Relive vote count in 1st round of Egypt presidential race: How Morsi and Shafiq moved on

Ahram Online, Friday 25 May 2012

According to final vote count, the Brotherhood's Mohamed Morsi is set to face Mubarak-era minister Ahmed Shafiq in runoff vote slated for 16/17 June

Votes-tally in Boulaq Abu El-Ela  (Photo: Mohamed Nada)

All aggregated results were compiled by Ahram Online

FINAL results in all 27 governorates aggregated by Ahram Online shows that with about 43.4 per cent turnout, the Muslim Brotherhood's candidate Mohamed Morsi kept the first place, followed by Ahmed Shafiq, Mubarak's last prime minister, while the Nasserist candidate, Hamdeen Sabbahi, stayed in the third rank.

1. Morsi 5,553,097 (25.30 per cent)
2. Shafiq 5,210,978 (23.74 per cent)
3. Sabbahi 4,739,983 (21.60 per cent)
4. Abul-Fotouh 3,936,264 (17.93 per cent)
5. Moussa 2,407,837 (10.97 per cent)

20:05 FINAL results are in from Cairo for the top four candidates, according to Al-Ahram's Arabic-language news site.

  1. Sabbahi 993,464 (34.6 per cent)
  2. Shafiq 744,138 (25.9 per cent)
  3. Morsi 579,715 (20.1 per cent)
  4. Abul-Fotouh 553,200 (19.2 per cent)

Combined votes for these four are equivalent to 44.2 per cent of the total number of voters registered in the governorate.

Final table
Table showing results of all 27 governorates.

19:15 FINAL results are in from Giza governorateaccording to Al-Ahram's Arabic-language news site. Turnout of voters in one of the three  greater Cairo governorates is around 47.6 per cent, out of a total of 4,289,421 registered voters.

Morsi 566,600 (27.78per cent)
Abul-Fotouh 423,127 (20.7 per cent)
Sabbahi 417,000 (20.4 per cent)
Shafiq 351,000 (17.2 per cent)
Moussa 236,132 (11.56 per cent)
 

18:25 Ahmed Khairy, the official spokesman of the liberal Free Egyptians Party, described the expected two-horse race between Mohamed Morsi and Ahmed Shafiq for Egypt's presidential seat as "the worst-case scenario".

Khairy branded the Muslim Brotherhood's Morsi as an "Islamic fascist" and former prime minister Shafiq as a "military fascist".

"It will be very hard for the party to endorse any of the two candidates. The party will either boycott the elections or allow its members to choose freely as individuals," he added.

 

18:15 Judicial sources in Cairo's general electoral committee told Ahram Online that the results in Cairo and Giza are approximately as follows:

1-Sabbahi 1,409,000
2-Shafiq 1,345,000
3-Morsi 1,146,000

 

16:30 FINAL Results in 25 governorates aggregated by Ahram Online shows that with about 41.8 per cent turnout, the Muslim Brotherhood's candidate Mohamed Morsi remains in the lead, followed by Ahmed Shafiq, Mubarak's last prime minister, while the leftist candidate, Hamdeen Sabbahi, who proved to be the dark horse of the race, fell back to third place. Still waiting for Cairo and Giza results, which will be decisive.

  1. Morsi 4,406,782 (26.48 per cent)
  2. Shafiq 4,115,840 (24.74 per cent)
  3. Sabbahi 3,329,519 (20.01 per cent)
  4. Abul-Fotouh 2,959,937 (17.79 per cent)
  5. Moussa 1,778,244 (10.69 per cent)

15:55 FINAL results are in from Qalioubiya governorateaccording to Al-Ahram's reporters at the headquarters of the Supreme Presidential Elections Commission (SPEC). Turnout of voters in the southern Delta governorate reached around 49.7 per cent, out of a total of 2,606,058 registered voters.

  1. Shafiq 395,553 (30.5 per cent)
  2. Morsi 302,352 (23.3 per cent)
  3. Sabbahi 272,662 (21.0 per cent)
  4. Abul Fotouh 17,0166 (13.1 per cent)
  5. Moussa 155,452 (11.9 per cent)

Table 2

15:30 FINAL results are in from the Upper Egypt governorate Assiutaccording to Al-Ahram's reporters in Assiut. Turnout of voters in Assiut reached around 32.6 per cent, out of a total of 2,087,308 registered voters.

  1. Morsi 210,445 (30.9 per cent)
  2. Shafiq 193,503 (28.4 per cent)
  3. Abul Fotouh 136,006 (20.0 per cent)
  4. Sabbahi 65,017 (9.5 per cent)
  5. Moussa 55,887 (8.2 per cent)

 

15:45 BREAKING: Citing judicial sources in the operations room of the Supreme Presidential Electoral Commission (SPEC) , Ahram's Arabic-language website lists the votes for the top three contenders after 90 per cent of the votes were counted in all governorates:

  1. Mohamed Morsi 5,400,000
  2. Ahmed Shafiq 5,300,000
  3. Hamdeen Sabbahi 4,600,000

 

15:34 FINAL results are in from the governorate of North Sinai, according to Al-Ahram's Arabic-language news website. Turnout of voters in North Sinai reached around 41 per cent, out of a total of 207,906.

