Alwaght- Low turnout has marked Egypt’s second phase of elections that are meant to restore parliament after a more than three-year gap but which the opposition says has been undermined by widespread repression.
Polling stations opened at 9 a.m. local time (0700 GMT) on Sunday and closed 12 hours later. The same process will also be followed on Monday.
The elections seen by President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi as a milestone on the army's roadmap to democracy but voter turnout has been low, with only a quarter of the electorate casting ballots in the first phase on Oct. 18-19.
Sisi supporters won a landslide in the first leg and are expected to repeat their performance on Sunday and Monday when voting takes place in the capital Cairo and 12 other provinces. Television once again showed footage of largely empty polling stations.
The government announced it was giving public sector workers half a day off on Monday to encourage them to cast their ballots.
Many who abstained said they felt the polls offered little genuine choice in the absence of the main opposition Muslim Brotherhood and other critics and that parliament would change little in lives dominated by the struggle to earn a living.
Egypt's last parliament was elected in 2011-12, in the first election after the popular uprising that ended Hosni Mubarak's 30-year rule. Voting then was marked by long queues and youthful excitement. The Muslim Brotherhood, long the country's main opposition movement, won about half the seats. A court dissolved that parliament in mid-2012. Egypt’s first democratically-elected president Mohammad Morsi, was overthrown by the military under the leadership of Sisi in July 2013. Morsi and other top Muslim Brotherhood members have been jailed while the military regime continues its crackdown on the opposition.
