Egyptians
went to the polls Wednesday on the first day of presidential elections seen as
an important step in the country's transition to democracy. Voting has been
running smoothly apart from isolated incidents.
Egyptians
on Wednesday cast their ballots on the first day of landmark free elections as
they voted for a new president.
More than
50 million eligible voters from a population of 80 million have been choosing
from among 13 candidates that include both Islamists and secular figures.
Turnout on
the first day of the two-day poll has been described as moderate, and voting
was extended for another hour on Wednesday. Thursday has been declared a public
holiday to encourage voters.
The
elections are the first free poll in over 30 years, following the ousting of
President Hosni Mubarak in a popular uprising 15 months ago. Independent
monitors say they have seen no major abuses.
Voting has
been largely calm. However, a policeman guarding a polling station in the
capital, Cairo, was shot dead in an exchange of fire with suspected criminals,
state television reported.
The report
said a gunman and a passing motorist were also injured by the gunfire.
Attack on
candidate
In another
incident, protesters attacked the candidate Ahmed Shafiq, who was Mubarak's
last prime minister, as he voted at another Cairo polling station late in the
day.
Witnesses
said Shafiq, 70, was not hurt as shoes and stones were thrown at his convoy.
Other
contenders include former foreign minister and Arab League head Amr Moussa, the
Muslim Brotherhood's Mohammed Morsi, independent Islamist Abdel-Monaem
Abul-Fetouh and the leftist candidate, Hamdeen Sabahy.
The
Egyptian election system will require a run-off between the top two candidates
if no one gets more than the half of votes needed to win outright. This would
take place on June 16 and 17.
The final
result would be announced on June 21.
First-round
results will be formally announced on Tuesday, but the outcome may be clear as
early as Saturday.
tj/sej (AFP, Reuters, AP)

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