  1. Morsi 32,431 (38.03 per cent)
  2. Moussa 20,937 (24.55 per cent)
  3. Abul-Fotouh 15,830 (18.56 per cent)
  4. Shafiq 8,470 (9.93 per cent)
  5. Sabbahi 7,616 (8.93 per cent)

 

15:25 For the first time in history, Egyptians across the nation are choosing their president in a free election. As the final results come in, the field has narrowed to three: the Muslim  Brotherhood candidate Mohamed Morsi, Mubarak-era minister Ahmed Shafiq and Nasserist Hamdeen Sabbahi.

However, significant questions remain. Without a constitution, it remains unclear even what powers the new president will have.

The Egyptian constitution was dissolved after the ouster of Mubarak in 2011, and the ruling military council has been ruling with an interim constitution after a referendum in March of the same year. After the dissolution of the body tasked with drafting the country's new constitution, Egypt remains without a constitution.

Political science researcher Hani Al-Aasar tackles the subject in an Ahram Online article on the eve of the polls:

Analysis: Can Egypt have a president without a constitution?

Egypt's next president will begin his tenure in the absence of a national charter specifying his responsibilities and powers

 

15:00 Egypt is currently waiting for the results of Cairo, Giza, Asiut, and Qalyoubiya governorates. The four governorates include one third of the total registered voters (15 million and 480,674 voters).

 

14:20 FINAL results are in from the Muslim Brotherhood's birthplace Ismailia governorate, according to Al-Ahram's Arabic-language news website. Turnout of voters in the Suez Canal governorate reached around 48.9 per cent, out of a total of 700,515 registered voters.

  1. Morsi 92,633 (27.0 per cent)
  2. Sabbahi 71,679 (20.9 per cent)
  3. Moussa 65,988 (19.2 per cent)
  4. Abul Fotouh 59,697 (17.4 per cent)
  5. Shafiq 52,377 (15.3 per cent)

14:34 FINAL results are in from the southwestern governorate of El-Wadi El-Gedid, according to Al-Ahram's Arabic-language news website. Turnout of voters in El-Wadi El-Gedid reached around 36.9 per cent, out of a total of 141,959.

  1. Morsi 15,571 (29.7 per cent)
  2. Abul-Fotouh  13,338 (25.5 per cent)
  3. Moussa 9,406 (18 per cent)
  4. Sabahi 7,607 (14.5 per cent)
  5. Shafiq 6,448 (12.3 per cent)

14:00 FINAL results are in from the Fayoum governorate, according to Al-Ahram's Arabic-language news website. Turnout of voters in Upper Egypt governorate reached around 38.8 per cent, out of a total of 1,554,788 registered voters.

  1. Morsi 288,848 (47.9 per cent)
  2. Abul Fotouh 168,413 (27.9 per cent)
  3. Shafiq 75,042 (12.4 per cent)
  4. Sabbahi 37,804 (6.2 per cent)
  5. Moussa 32,476 (5.3 per cent)

 

13:30 Final results aggregated by Ahram Online of counted votes in 18 out of 27 governorates (Daqahliya, Sharqiya, Alexandria, Beheira, Gharbiya, Minya, Sohag, Menoufiya, Kafr El-Sheikh, Qena, Beni Suef, Aswan, Damietta, Luxor, Port Said, Suez, Red Sea and South Sinai) show that with 41.6 per cent turnout, Brotherhood candidate Morsi is in first place, followed by Mubarak's last prime minister Shafiq, while the Nasserist candidate Sabbahi, the surprise of this election so far, has fallen back into third place - after the totals of Sharqiya and Sohag governorates were announced.

The results thus far are as following:

  1. Morsi 3,451,433 (25.59 per cent)
  2. Shafiq 3,378,998 (25.05 per cent)
  3. Sabbahi 2,862,143 (21.22 per cent)
  4. Abul-Fotouh 2,362,956 (17.52 per cent)
  5. Moussa 1,431,239 (10.61 per cent)
    table
    Table showing results of 18 governorates. Daqahliya, Sharqiya, Gharbiya and Menoufiya are the weights behind Shafiq's lead.

13:20 Final results are in from the Upper Egyptian governorate of Sohag, according to Al-Ahram's Arabic-language news website. Turnout of voters in Sohag reached around 27.3 per cent, out of a total of 2,347,958 registered voters.

  1. Morsi 202,554 (31.6 per cent)
  2. Shafiq 177,418 (27.7 per cent)
  3. Abul-Fotouh 113,617 (17.7 per cent)
  4. Moussa 100,032 (15.6 per cent)
  5. Sabbahi 47,463 (7.4 per cent)

13:15 Final results are in from the coastal Red Sea Governorate, according to Al-Ahram's Arabic-language news website. The popular touristic governorate achieved a 40.4 per cent turnout out of 225,218 registered voters.

