What's new

Egypt | Army Ousts Mursi govt, violence erupts | News & Discussions

.
Instead of removing Morsi by force, why didn't they insist on new elections.?

This happens in democratic countries. You get snap elections when there's a major scandal or something.

The MB are knuckle-dragging Neanderthals, but the Army have behaved dreadfully.

Sort yourselves out, Arabs. This is 2013.
 
.
Egypt's bruised Brotherhood fails to show street power

(Reuters) - Mass protests called by Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood mostly failed to materialize on Friday as the movement reeled from a bloody army crackdown on followers of ousted President Mohamed Mursi.

Troops and police had taken relatively low-key security measures before the "Friday of Martyrs" processions that were to have begun from 28 mosques in the capital after weekly prayers.
Egypt's bruised Brotherhood fails to show street power | Reuters

Time to move on
 
.
Egypt's bruised Brotherhood fails to show street power

(Reuters) - Mass protests called by Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood mostly failed to materialize on Friday as the movement reeled from a bloody army crackdown on followers of ousted President Mohamed Mursi.

Troops and police had taken relatively low-key security measures before the "Friday of Martyrs" processions that were to have begun from 28 mosques in the capital after weekly prayers.
Egypt's bruised Brotherhood fails to show street power | Reuters

Time to move on

Yeah....even if 100 members attended thats really great...even after killing so many...
 
. .
Yeah....even if 100 members attended thats really great...even after killing so many...
Muslim Brotherhood leaders were not killed, they ran like a chicken and some of them tried to run out of the country!! The know it is over for them. Only reason they were in Rabaa was to use the "protesters" as human shields so they don't get arrested.
 
. .
You are neither muslim nor egyptian. How does it matter to u?

You havent answered my question.


Plus by the same logic you are not an Egyptian, so how does Egyptian politics matter to you especially when majority of Egyptians themselves doesnt care about what you think or in other words, your opinion doesnt count for anything ?
 
.
Why do Indian muslims support MB when even majority of Egyptians are against them ?
That is the main problem with Islamists; they have no loyalty to their countries what so ever! I am talking about Islamists not all Muslims btw. It is very common to hear an Islamist in Egypt saying that a Muslim in any country is closer to them than a non Muslim Egyptian. The Muslim Brotherhood supreme Guide said once in 2006 that he rather have a Muslim male from Indonesia become a president of Egypt rather than a and Egyptian female or a christian Egyptian.
 
.
You are not an Egyptian, so how does Egyptian politics matter to you especially when majority of Egyptians themselves doesnt care about that ?

Actually i was waiting for ur reply from he beging..i was wondering why you dint comment.

See, It is simple. Like you cant tolerate suffering of Tamils in SL.
 
.
Actually i was waiting for ur reply from he beging..i was wondering why you dint comment.

See, It is simple. Like you cant tolerate suffering of Tamils in SL.

Genius, the obvious difference is India was/is involved in Sri Lanka from the beginning. It is our neighbor and the situation there directly affects the situation in India. Lankan President gave promises to Indian PM about the treatment of Tamils there and we as tthe pre-eminent power in South Asia need to make them accountable to the promises they gave to us. Plus if anything goes wrong there, its Tamil Nadu those Tamils migrate to as refugees. Also those Tamils are the same people as us .

On the other hand, I cant fathom how the politics in Egypt could possibly affect India. So instead of going offtopic why dont you answer my initial question ? When the Arab muslims dont even consider you south asian muslims as their equal why are you so concerned about them ?
 
.
Genius, the obvious difference is India was/is involved in Sri Lanka from the beginning. It is our neighbor and the situation there directly affects the situation in India. Lankan President gave promises to Indian PM about the treatment of Tamils there and we as tthe pre-eminent power in South Asia need to make them accountable to the promises they gave to us. Plus if anything goes wrong there, its Tamil Nadu those Tamils migrate to as refugees. Also those Tamils are almost the same people as us and linked to us culturally, linguistically and by blood relations.

On the other hand, I cant fathom how the politics in Egypt could possibly affect India. Or are you one of those who as @Agentny17 said thinks muslims from anywhere in the world are more closer to him than his non-muslim Indians ?

Earlier when one Tamil traitor who hated in India in one of the thread you mentioned only bolded point. They are neighbors not neibors still you would support them. Tamils are in other countries too...

Congress and BJP are doing the same thing.

