Egypt’s independent presidential election commission said the presidential race icludes only resigned defense minister Abdel-Fattah al-Sisi and former presidential contender Hamdeen Sabahi.
Egypt's independent presidential election commission on Sunday pulled down the curtain on candidacy applications, leaving the presidential race between resigned defense minister Abdel-Fattah al-Sisi and former presidential contender Hamdeen Sabahi.
The commission, which is made up of senior judges, said only the two hopefuls had met candidacy requirements and submitted their applications on time.
Presidential hopefuls were supposed to pass medical tests and submit 25,000 written endorsements from eligible voters from at least 15 of Egypt's 27 provinces.
Election Commission Secretary-General Abdel-Aziz Salman said Sisi had submitted more than 188,000 endorsements while Sabahi hand over some 31,000 endorsements.
Election propaganda would start in early May and last until May 23.
The presidential elections, scheduled for May 26/27, is the second step on Egypt's transitional roadmap announced with the army's ouster of elected Muslim Brotherhood president Mohammad Mursi on July 3 last year.
Salman said the election commission had allowed six international organizations to follow up the vote, adding that the selected organizations boast expertise in the field and can offer comprehensive, neutral reports about the elections.
He added that the commission was still reviewing applications from local organizations to observe the vote.
The election commission has earlier signed an agreement with the Election Union to send a mission to observe the vote.
The African Union and the Arab League have also been invited to send election observers.
Sisi would be the latest in a line of Egyptian rulers drawn from the military that was only briefly broken during Mursi's year in office.
The only other contender, Sabahi, heads a political alliance called the Popular Current and was a member of parliament under Mubarak. He came third in the 2012 presidential vote after Mursi and ex-air force chief Ahmed Shafik.