  1. Sabbahi 22,384 (24.6 per cent)
  2. Moussa 18,651 (20.5 per cent)   
  3. Shafiq 18,042 (19.83 per cent)
  4. Abul-Fotouh 16,328 (17.9 per cent)
  5. Morsi 15,593 (17.1 per cent)

12:50 Final results are in from the large working class Imbaba district in Giza governorate, according to CBC Satellite TV channel.

Imbaba is a traditional stronghold of Salafists. The Salafist Nour Party and Al-Jamaa Al-Islamiya's Building and Development Party, as well as the ultra-conservative Salafist Call and Al-Jamaa Al-Salafiya had previously announced their intention to support to Islamist Abul-Fotouh after the disqualification of Salafist Hazem Abu-Ismail from the presidential race. Despite this, Nasserist candidate Hamdeen Sabbahi is reported to have won the most votes in the district.

A total of 239,485 voters cast their ballots.

  1. Sabbahi 77,108 (32.20 per cent)
  2. Shafiq 55,722 (23.27 per cent)
  3. Morsi 43,913 (18.34 per cent)
  4. Abul-Fotouh 35,381 (14.77 per cent)
  5. Moussa 27,361 (11.42 per cent)

12:40 FINAL results are in from Sharqiya governorate, according to Al-Ahram's Arabic-language news website. Sharqiya is the fourth largest governorate in terms of registered voters. A total of 1,666,193 voters cast their ballots with a turnout of 47.6 per cent.

  1. Shafiq 627,808 (37.6 per cent)
  2. Morsi 536,634 (32.2 per cent)
  3. Abul Fotouh 220,920 (13.2 per cent)
  4. Sabbahi 211,106 (12.6 per cent)
  5. Moussa 69,725 (4.1 per cent)

 

12:35 Final results aggregated by Ahram Online of final vote counts in 15 different governorates show a total of 11,088,494 voters cast their ballot in these governorates with a turnout of 42 per cent. 

  1. Morsi 2,696,652 (24.03 per cent)   
  2. Sabbahi 2,581,190  (23.3 per cent)
  3. Ahmed Shafiq 2,555,730 (23.03 per cent) 
  4. Abul-Fotouh 2,012,019 (18.1 per cent) 
  5. Moussa 1,542,831 (11.2 per cent)

 

12:10 The presidential campaign of the Muslim Brotherhood's Freedom and Justice Party candidate, Mohamed Morsi, announced on the group's official website that after counting 90 per cent of the total votes around Egypt's governorates, Morsi is still leading the race.

The campaign claims that the runoffs will be between Morsi and Ahmed Shafiq, according to the numbers they boast.

The Freedom and Justice Party, the political wing of the Brotherhood, will hold a press conference on Friday night to announce the latest updates. The exact time and location of the conference are yet to be announced.

 

12:01 Final results are in from the coastal governorate of Alexandria according to Al-Ahram's Arabic-language news website. Alexandria is the fifth largest governorate in terms of registered voters. A total of 1,761,000 voters cast their ballots with a turnout of 53.5 per cent.

  1. Sabbahi 602,000 (34.2 per cent)  
  2. Abul-Fotouh 387,000 (22 per cent)
  3. Moussa 291,000 (16.5 per cent)    
  4. Morsi 269,000 (15.3 per cent)
  5. Shafiq 212,000 (12 per cent)

11:46 Near final results are in from the Upper Egypt governorate of Luxor, only with the exclusion of the city of Al-Qarna, according to Al-Ahram's Arabic-language news website. A total of 186,128 voters cast their ballot with a turnout of 27.6 per cent.

  1.  Shafiq 47,433 (25.5 per cent)
  2.  Morsi 44,720 (24 per cent)
  3.  Abul-Fotouh 38,635 (20.8 per cent)
  4.  Sabbahi 32,750 (17.6 per cent)
  5.  Moussa 22,590 (12.1 per cent)

11:55 On Friday morning, presidential frontrunner Ahmed Shafiq  expressed his gratitude to all voters who chose him over the course of two days of voting in the first post-Mubarak presidential elections.

On his official Facebook page, Shafiq also promised that if he wins he will ensure that Egyptians live in a climate of freedom.

"To the generous people of Egypt, justice will reign," Shafiq said.

"All thanks and appreciation for your efforts in supporting me as a candidate," he continued.

The administrator of Shafiq's page also directed a few words to rival presidential candidate Hamdeen Sabbahi.

"The Shafiq campaign salutes the honourable Sabbahi, and God bless him. If he wins we will not be upset because he is a patriotic man."

 

11:50 The presidential campaign of the Muslim Brotherhood's Freedom and Justice Party (FJP) candidate Mohamed Morsi announced on their official website that with 90 per cent of the total votes across Egypt's governorates counted, Morsi is still leading the race.

