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So far, the petition has collected 800,000 signatures, nearly 700,000 of them secured through the Brotherhood website, a sign of how its network dwarfs that of the nascent group in this country of nearly 80 million. Critics warn that the alliance with the Brotherhood may drown liberal voices and drive away potential supporters wary of Islamist ideology. But the campaign organizers appear unfazed. Coordinator Abdul-Rahman Youssef said keeping close to Egypt's most organized group has its benefits, especially when the demands are as fundamental as a free ballot box. "No one faction can organize civil disobedience alone," he said. Government-sanctioned opposition parties are more suspicious of ElBaradei. They have rejected his call for a boycott of November's elections for the 500-seat parliament, which he says will surely be rigged. Some dismiss a boycott as a "risky" option that would benefit the government. "ElBaradei is most responsible for confusing the situation," said Rifaat Saeed, the octogenarian head of a left-wing party with just two seats in parliament. Another 9,000 volunteers are to be trained or have applied to join the campaign of ElBaradei supporters. After operating mainly online, volunteers have started going door-to-door to gather signatures and reach out to people, following the ideas of Sharp. In his writings, Sharp offers nearly 200 methods for protesters to pressure authoritarian regimes, from adopting symbolic colors to staging mass strikes. Egypt's new movement has not implemented Sharp's more dramatic steps yet. But ElBaradei said he won't hesitate to call for civil disobedience if the government remains intransigent. In the meantime, they have successfully avoided heavy arrests by security services. "So long as we appear weak, the security agencies will leave us alone," said Ahmed Ezz, the lead trainer. "We just want a space to breathe, to be free, and we are looking to create a trend." Amr el-Shobaky, a political analyst at the Al-Ahram Center think tank, said the signature campaign is impressive, and such steps to gauge public opinion and set up a structure are new for Egypt's opposition. But, he cautions, "no one has an answer to what the next step would be."
[Associated
Press;
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