Hamdeen Sabahi

Hamdeen Sabahi
حمدين صباحى
Personal details
Born
Hamdeen Abdel-Atty Abdel-Maksoud Sabahi

(1954-07-05) 5 July 1954 (age 70)
Baltim, Kafr el-Sheikh Governorate, Egypt
Political partyEgyptian Popular Current[1]
Other political
affiliations
Dignity Party
SpouseSeham Negm
Children
Alma materCairo University
Known forPolitician, Journalist

Hamdeen Sabahi (Arabic: حمدين صباحي, romanizedḤamdīn Ṣabāḥī, IPA: [ħæmˈdeːn sˤɑˈbɑːħi]; born 5 July 1954) is an Egyptian politician and journalist. He is a former presidential candidate and currently the leader of the Egyptian Popular Current and a co-leader of the National Salvation Front.

An opposition activist during the Anwar Sadat and Hosni Mubarak eras, Sabahi was jailed 17 times during their presidencies for political dissidence.[2] He was an immediate supporter and participant of the 2011 Egyptian revolution.[2] Sabahi entered the 2012 Egyptian presidential race in which he finished third place with 21.5% of the vote trailing the second place candidate Ahmed Shafiq by a margin of 700,000 votes.[3]

In the 2014 presidential election he was one of just two candidates. He ran second with less than 4% of the vote. Abdel Fattah el-Sisi was declared the winner after attracting 22 million of the nearly 23 million votes cast.[4] Sisi was sworn into office as President of Egypt on 8 June 2014.

A well-known opposition figure, Sabahi ascribes to Nasserism and in 1996 he founded the Nasserist Karama (Dignity) Party.[5][6] Sabahi ran as an independent and not as the Dignity Party's candidate. One of the few secular figures without any ties to the regime of Hosni Mubarak, Sabahi has attracted the support of several leading Nasserists. Sabahi is running under the slogan "one of us" which highlights his strong ties with the working class and advocates his socialist aspirations. Sabahi also gained the support of prominent Egyptian figures including writer and political activist Alaa Al Aswany and director and film-writer Khaled Youssef.[5][7]

  1. ^ Egypt's NSF undecided on presidential candidate, considering unified parliamentary lists. Ahram Online. 2013-10-01. Retrieved 2013-10-01.
  2. ^ a b Cite error: The named reference ALJAZEERA was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  3. ^ "Egypt candidate to seek election suspension". Al Jazeera. 27 May 2012. Retrieved 28 May 2012.
  4. ^ "Former army chief scores landslide victory in Egypt presidential polls". The Guardian. Retrieved 29 May 2014.
  5. ^ a b Khalil, Ashraf (18 April 2012). "The Brothers Grim". Foreign Policy.
  6. ^ "Nasserist leaders unite around presidential hopeful Hamdeen Sabahi". Aswat Masriya. 1 April 2012.
  7. ^ "Nasserist leaders unite around presidential hopeful Hamdeen Sabbahi". Al Ahram. 31 March 2012.