The campaign said that "according to the numbers we have" they can confirm that the run-off will be between the Brotherhood leader Morsi and Mubarak's last prime minister Ahmed Shafiq.

FJP leaders and representatives from Morsi's campaign will hold a press conference on Friday evening to announce the latest updates, with time and place to be announced later Friday.

 

11:38 FINAL results are in from the Delta governorate of Menoufiya, according to Al-Ahram's Arabic-language news website. A total of 1,064,543 voters cast their ballot with a turnout of 47.9 per cent. Worth mentioning that Menoufiya is the home town of former presidents Hosni Mubarak and Anwar Sadat.

  1.   Shafiq 586,345 (55.0 per cent)
  2.   Morsi 203,503 (19.1 per cent)
  3.   Abul-Fotouh 133,788 (12.57 per cent)
  4.   Sabbahi 105,727 (12.57 per cent)
  5.   Moussa 35,180 (3.3 per cent)

11:30 Dark horse Hamdeen Sabbahi's official Facebook page has just announced, in response to the incoming ballot results: "If God forbids it and we don't make it to the runoffs, we will be honoured to have supported the right candidate. We stood by him, we are honoured to be members of his page, we will continue until the dream to live in a country with dignity, pride and security comes true. Our greetings to all honourable patriots."

The official page administrator also stated: "We are still dreaming of a better future, there is still hope. Only 55 per cent of the results have come out. We still have 45 per cent to go. Who has hope like me? I am sure the eagle [Sabbahi's voting symbol] is in the runoff."

11:05 According to state news agency MENA, members of the Carter Center, a US-based NGO that focuses on international democracy promotion, praised Egyptian authorities on Friday morning for their precautions taken to ban violations during the first round of the presidential elections, in contrast to those which members had witnessed in the recent parliamentary elections.

Based on their nationwide observation at polling stations, Carter Center monitors stated that the presidential elections have been much more organised and much smoother than they observed at polling stations in Alexandria during the parliamentary elections.

The Carter Center will provide a report after the vote count in all governorates is finished. The report will touch on the electoral process, campaigning, and the voting from the beginning of the first round until the announcement of the official results.

10:38 FINAL results are in from the Upper Egypt governorate of Beni Suef, according to Al-Ahram's Arabic-language news website. A total of 612,553  voters cast their ballot with a turnout of 42.9 per cent.

  1. Morsi 258,247 (42.1 per cent)
  2. Abul-Fotouh 130,986 (21.4 per cent)
  3. Shafiq 118,296 (19.3 per cent)
  4. Moussa 57,024 (9.31 per cent)
  5. Sabbahi 48,000 (7.8 per cent)

10:25 In a phone conversation this morning, Nesma Youssef, the representative of Abul-Fotouh's campaign in 6 October City, located on the outskirts of Cairo, described to Ahram Online how she felt, as incoming results indicate a two-horse race between Morsi and Shafiq.

"I didn't sleep until 4am," she said. "How did Shafiq get all these votes? Really, how? I am extremely depressed. I will pray that Hamdeen Sabbahi and Abul-Fotouh will be cursed for leaving us to choose between Shafiq and Morsi in the runoffs.

"One of them should have stepped down for the other, just like Abdallah El-Ashaal helped Morsi in polling stations. We wouldn’t have lost. I am in shock.

"Hamdeen did really well among all governorates; he came in first place in 6 October, and Abul-Fotouh came second. Morsi and Shafiq trailed way behind in fourth and fifth places respectively. I don’t know what to do."

 

10:20 BREAKING: The central campaign of the Brotherhood candidate, Mohamed Morsi, announced at a press conference that the results they have indicate Morsi will compete with Shafiq in the presidential election runoffs.

 

9:55 FINAL results are in from the country's sixth largest governorate of Beheira – in terms of registered voters, according to Al-Ahram's Arabic-language news website. A total of 1,329,753 voters cast their ballot with turnout reaching 41.2 per cent.

  1. Morsi 389,206 (29.2 per cent)
  2.  Abul-Fotouh 332,753 (25 per cent)
  3.  Moussa 242,196 (18.2 per cent)
  4.  Sabbahi 194,502 (14.6 per cent)
  5.  Shafiq 171,013 (12.86 per cent)

9:10 FINAL results are in from the Upper Egypt governorate of Aswan, according to Al-Ahram's Arabic-language news website. A total of 252,579 voters cast their ballot with a turnout of 29.4 per cent.

  1.   Morsi 60,495 (23.95 per cent)
  2.   Moussa 59,790 (23.6 per cent)
  3.   Shafiq 45,813 (18.1 per cent)
  4.   Abul-Fotouh 44,795 (17.7 per cent)
  5.   Sabbahi 41,686 (16.5 per cent)

8:32 FINAL results are in from the eighth largest governorate of Minya – in terms of registered voters, according to Al-Ahram's Arabic-language news website. A total of 943,915 voters cast their ballot with a turnout of 35.4 per cent.

