Coordinator of Egypt's Social Justice Alliance, Gamal Zahran called Sunday for dissolving and rebuilding the existent parties according to a national strategy, Al bawaba news reported. "The political arena does not represent the revolution," Zahran, a former parliamentary, said, calling for forming a unified national front based on plurality, democracy and transparency. In the same context, Egypt's Supreme Administrative court adjourned to October 17 a lawsuit by TV host Tawfic Okasha calling for the dissolution of all Egyptian political parties. Okasha's lawsuit claims Egypt's 90 parties failed to provide candidates for the parliamentary elections, which were postponed for constitutional reasons, a move he considered evidence to those parties' fragility. Only 840 candidates, representing seven parties, ran for that election while the other parties remained absent, Okasha said at TV releases. Most of these parties were formed on religious basis in the wake of the 2011 uprising that ousted former president Hosni Mubarak, he added.