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Egyptians call for boycott of Turkish products

September 30, 2014 By administrator

CAIRO

egypt-boycott-turkishEgyptian writers and political movements have called for a boycott of Turkish products in response to what they describe as “unjustified” attacks on Egypt by Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan.

Advocates of the boycott note that Egypt is a major importer of Turkish products and that a boycott of the products would take a toll on the Turkish economy.

Egyptian lawyer Samir Sabri filed a lawsuit last week to force the Egyptian government to ban the entry of Turkish products into the country. A court is expected to rule on the case on Dec. 2.

Television anchor and writer Gamal Anayet has also called for a boycott of Turkish products and has even encouraged Egyptians to drop Turkey as a tourist destination.

“A boycott is a simple and thorough [means by] which we can affect Turkish policies,” Anayet said during his “New Evening” talk show on the private al-Tahrir channel.

“Turkish products have alternatives in Egypt,” he added, inviting Egyptians to buy local products instead of their Turkish counterparts.

Political analyst Michel Fahmi, for his part, called for a “strong public boycott” of all products, services and arts coming from Turkey.

He said striking at the economic interests of those who “harbor inimical” attitudes toward Egypt would cause them pain. “Economic sanctions will be much tougher than political sanctions,” Fahmi said.

Bassem Halaqa, the head of Egypt’s Tourist Guides Union, also called for a boycott of Turkey as a tourist destination, saying that supporting Egyptian tourism and the national economy were “patriotic duties.”

Despite political tensions between the two states, some 30,125 Egyptians visited Turkey between January and April of this year, compared to 37,299 who visited the country in the corresponding period last year, according to Turkey’s Tourism Ministry.

The ministry added that some 10,600 Turkish tourists visited Egypt between January and April this year, compared with 25,289 who visited in the corresponding period last year.

Trade exchanges between Egypt and Turkey, meanwhile, reached a total of $5 billion last year, including $3.5 billion of Turkish exports to Egypt, according to Egypt’s Trade Ministry.

Around 418 Turkish companies also operate in Egypt, especially in the textile, food and petrochemical sectors.

Public action 

Female writer Reem Eidi and the Congress Party, founded by former presidential candidate Amr Moussa, also joined the boycott calls for Egyptians, but they raised the stakes further, extending a call to the whole Arab world.

“The appropriate response will come through an Egyptian-Arab public boycott campaign against Turkish products and TV serials,” Congress Party Vice Chairman Tamer al-Zaydi said in a statement. “Egyptians and Arabs must also stop travelling to Turkey.”

Relations between Egypt and Turkey took a turn for the worse after Egypt’s military ousted elected President Mohamed Morsi in July of last year.

Tensions between the two countries reached their nadir last November, when Egypt declared the Turkish ambassador in Cairo “persona non grata” and Turkey responded in kind.

While addressing the U.N. General Assembly late last week, Erdoğan again lashed out at the new regime in Egypt. He accused the international community of lending legitimacy to Egyptian President Abdel-Fattah el-Sisi, widely seen as the architect of Morsi’s ouster last year.

September/30/2014

Filed Under: News Tagged With: boycott, Egypt, products, Turkish

Erdoğan: Turkey would welcome Muslim Brotherhood figures leaving Qatar

September 16, 2014 By administrator

REUTERS / ISTANBUL

Turkey would welcome senior figures from Egypt’s outlawed Muslim Brotherhood after they were asked to leave Qatar under pressure from other Gulf 192441_newsdetailArab states, Turkish media quoted President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan as saying late on Monday.

A senior Brotherhood official based in London said on Saturday that Qatar had asked seven senior figures from the movement to leave the country after its neighbours pressed it to stop backing the Islamists.

Senior Brotherhood figures would be welcome to come to Turkey if they wished to do so, Turkish television stations quoted Erdoğan as telling reporters on his plane back from an official visit to Qatar on Monday.

