Arab nations must prosper in the mere future.
Syrian elections are to persist on Tuesday. Millions of Syrians are expecting another years of service from President Bashar Assad.
Opposition groups are eyeing on the President's inexorable win.
"They're blood elections. Are we going to vote for the one who killed our children and made us homeless, exiled us, made us immigrants?" Mohamad al-Zain, a person who has been forced to leave Syria despite of war, spoke angrily.
Amongst Assad's opponents, they could not believe the president's impetus for another re-election. "All the elections are a failure," Abdelmaati al-Kareem, a fugitive in Arsal said.
"We haven't experienced anything like democracy for the last 40 years - are they fooling us in the name of democracy?" a bystander woman raised.
Syrians remain their eyes on the next president's mouth, waiting for concrete plans on holding the country. Will this lead to another coup?
The Arab Spring has pledged much. But those words are yet visible to the eyes of the people.
Egyptian president lead: a better Egypt still unclear
Egyptians have already elected their new head of state earning 95 percent of the total counted votes. Former Egyptian army chief Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, the newly elected President of Egypt, aims to remold the economy and abolish renegades.
Abdel Fattah al-Sisi is now bolstering heavy responsibilities to bring back loyalists.
According to reports and surveys, Sisi's win was already known beforehand - even the formality of the elections still needed. Many have expressed their discontent on the said elections. Opposition continues voicing out their anger and distrust on Sisi.
In the midst of all the congratulatory speeches, Sisi has not mentioned any plans yet on how he would build the country again after all the disasters and economical downfall happened. Thus, he told his people to be patient and work together - a signal of an inefficient leader, as most brotherhood supporters declared.
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