  1. Morsi 407,201 (43.1 per cent)
  2. Shafiq 265,402 (28.1 per cent)
  3. Abul-Fotouh 150,503 (15.9 per cent)
  4. Sabbahi 64,314 (6.8 per cent)
  5. Moussa 56,495 (5.9 per cent)

8:24  FINAL results are in from the Delta governorate of Kafr El-Sheikh, according to Al-Ahram's Arabic-language news website. A total of 774,059 voters cast their ballot with a turnout of 41.5 per cent.

  1. Sabbahi 486,662 (62.8 per cent)
  2. Morsi 133,932 (17.3 per cent)
  3. Abul-Fotouh 67,164 (8.6 per cent)
  4. Shafiq 63,395 (8.1 per cent)
  5. Moussa 22,906 (2.9 per cent)

 

7:57 A Brotherhood official tells Reuters that Morsi and Shafiq will compete in June's run-off vote.

 

7:37 FINAL results are in from the country's third largest governorate of ‪Daqahliya, according to Al-Ahram's Arabic-language news website. A total of 1,685,399 voters cast their ballot with turnout reaching 42.1 per cent.

  1. Shafiq 418,527 (27 per cent)
  2. Sabbahi 394,553 (25.5 per cent)
  3. Morsi 388,525 (25.1 per cent)
  4. Abul-Fotouh 247,264 (15.9 per cent)
  5. Moussa 99,000 (6.4 per cent)

It's another tight contest, as Sabbahi continues to suprise, while Abul-Fotouh's and Moussa's poor performance is also raising eyebrows. The rise of military-man Shafiq is yet another surprise. Morsi's sizeable electoral gains, however, were not unexpected.

7:29 For more information on tonight's frontrunners, click here.

7:22 FINAL results are in from the country's seventh largest governorate of Gharbiya, according to Al-Ahram's Arabic-language news website:

  1. Shafiq 421,411
  2. Sabbahi 308,424
  3. Morsi 245,438
  4. Abul-Fotouh 217,518
  5. Moussa 126,876

7:18 FINAL results are in from Cairo's Sahel district, as announced by it's general electoral committee. The district, which boasts a significant Coptic Christian population, saw 201,052 voters cast their ballots, thrusting Shafiq into a comfortable lead.

  1. Shafiq 76,034 (37.8 per cent)
  2. Sabbahi 51,972 (25.8 per cent)
  3. Morsi 26,790 (13.3 per cent)
  4. Abul-Fotouh 24,125 (12.0 per cent)
  5. Moussa 18,190 (9.05 per cent)

7:06 Good morning to our colleagues at Egypt's state news agency, MENA. With yet another salute, they begin their coverage.

7:03 FINAL results are in from the coastal governorate of Suez, according to Al-Ahram's Arabic-language news website. A total of 207,891 voters cast their ballot with turnout reaching 54.5 per cent.

  1. Morsi 49,719 (23.9 per cent)
  2. Sabbahi 45,500 (21.9 per cent)
  3. Moussa 43,469 (20.9 per cent)
  4. Abul-Fotouh 41,989 (20.2 per cent)
  5. Shafiq 21,816 (10.5 per cent)

6:43 Some Egyptian TV stations have reverted to the black and white films of yesteryear. Who can blame them? The counting process has markedly slowed.

Evan Hill seems to agree, tweeting: Time to sleep. If it took 8 hours to get 50% of results in, when I wake up hashoof el ra2is il gai fi masr.

Four governorates out of Egypt's 27 have thus far submitted their final results with Abul-Fotouh entering the fold, coming on top in the governorate of Damietta by a very slim margin. In the Upper Egyptian governorate of Qena, Brotherhood darling Morsi overpowered military-man Shafiq by 3.6 per cent.

6:33 Al-Ahram's Arabic-language news website reports the following results from Cairo's traffic-choked district of Nasr City:

  1. Sabbahi 63,638
  2. Abul-Fotouh 56,777
  3. Shafiq 50,405
  4. Moussa 32,392
  5. Morsi 26,948

6:04 FINALresults are in from the Upper Egyptian governorate of Qena, according to Al-Hayat TV. A total of 377,092 voters cast their ballot with turnout reaching 23.5 per cent.

  1. Morsi 97,267 (25.8 per cent)
  2. Shafiq 83,931 (22.2 per cent)
  3. Abul-Fotouh 78,789 (20.8 per cent)
  4. Moussa 74,909 (19.8 per cent)
  5. Sabbahi 42,196 (11.2 per cent)

5:42 FINALresults are in from the coastal governorate of Damietta, according to Al-Hayat TV. A total of 438,334 voters cast their ballot with turnout reaching 51.4 per cent.

  1. Abul-Fotouh 106,219  (24.2 per cent)
  2. Sabbahi 105,877 (24.1 per cent)
  3. Morsi 105,610  (24 per cent)
  4. Moussa 66,066 (15 per cent)
  5. Shafiq 54,562  (12.4 per cent)

It could be the closest contest yet.

