The historic Vote in Egypt continued for 2 days

Voting in the first parliamentary election since the ouster of the former in Egypt President Hosni Mubarak continues after the monitor reported a high turnout and the peaceful atmosphere of the previous day.

Tuesday marked the second day of the drawn-out process of voting staggered over six weeks in 27 provinces.

The influential Muslim Brotherhood, a moderate Islamic movement banned since the 1950s, is expected to emerge as the largest power-but without a majority at the same time-when the results were published in January.

The historic election will determine whether a group of freedom and Justice Party is poised to move higher after Egypt's Islamic road nearly six decades as a secular State which is run by authoritarian effective military.

All day Monday, a large crowd turned up at POLLING STATIONS despite the turmoil over a spate of security and deadly violence in the weeks before the polls opened. Many voters said they were casting votes for the first time, while others expressed the hope that this election, unlike a decade ago, will count.

The first day of voting was extended for two hours in some locations.

The cities of Cairo Alexandria, as well as seven other provinces, are currently voting. Runoff to those areas will be held December 5.

The whole country will choose two later rounds are expected in early January. House election will then take place, which ended in March, after the Assembly will write a new Constitution.

Thousands of judges is monitoring the process of Egypt.

General master of Egypt had established an elaborate system of elections that many fear will result in the legislature less credibility. General of the army has a new Assembly will obviously not have the right to remove the Government appointed by the ruling military Council.

Nine days of clashes, with 42 people were killed and more than 3,000 wounded, raising fears of violence between supporters of rival candidates.

The elections began this week is expected to support the Islamic party, including conservative Salafis

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