 presidential candidate, and military Colonel Ahmed Konsowa.

However, a military court in December sentenced Mr. Konsowa to six years in jail after he announced his intention to stand.

Ali meanwhile has appealed a three-month sentence in September on charges of offending public decency, in relation to a photograph that Ali says was fabricated and that appeared to show him making an obscene gesture outside a court house.

Egypt has been under an extended state of emergency after a spate of terrorist attacks that have rattled the nation.

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