5:23 Dawn is breaking across Egypt, but election officials are still hard at work tallying votes.

Of the country's 27 governorates, only two have submitted final results.

Moussa, who seems to be struggling elsewhere in the country, captured a decisive win in Egypt's smallest governorate, South Sinai. In the nearby governorate of Port Said, Sabbahi trounced his rivals, garnering twice as many votes as the next most popular contender.

The Brotherhood, however, continue to proclaim their man's dominance, placing Morsi ahead with a comfortable margin in their latest tabulation.    

5:16 Al-Ahram's Arabic-language news website lists the following results from 200 out of 201 polling stations in the governorate of Ismailiya:

  1. Morsi 91,801
  2. Sabbahi 70, 964
  3. Moussa 65,267
  4. Abul-Fotouh 59,251
  5. Shafiq 52,116

5:13 The Freedom and Justice Party announce results from half of Egypt's polling stations, where about 10 million out of a total of 50.5 million registered voters cast their ballots:

  1. Morsi  30.8 per cent
  2. Shafiq 22.3 per cent
  3. Sabbahi 20 per cent
  4. Abul-Fotouh 17 per cent
  5. Moussa 11 per cent

5:06 FINAL results from 110 polling stations in the Alexandria district of Al-Montazah, where 16 per cent of the coastal city's 3.2 million voters reside:

  1. Sabbahi 104,367 (34 per cent)
  2. Abul-Fotouh 69,986  (22.8 per cent)
  3. Morsi 50,732  (16.5 per cent)
  4. Shafiq 42,460  (13.8 per cent)
  5. Moussa 39,369  (12.8 per cent)

4:51 The Freedom and Justice Party says on their official Facebook page that they will soon announce the final results from 6,661 polling stations.

4:43 Here are the largest ten governorates in Egypt by numbers of registered voters. Altogether they make up 69 per cent of Egypt's total 50.5 million constituents.

Governorate

 Registered voters

‪Cairo

6,497,887

‪Giza

4,289,421

‪Daqahliya

3,675,691

‪Sharqiya

3,499,492

‪Alexandria

3,291,734

‪Beheira

3,227,555

‪Gharbiya

2,914,418

‪Minya

2,668,655

‪Qalioubya

2,606,058

‪Sohag

2,347,958

4:41 It's Sabbahi again in the lead. The Nasserist candidate turns the tables in Beheira's capital city Damanhour, topping the list of contenders according to Al-Ahram's Arabic-language news website:

  1. Sabbahi 42,699
  2. Morsi 25,078
  3. Mousa 24,644
  4. Abul-Fotouh 23,344
  5. Shafiq 14,073

4:35 Nasserist contender Sabbahi sweeps the Port Said vote, according to an official statement by the seaside governorate's electoral operation room:

  1. Sabbahi 104,516
  2. Shafiq 41,487
  3. Morsi 38,439
  4. Mousa 37,470
  5. Abul-Fotouh 29,636

4:25 FINAL results are in from all 20 polling stations in the tourist hub of South Sinai with Mubarak's ex-foreign minister Amr Moussa claiming a clear victory. A total of 26,297 votes were cast with a turnout rate of 42 per cent:

  1. Moussa 6,910 (28.7 per cent)
  2. Morsi 4,895 (20.3 per cent)
  3. Abul-Fotouh 4,305 (17.8 per cent)
  4. Shafiq 4,102 (17 per cent)
  5. Sabbahi 3,849 (16 per cent)
  6. Others 2,236 (8.5 per cent)

4:06 Egyptian state run news agency, MENA, called it a night at 3:30am, signing off with "We salute you and end our coverage." Apparently the sandman got the best of them.

Ahram Online's team will be here till the bitter end.

3:50 Darkhorse candidate Sabbahi remains comfortably ahead in coastal Alexandria, while tonight's leading man, Morsi, trails in third, according to Al-Ahram's Arabic-language news website, which reports the following results from 100 of 691 polling stations:

  1. Sabbahi 82,725 (34 per cent)
  2. Abul-Fotouh 47,734 (19 per cent)
  3. Morsi 43,009 (17 per cent)
  4. Mousa 37,844 (15 per cent)
  5. Shafiq 29,636 (12 per cent)

3:36 Results from 28 polling stations in the Delta governorate of Gharbiya, according to Al-Ahram's Arabic-language news website:

  1. Shafiq 26,806 (28.1 per cent)
  2. Morsi 20,277 (21.33 per cent)
  3. Abul-Fotouh 19,613 (20.6 per cent)
  4. Sabbahi 18,737 (19.7 per cent)
  5. Moussa 9,652 (10.1 per cent)

3:18 A top judicial source tells Al-Ahram's Arabic-language news website that 1,750 out of more than 13,000 polling stations have returned the following results:

  1. Morsi 1,000,000+
  2. Shafiq 740,000
  3. Abul-Fotouh 690,000
  4. Sabbahi 545,000
  5. Mousa 480,000

3:09 Is there something in the water? Two of Egypt's seaside governorates appear to be going against the tide, plumping for Sabbahi over Morsi.