Qatar and Turkey were the only regional countries to back the Brotherhood after Egypt’s army toppled Islamist President Muhammad Morsi last year following mass protests against him.

Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and other Gulf Arab states, in contrast, have showered Egypt’s new rulers with billions of dollars. They see the Muslim Brotherhood as an existential threat to their monarchies.

Egypt has declared the Brotherhood a terrorist movement. The Brotherhood says it is a peaceful group.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Egypt, Erdogan, muslim brotherhood, qata

Egyptian newspapers: Turkey supports Daash (ISIL) in Iraq and Syria

August 29, 2014 By administrator

Ahmed Ragab

29/08/2014

Egyptian newspapers attributed to the Egyptian security apparatus for monitoring information that contacts are underway between the Turkish intelligence services and the D4D0CF19-D18A-476D-9E1C-26CAED3C5091_w268_r1organization (Daash)(Islamic State). report iraqhurr.org

She pointed out that these newspapers, “the Turkish government provide full support to the organization and help him in recruiting fighters Europeans into Iraq and Syria in the framework of the organization’s efforts to control the two countries and establish an Islamic emirate, according to the alleged scheme.”

Local newspapers reported that the hardware information in Egypt continues to track the movements (Daash- Islamic State) within the region as a whole, and found that the intelligence Turkish supplied (Daash) during the last period with information and maps of the most important banks and exchange offices in Syria and Iraq to the armed robbery them and harvested from the large sums of money assist them in spending on terrorist operations carried out by.

She newspapers that the Turkish government helped (Daash) also in robberies on several wells for oil Baham and sale of oil using the Turkish border with Iraq and Syria, and even benefited Turkey of oil, which steals (Daash) of the wells the two countries and transferring it to the Turkish soil cheaply less than its real .

To the president of the Astronomical Institute of Science, Dr. Hatem return of “The Institute strongly monitor earthquakes first 4 and 7 per ten degrees on the Richter Mkabbas last weak and very strongly less than two degrees in the early hours of Friday morning.”

On the other hand, reports said unidentified fired in the early hours of Friday morning fire on a police station Fayoum, while the forces insurance circumference them back to the police department was an exchange of fire in the vicinity of the section, provided the unsung without causing any injuries between the two parties.

As violent clashes broke out between the Central Security Forces, and elements of the Muslim Brotherhood, in the vicinity of Helwan metro station, and Central Security forces fired tear gas canisters to disperse the elements of the Brotherhood received items pelted troops with stones. The police dispersed the march of the elements of the Muslim Brotherhood in the area of ​​Dokki.

This announced the public prosecutor that it started an investigation with 141 defendants, members of the Ultras Zamalek Club “White Knights”, arrested in clashes with security forces rotation of Shubra on Thursday evening (August 28), following the exit of tens of “White Nights” in rotation Shubra to go in the march to the Office Attorney General to demand the release of 11 members of their colleagues who were arrested last week on charges of trying to assassinate Prime Zamalek Murtada Mansour, and clashes resulted in the injury of three recruits and 6 members of the Ultras Zmalkkawi.

أحمد رجب

29.08.2014

نسبت صحف مصرية الى أجهزة الأمن المصرية رصدها معلومات تفيد عن اتصالات تجري بين أجهزة المخابرات التركية وتنظيم (داعش).

واشارت هذه الصحف الى إن “الحكومة التركية تقدم دعما كاملا للتنظيم وتساعده في استقدام مقاتلين أوربيين إلى داخل العراق وسوريا فى إطار مساعي التنظيم للسيطرة على الدولتين وإقامة إمارة إسلامية وفقا لمخططه المزعوم”.

وأضافت الصحف أن أجهزة المعلومات في مصر تواصل تتبع تحركات (داعش) داخل المنطقة ككل، وتبين لها أن أجهزة مخابرات تركية أمدت (داعش) خلال الفترة الماضية بمعلومات وخرائط عن أهم البنوك ومكاتب الصرافة في سوريا والعراق لكي تقوم  بسطو مسلح عليها وتحصد من ذلك أموالا طائلة تساعدها في الإنفاق على العمليات الإرهابية التي تقوم بها.