Tamils needs separate nation like Israel.When center ignoring our feelings means there is nothing wrong to take anti-India stance to harm India. Tamils have no enmity towards China and Pakistan personally those are north Indian and NE Indian problems if china favors tamils interests then we wholeheartedly welcoming China presence in IOR.

Source: http://www.defence.pk/forums/world-...-over-coals-over-sri-lanka.html#ixzz2co2FghJA

For you this tamil traitor is thambi....right? But even if i say 100 positive things it doesnt make me Indian.

We muslims too have lot of common things btw us and muslims any part of the world. We do feel bad when anything happens to them. But when it comes to country, our country is important to us as long as it is doing right thing.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
.
Egypt 'killed 78 militants' in recent operations in Sinai
78 suspected militants killed, 203 arrested in Sinai Peninsula in recent operations, army says
Egyptian security forces have killed 78 suspected militants, including 32 foreigners, in recent operations in the Sinai Peninsula, military spokesperson Ahmed Ali said on Friday.
The operations injured around 116 people, Ali added via his official Facebook page.

Ali confirmed that 203 people, including 48 foreigners, had been arrested for their alleged involvement in attacks on security checkpoints in the peninsula.

He also said that 343 tunnels on the border between Egypt and Gaza at Rafah have been destroyed.

Last Tuesday, at least 25 Egyptian policemen were killed when suspected militants ambushed a personnel carrier near Rafah.

In August 2012, an attack by unknown assailants killed 16 army conscripts in Rafah. Then-president Mohamed Morsi conducted a security reshuffle that saw army intelligence chief Abdel-Fattah El-Sisi appointed defence minister.

Attacks against security forces have escalated since Morsi's ouster. Sixty people have reportedly been killed in attacks on security checkpoints in Sinai since Morsi was deposed by the military on 3 July amid mass protests against his rule.
Egypt 'killed 78 militants' in recent operations in Sinai - Politics - Egypt - Ahram Online
 
.
Why Saudi Arabia is taking a risk by backing the Egyptian coup

David Hearst
Tuesday, 20 August 2013 17:18

saudi-backing-egypt-coup.jpg


King Abdullah fears the Muslim Brotherhood, which challenges the kingdom's claim to be the protector of Islam

It took almost 60 years for the CIA to own up to its role in the British-backed coup that overthrew Iran's prime minister Mohammed Mossadegh on August 19, 1953. But Saudi Arabia's backing for the recent Egyptian coup, which its head of intelligence, Prince Bandar bin Sultan, had worked so tirelessly to achieve, was instantaneous. When Adli Mansour, the former head of Egypt's supreme court, was sworn in as interim president, King Abdullah sent him a message praising the Egyptian army for having saved the country from a dark tunnel.

The Saudi monarch followed this up last Friday with a speech whose bluntness was atypical of the man. "Let the entire world know," he proclaimed "that the people and government of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia stood and still stand today with our brothers in Egypt against terrorism, extremism and sedition, and against whomever is trying to interfere in Egypt's internal affairs." This was unusual, not only because Abdullah was aiming his words at his other ally, the United States, and the Gulf state's regional rival Qatar, whom he accused of "fanning the fire of sedition and promoting terrorism, which they claim to be fighting". It was rare because the monarch, who prefers behind the scenes diplomacy, was so explicit.

The kingdom has backed its words with money, and oil. It has already put together an $12bn (£7.7bn) aid package along with the UAE and Kuwait which is four times as much as the military and economic grants from the US and the EU combined ($1.5bn and $1.3bn respectively). On his return from meeting the French president at the weekend, the foreign minister, Saudi al-Faisal, vowed to compensate Egypt for any loss of EU or US money. Barack Obama's impotence in the Middle East is being paraded by the US's closest Arab military ally.

Prince Bandar has also been to Moscow. Being on opposite sides of the civil war in Syria (the kingdom is seeking the fall of Bashar al-Assad, who Russia supports militarily) was no impediment to a productive visit. Both sides agreed to keep the oil price high, found common ground in their hatred for the Muslim Brotherhood, whom top Russian Arabists in the ministry of foreign affairs equate with Islamic extremists. Russia feels it has every reason to fear political Islam, with a population of indigenous Muslims from the Caucasus, which is rising as a proportion of the Russian Federation's total population, and expected to hit 19m or 14% of the population by 2020. "Are you mad?" an MFA official told his US counterpart "to support the guys with beards over the guys with ties?".

