Egyptians flocked to the polls today for the first time since Hosni Mubarak was toppled to vote in a referendum on constitutional reforms which the military rulers hope will allow elections within six months.
Lengthy queues formed at polling stations across the country to cast ballots in the first vote in living memory whose outcome has not been known in advance. The result will determine how quickly Egypt can hold elections.
Voters emerged from the polling stations bearing ink-stained fingers as proof they had cast their ballots.
"It is too early to tell what the voter turnout is, but it is clear that this is unprecedented," said Ahmed Samih Farag, a human rights activist and monitor with the Egyptian Coalition for Election Monitoring.
Egypt has been alive with debate over the referendum and the country is divided between those who say the constitution needs a complete rewrite and others who argue that the amendments will suffice for now.
"I voted yes - yes for stability and for things to go back to normal," said Mustafa Fouad (24), an engineer voting in Cairo at a polling station.
"I voted no. This is not enough," said Atef Farouk, who arrived at the same polling station with his wife and three daughters, who waved an Egyptian flag as their parents voted. "We want a new constitution.”
The result is expected to be announced in the next two days, a member of a judicial committee involved in overseeing the election told Reuters.
The amendments were drawn up by a judicial committee appointed by the military rulers to whom Mr Mubarak handed power last month. They are designed to open the door to legislative and presidential elections that will allow the military to hand power to a civilian, elected government.
Mr Mubarak was forced from office by a wave of mass protests demanding his removal and an end to autocratic rule in the country he had governed for three decades.
One of the reforms limits the time a president can stay in office to two, four-year terms.
The Muslim Brotherhood, a well-organised Islamist group, has come out in favour of the amendments, setting it at odds with secular groups and prominent reform advocates including Mohamed ElBaradei and Amr Moussa, both candidates for the presidency.
Secular groups have broader concerns about the course the military has charted towards elections. They want more time before elections to allow political life to recover from decades of oppression by Mr Mubarak.
They say the timetable set by the military is too short, giving an advantage to the well-organised Brotherhood and remnants of the deposed president’s National Democratic Party.
The military council hopes the amendments will pass so it can move along the path it has set towards elections that will allow it to cede power to an elected government.
Eager to get out of power as quickly as possible, the military has said the amendments are the best way forward, if not the ideal one. It called for a high turnout, saying participation in a free electoral process was more important than the outcome. The army has deployed 37,000 soldiers to help police secure the streets.
Rejection of the amendments will force the council to extend an interim period and to form a new judicial committee to re-write the constitution. That scenario could push back a parliamentary election to December, a security source said, four months later than the September vote the military is planning at the moment.
Under the military's current plans, the presidential election will come after the parliamentary vote.