WASHINGTON — Egypt is conducting political and economic reforms at its own pace, and pressure by the Bush administration on Cairo to move faster would only be counterproductive, visiting Prime Minister Ahmed Nazief said Sunday.
"Some people say we're moving too slow," Nazief said in an interview, as he prepared for meetings with President Bush and other high-level officials this week. "But I also believe that it should be left to the country itself to decide on the pace.... We know the risks of moving too fast or too slow."
Nazief is traveling instead of Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, who usually visits Washington at least once a year but was said by officials to be too busy this time.
Political analysts in the United States and Egypt believe that Mubarak wanted to avoid embarrassing public pressure from U.S. officials to move more quickly toward full democracy.
Mubarak agreed in February to allow a competitive presidential election for the first time in his 24 years in office. Although he has not formally announced his candidacy, the 77-year-old Mubarak is widely expected to run in the September election, and critics say the new rules will ensure that he keeps a tight grip on power. Bush said this month that the Egyptian presidential balloting "should proceed with international monitors, and with rules that allow for a real campaign."
Nazief would not commit to allowing international monitors because, he said, the legacy of colonialism has left Egyptians suspicious about foreign interference in their affairs. But the prime minister said that opposition leader Ayman Nour, who was recently released from prison, was free to run for president, along with candidates from the 17 other opposition parties.
"Give him a chance to show what he stands for," Nazief said of Nour, an outspoken critic of Mubarak. The government will present a new election law that will allow candidates equal access to the media and regulate campaigning, he said.
"We have nothing to fear" in holding free and fair elections, he said, though Egypt "may not get it right the first time, or the second." He called for tolerance for what he said was "an evolutionary process" for democracy.
Nazief, 52, earned a doctorate in engineering from McGill University in Montreal and has been an avid promoter of Internet use in Egypt. A technocrat, he is credited during his 10 months in office as prime minister with stabilizing the currency, bringing inflation under control and attracting more foreign investment.