Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi, seen as certain to become Egypt's next president in the May 26-27 vote, has been taken to task, even by supporters, for failing to reach out to the large youth vote.
Many youth groups have been critical of the military's management of the transition following the ouster of Hosni Mubarak in 2011 and the subsequent crackdown on dissent after el-Sissi's ouster last summer of Islamist President Mohammed Morsi.
"They must be sure they are hugely appreciated not only by me. But I can't get it to them frankly," he said yesterday when asked about the youth. He called their role in bringing about change "unforgettable."
"But the circumstances are hard for all of us. Recognize this, and stand by Egypt now and in the future," he said. He said he wants the youth groups to prepare to be future leaders, adding that if elected he would offer them positions as aides to governors, ministers and himself though made no mention of naming them as actual ministers.
But he has antagonized many of the youth groups, many of whom also opposed Morsi. The crackdown on Islamists since Morsi's ouster has widened to include secular and non-Islamist youth leaders and activists who criticized the military-backed heavy-handedness on dissent. Several of the most prominent activists in the uprising against Mubarak are now in jail on trial for breaking new anti-protest laws. Some have also left the country.