CAIRO — A center-left political party says it will boycott Egypt's elections next month in protest at what it calls the government's human rights violations.
Saturday's announcement by the Dostour party raises fresh doubts about whether the elections, due to start March 21, will produce a parliament that represents a wide range of public opinion.
Dostour said in a statement that the military-backed government made it impossible for opposition parties to campaign openly. "The current political climate does not encourage political parties to participate in public life," it said.
Egypt has had no parliament since 2012, when a court ordered the dissolution of the previous Islamist-dominated legislature. Dostour held no seats in the previous parliament. Next month's election would have been its first political contest.
The Muslim Brotherhood of former Islamist President Mohammed Morsi, ousted in 2013, is barred from next month's elections because the government has outlawed the movement.
Political parties face many disadvantages in an election law passed last year. Nearly 75 percent of the seats in the 567-member assembly are reserved for individual candidates, which analysts say favors wealthy businessmen best able to fund personal campaigns. Another 5 percent of seats will be directly appointed by President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi, the former army chief who has led Egypt since last year.
Opposition activists predict that well-connected businessmen and one or two parties loyal to el-Sissi will dominate the next parliament.
The political tensions come against a backdrop of rising anti-government violence, particularly in the Sinai Peninsula. El-Sissi has blamed the Muslim Brotherhood for much of the bloodshed.
Three policemen were shot to death Saturday in the central Egyptian city of Minya, but security officials said they suspected that common criminals were responsible, not Muslim radicals.