As Egyptians vote for a president Monday, a gutted police building in the Muslim Brotherhood stronghold of Kerdasa stands as a monument to the brutal divide left by the overthrow of Egypt's Islamist leader. The frontrunner is Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, the now retired army chief who ousted elected president Mohammed Morsi last July, in what many here call a bloody military coup. Portraits of Sisi abound across the country, but they are mostly absent in this town southwest of Cairo, where just a trickle of voters turned out on Monday. Instead, defiant residents have posted pictures of Morsi, describing him as "the legitimate president." Kerdasa took its place in history on August 14 last year, when a mob attacked a police station and killed 13 officers, mutilating their corpses. The attack was savage revenge for the deaths of some 700 pro-Morsi protesters in Cairo that day. As voting in the two-day election began, there were no festivities or ululating women here, in contrast to polling stations elsewhere in Egypt. Only three were open to voters, on the outskirts of the town, which lies 35 kilometers (25 miles) southwest from the capital. "It's to avoid a clash with rioters," said a police officer guarding the polling station in a school, itself decorated with graffiti that said "down with military rule." "Sisi killed youths and now he is grabbing power. This is the biggest evidence that (Morsi's ouster) was a coup," said Mohamed Gamal, a Muslim Brotherhood member who has since spent five months in detention. Morsi's Brotherhood has been designated as a terrorist group and its leaders, including the deposed president, are in jail. Sisi is expected to trounce his rival, leftist Hamdeen Sabbahi, riding a wave of popularity for ousting the divisive Morsi almost a year after his election. Many in the country want to move on, with a strongman at the helm to restore stability in the most populous Arab country. But not in Kerdasa, where run-down buildings are grimly festooned withstencilled pictures of pro-Morsi "martyrs" killed by the police in clashes. "After all this blood spilled in Egypt and my city, there can't be participation in this election," said Mahmud al-Taghish, 23. On the city's outskirts, only several dozen men and women lined up to vote. "We support Sisi because he has no particular ideology, only the country's best interest," said Mohamed Farag, an activist with the ultra-conservative Salafist Nour party. The party sided with Sisi when he ousted Morsi, after millions of Egyptians took to the streets demanding his removal from power. Following the August 14 attack, Kerdasa appears to have been mostly abandoned by police. They swooped in on the city a month later to flush out wanted Islamists, in an operation that left a police general dead. But with the town's residents still smoldering, they have not tried to set up new headquarters, only conducting the occasional arrest operation, or sending in special forces to confront a protest.
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