Why has the kingdom, famed for its caution on the diplomatic stage, put all its eggs in one basket, which, considering the volatility in Egypt, remains fragile and unpredictable. Who knows which side in Egypt will prevail, and if that is so, why back the coup leader General Abdel Fattah al-Sisi so publicly? Sisi thanked the kingdom in fulsome terms. He said that the Saudi intervention was unprecedented since the Yom Kippur 1973 war with Israel. Praise indeed.

For Dr Maha Azzam, associate fellow of the Middle East and North Africa programme at Chatham House, the kingdom's fire-breathing support for the coup comes as little surprise. Not only had they been astonished by Washington's abandonment of the kingdom's closest regional ally in Hosni Mubarak, a point they made very clear during his trial. They had seen him replaced, at the polls, by the Brotherhood, which challenged the kingdom's claim to be the protector of Islam.

Azzam said: "What they had was a lethal equation, democracy plus Islamism, albeit under the Muslim Brotherhood. That was a lethal concoction in undermining the kingdom's own legitimacy in the long run. They know full well they do not want democracy, but to have another group representing Islam was intolerable."

King Abdullah has good reason to fear the Brotherhood, which has been getting unprecedented support in Saudi Arabia since the 3 July coup. Sympathy for Mohamed Morsi has filled Twitter feeds in the country. Support for Morsi on social media has its own emblem, a four-fingered salute, known as the sign of Rabaa

It is one thing to upset the middle class and the intelligentsia, but quite another to have the country's religious scholars denounce you. A group of 56 of them did so, by issuing a statement describing the events of 3 July as "unquestionably a military coup and an unlawful and illicit criminal act". The king has also been attacked in a sermon by a sheikh at the al-Masjid al-Nabawi mosque in Medina, Islam's second holiest site.


The royal family have responded to the campaign they are facing on social media by sacking a Kuwaiti TV preacher with Brotherhood links. Tareq al-Suwaidan, who has more than 1.9 million Twitter followers, was told that there is no place for those who carry deviant thoughts at the Al Resalah channel

But this is a dangerous strategy. As president, Morsi resisted calling his regional enemies out for the money and support they gave to Egyptian opposition politicians, parties and private television channels for good reason. Up to 2 million Egyptians are employed as guest workers in the kingdom and their remittances were important for an economy on its knees. He feared that the Saudis would kick them out if he accused them of undermining his presidency. However today, Egyptian ex-pats are not the Brotherhood's problem or responsibility. What could well follow is an unrestrained campaign by its members to destabilise the Saudi and UAE regimes.

Azzam said: "For the US and EU, there is very little grey area. Either you have authoritarian regimes, including Assad or you have the Arab spring. The authoritarian regimes are saying: 'If we use enough force, we can quell the tide of democracy.' For Washington it means that there is no regional player that can now mediate with the Egyptian military. No one that can play the role of good cop."

The battles lines have now been clearly drawn throughout the Arab world. The military coup in Egypt, and Saudi support for it, represents an attempt to turn the clock back, to halt the wave of democratisation heralded by the toppling of Arab dictators. It is unlikely to be the final word or battle in what promises to be an epic struggle.

This article first appeared on theguardian.com

Why Saudi Arabia is taking a risk by backing the Egyptian coup
 
.
Egypt 'killed 78 militants' in recent operations in Sinai
78 suspected militants killed, 203 arrested in Sinai Peninsula in recent operations, army says
Egyptian security forces have killed 78 suspected militants, including 32 foreigners, in recent operations in the Sinai Peninsula, military spokesperson Ahmed Ali said on Friday.
The operations injured around 116 people, Ali added via his official Facebook page.

Ali confirmed that 203 people, including 48 foreigners, had been arrested for their alleged involvement in attacks on security checkpoints in the peninsula.

He also said that 343 tunnels on the border between Egypt and Gaza at Rafah have been destroyed.

Last Tuesday, at least 25 Egyptian policemen were killed when suspected militants ambushed a personnel carrier near Rafah.

In August 2012, an attack by unknown assailants killed 16 army conscripts in Rafah. Then-president Mohamed Morsi conducted a security reshuffle that saw army intelligence chief Abdel-Fattah El-Sisi appointed defence minister.

Attacks against security forces have escalated since Morsi's ouster. Sixty people have reportedly been killed in attacks on security checkpoints in Sinai since Morsi was deposed by the military on 3 July amid mass protests against his rule.
Egypt 'killed 78 militants' in recent operations in Sinai - Politics - Egypt - Ahram Online

Good hit with an iron fest , may they rot in hell.
 
.
Back
Top Bottom