Results from 43 out of 104 polling stations in the governorate of Port Said, according to Al-Ahram's Arabic-language news website:

  1. Sabbahi 37,315 (37.5 per cent)
  2. Shafiq 18,267 (18.3 per cent)
  3. Moussa 16,641 (16.7 per cent)
  4. Morsi 14,155 (14.2 per cent)
  5. Abul-Fotouh 12,944 (13 per cent)

3:05 Ahram Online's news team aren't the only ones burning the midnight oil. Put on your kettles, because this is shaping up to be a long night. Egypt's Twitter users are seemingly hopped up on caffeine, as they weigh in on Morsi's initial wave of good fortune. Here's a taster:

Khaled Elgindy tweets: Morsy-Shafiq run-off is the battle MB has been waiting for. Morsy-AbulFotouh run-off is the battle MB desperately wants to avoid.

Mosa'ab Elshamy tweets: Not blaming Copts for Shafik's rise but two Qs: 1. Why not a non-Islamist Sabahi? 2. Didn't the "secular", military man Mubarak oppress you?

su zee tweets: Dear Egyptians freaking out on twitter, calm down. Remind urself: u survived Mubarak. U made a revolution. U can survive the next president.

And our very own Hani Shukrallah tweets: Look at it this way: If Morsi wins MBs will be finished in 2 yeas; if Shafiq wins, Mubarak regime will be finished by next Jan.

2:49 Results from 184 out of 201 polling stations in the governorate of Ismailia, according to Al-Ahram's Arabic-language news website:

  1. Morsi 83,358 (26.8 per cent)
  2. Sabbahi 62,157 (20 per cent)
  3. Moussa 58,921 (18.9 per cent)
  4. Abul-Fotouh 52,891 (17 per cent)
  5. Shafiq 46,394 (14.9 per cent)

2:16 Results from 38 out of 238 polling stations in the governorate of Damietta, according to Al-Ahram's Arabic-language news website:

  1. Morsi 13,107
  2. Abul-Fotouh 12,967
  3. Sabbahi 12,633
  4. Mousa 8,098
  5. Shafiq 7,845

2:03 More results from the governorate of Ismailiya culled from 92 out of 201 polling stations, according to Al-Ahram's Arabic-language news website:

  1. Morsi 38,541
  2. Sabbahi 27,011
  3. Moussa 26,884
  4. Abul-Fotouh 22,284
  5. Shafiq 19,222

1:54 Results from 68 polling stations out of a total of 552 in the governorate of Assuit, according to Al-Ahram's Arabic-language news website:

  1. Morsi 24,600 (32.5 per cent)
  2. Shafiq 23,435 (31 per cent)
  3. Abul-Fotouh 17,267 (22.8 per cent)
  4. Sabbahi 5,841 (7.7 per cent)
  5. Moussa 4,356 (5.7 per cent)

1:38 Results from 678 polling stations, according to the Freedom and Justice Party:

  1. Morsi 165,874 (35.5 per cent)
  2. Shafiq 103,648 (22.2 per cent)
  3. Abul-Fotouh 77,947 (16.7 per cent)
  4. Sabbahi 53,941   (11.5 per cent)
  5. Moussa 53,181   (11.4 per cent)

1:34 Results from seven polling stations in the Beheira Governorate's Itay Al-Baroud constituency, according to Al-Ahram's Arabic-language news website:

  1. Morsi 25,736
  2. Shafiq 21,397
  3. Abul-Fotouh 16,437
  4. Moussa 12,818
  5. Sabbahi 8,328

1:04 The Freedom and Justice Party have released voting results from 236 polling stations across 16 governorates, showing their contender well in the lead.

  1. Morsi 55,698
  2. Shafiq  33,139
  3. Abul-Fotouh 24,882
  4. Moussa 16,913
  5. Sabbahi 12,460

There are more than 13,000 polling stations countrywide.

12:25 The results of 18 polling stations out of 81 in the governorate of Marsa Matrouh:

  1. Abul-Fotouh 3,660
  2. Morsi 1,039
  3. Moussa 845
  4. Shafiq, Sabbahi (both below 700)

12:24 The results of 16 polling stations out of 691 in the governorate of Alexandria, according to the Salafist Nour Party's operating room:

  1. Sabbahi 8,706
  2. Abul-Fotouh  7,185
  3. Morsi 6,092
  4. Shafiq 3,271
  5. Moussa 3,086

12:19 The results of 38 polling stations out of 201 in Ismailiya governorate:

  1. Morsi 14,591
  2. Sabbahi 9,508
  3. Moussa 9,380
  4. Abul-Fotouh  8,550
  5. Shafiq 6,983

12:09 The Brotherhood's fortunes are less rosy in Cairo's upscale district of Zamalek, reports Ahram Online's correspondent Osman El-Sharnoubi.

