A line of more than 1,200 women lined up in Ma’adi, a suburb of Cairo, to vote on Monday. (Photo: Matthew Bell)
November 29: A second day of voting is taking place in Egypt in the first elections since President Hosni Mubarak was overthrown, with indications of a high turnout in Cairo and other big cities.
Many protesters occupying Cairo’s Tahrir Square have boycotted the vote. The elections for a new parliament have been mainly peaceful so far.
General Ismail Atman, a member of the ruling council of army generals, told al-Jazeera TV that he expected turnout in this phase of voting to exceed 70%.
BBC Coverage
Journalists tweeting from Egypt:
The World’s Matthew Bell
The BBC’s Lyse Doucet
Al Jazeera’s Sherine Tadros
NBC’s Richard Engel
CBC’s Derek Stoffel
Financial Times’ Borzou Daragahi
On The World:
Long Lines For Egypt Vote
What’s At Stake In Egyp
Egypt Before The Crucial Vote
The Revolution at Cairo’s American University
UN Condemns ‘Excessive Use Of Force’ in Egypt
Pushing For Police Reform
Egyptians Wary Of The Future
Read tweets about the protests in Egypt
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