By way of Shaimaa Fayed and Michael Georgy CAIRO (Reuters) – A leading Egyptian social democrat fears the elite that thrived underneath former President Hosni Mubarak will once once more dominate politics in elections promised through the military after it overthrew Islamist President Mohamed Mursi. The 2011 common rise up towards Mubarak raised hopes for an finish to many years of corruption and nepotism, however political turmoil on the grounds that then has dimmed aspirations for real democracy. Mohamed Abul Ghar, a physician who heads the Egyptian Social Democratic Party, is with reference to the army-backed meantime prime minister and his deputy, who belong to the identical party. Abul Ghar, seventy three, had hoped newly-fashioned liberal and leftist events would set the most populous Arab state on a democratic, non-Islamist route after 30 years of Mubarak’s one-man rule.