Morsi received 89 votes out of a total 3,165 in polling station no 4 in Zamalek. Moussa came first with 1,086 votes followed by Shafiq with 787, Sabbahi with 625 and Abul-Fotouh with 467.

12:01 Morsi is enjoying a comfortable lead in the Upper Egyptian governorate of Sohag after 51 polling stations finished tallying their votes.

Morsi gathered 12,209 votes, while Abul-Fotouh trailed with 6,820 votes.

Shafiq came in at a close third with 6,330 votes; Moussa fourth with 5,106; and Sabbahi fifth with 1,588.

23:57 El-Erian states that Morsi's presidential programme, entitled the 'Renaissance Project', will be set into motion in a few days. Using typically grandiose rhetoric, the leading Brotherhood member states Egypt now stands on the cusp of a new era.

"These elections are being followed not only by Egyptians and Arabs, but the entire world is waiting with bated breath for the results," El-Erian states. "Egyptians have proved that they are capable of forging a new history for their country."

Sounding assured the medical doctor asserts, "We are confident that Egypt's next president will be Mohamed Morsi."

23:45 El-Erian states that only 250 polling stations – representing 2 per cent of the total – have completed tallying the votes, adding that their man, Morsi, is in the lead.

23:37 The Brotherhood's Freedom and Justice Party announce in a press conference that the countrywide voter turnout was 50 per cent. The party thanked the Egyptian people, who voted freely for the first time in history. Morsi is leading the vote count across the country, according to the their spokesman, who adds that a preliminary vote tally will be announced after a few words by well-known party member Essam El-Erian, vice president of the FJP.

23:34 More preliminary results for those eager eyes:

Hamdeen Sabbahi finished first in Al-Semad polling station in the Red Sea governorate of Suez, earning 496 votes. Morsi follows, while Moussa trails in third.

In Al-Horreya polling station, Sabbahi also finished first, gaining 811 votes, followed by Abul Fotouh and Moussa.

23:18 Dozens of polling stations across the country have begun to submit their results to their district's general electoral committee. As the results begin to trickle in, it is too early to make any sweeping conclusions, however Brotherhood candidate Morsi appears to have a slight lead over rivals Abul-Fotouh, Shafiq, Moussa and Sabbahi.

Al Jazeera Mubashir reports that Shafiq leads in two polling stations in the Upper Egyptian governorate of Sohag, while Al-Ahram's Arabic-language news website reports that Morsi is leading in two polling stations in the governorates of Beheira and Sohag.

Former regime figures and the Brotherhood aren't the only ones with cause for cheer. Our correspondent Lina El-Wardani, reporting from Alexandria, reports that Nasserist candidate Sabbahi has a substantial lead in two polling stations.

 

23:12 Voter turnout in the Delta governorate of Gharbiya reached 40 per cent in the two-day electoral process, El-Sayed Abdel-Moati, the governorate's secretary-general stated Thursday evening.

Boasting 2.9 million registered voters, Gharbiya is one of Egypt's larger governorates.

23:09 Across Egypt's 13,000 polling stations, vote counting is underway.

Here is a quick rundown of how the counting process will proceed:

After the electoral sub-committees, which are operating out of each polling station, finish the vote count, the station's presiding judge will announce the results to a representative from each of the eleven presidential campaigns. The representative must then sign off on the final tally before the judge transmits the results to each district's general electoral committee. The aggregated results will then be sent to the Supreme Presidential Electoral Commission.

22:57 According to the Muslim Brotherhood's website, Ikhwanweb, Mohamed Morsi's campaign will hold a press conference shortly to announce preliminary results of the vote count.

22:33 The Salafist Al-Nour Party has announced that it will not recognise results coming from polling stations where vote counting was carried out in the absence of campaign representative.

The party, which officially backed presidential hopeful Abdel-Moneim Abul-Fotouh, warned in a statement Thursday night against any manipulation of the vote count.

The statement added that the party would take all legal and "popular" (demonstrations, etc) measures to thwart any attempt to manipulate the public will.

22:19 Osman Sharnoubi, reporting from the upscale district of Zamalek in Cairo, has sent us the following update:

"The counting process is going smoothly in Zamalek's busiest polling station. Amr Moussa and Ahmed Shafiq seem to be leading so far. Islamists are way behind, including the Muslim Brotherhood."

22:07 Our correspondent Lina El-Wardani, reporting from the Ras El-Teen polling station (5,116 votes), reports that Nasserist candidate Hamdeen Sabbahi appears to be ahead in the district.

All 13,000 polling stations in Egypt are shutting their doors after two days of voting in Egypt's first genuine multi-candidate presidential elections. Earlier on Thursday, the electoral commission extended voting hours until 9pm.

While some stations have already begun counting votes, others are still waiting until all remaining voters have cast their ballots.

Military and police are on high alert to safeguard the ballot boxes throughout the counting process. The primary vote count will be performed by the electoral sub-committees inside the polling stations.

Each sub-committee will inform the candidates' campaign offices of the total number of votes cast in their favour.

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