وتابعت الصحف أن الحكومة التركية ساعدت (داعش) أيضا في عمليات السطو على آبار عديدة للنفط بالشام وبيع النفط باستخدام الحدود التركية مع العراق وسوريا بل واستفادت تركيا من النفط الذي تسرقه (داعش) من آبار الدولتين وتقوم بنقلها إلى الأراضى التركية بثمن رخيص أقل من سعره الحقيقي.

إلى ذلك اعلن رئيس معهد العلوم الفلكية الدكتور حاتم عودة إن “المعهد رصد زلزالين أولهما بقوة 4 و7 بالعشرة درجة على مقباس ريختر وآخر ضعيف للغاية بقوة أقل من درجتين في الساعات الأولى من صباح اليوم الجمعة”.

من جهة أخرى ذكرت تقارير ان مجهولين اطلقوا في ساعة مبكرة من صباح الجمعة النار على قسم شرطة الفيوم، فيما قامت قوات التأمين بمحيط قسم الشرطة بالرد عليهم وتم تبادل إطلاق النار في محيط القسم، وفر المجهولون دون وقوع أية إصابات بين الطرفين.

كما نشبت اشتباكات عنيفة بين قوات الأمن المركزي، وعناصر جماعة الإخوان، في محيط محطة مترو حلوان، وأطلقت قوات الأمن المركزي قنابل الغاز المسيل للدموع على عناصر الإخوان لتفريقهم وردت العناصر برشق القوات بالحجارة. وفرقت قوات الشرطة مسيرة لعناصر جماعة الإخوان في منطقة الدقي.

هذا واعلنت النيابة العامة انها باشرت التحقيق مع 141 متهما من أعضاء ألتراس نادى الزمالك “وايت نايتس”، المقبوض عليهم فى اشتباكات مع قوات الأمن بدوران شبرا مساء الخميس(28آب)، إثر خروج عشرات الـ”وايت نايتس” في دوران شبرا للتوجه في مسيرة لمكتب النائب العام من أجل المطالبة بالإفراج عن 11 عضوا من زملائهم الذين تم إلقاء القبض عليهم الأسبوع الماضي لاتهامهم بمحاولة اغتيال رئيس الزمالك مرتضى منصور، وأسفرت الاشتباكات عن إصابة 3 مجندين و6 من أعضاء الألتراس الزمالكاوي.

 

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Egypt, ISIL, support, Turkey

Turkey starting new Jihadist “Egyptian ‘Revolutionary Council’ in Istanbul”

August 9, 2014 By administrator

Representatives of the Egypt’s opposition groups including former ministers from the toppled Muslim Brotherhood administration have declared the establishment of “Egyptian Revolutionary Council” against Egyptian Egyption-counsilPresident Abdel-Fattah al-Sisi in Istanbul. report Turkish hurriyet daily news

“The revolutionary and national forces, a year after the situation was exposed, are capable of confronting the bloody terrorist coup which stole our revolution, killed and imprisoned our people, sold our country and spread destruction and fear through the land and kidnapped Dr. Mohammed Morsi”, the spokesperson of the council which consist of 60 people, Mohammed Sharif Kamil, said during a meeting held in Istanbul on August 8.

“We call on all patriots inside and outside egypt to gather around the revolution and its idals and to unify all efforts to confront the counter revolution and its military coup”, Kamil added.

Kamil said the council refused the involvement of the military establishment of a civil state.
“We therefore declare to the Egptian people the establishment of this council in support of the popular resistance affirming that we are not an alternative to the popular resistance inside Egypt which we fully support,” he added.

The group’s targets are uniting all revolutionary forces and youths who are opposed to the military regime, mobilizing international support for the January 2011 revolution, and fulfill the right of the Egyptian people to establish a civil and constitutional state, Kamil said.

Kamil also said they made a call on “all goverments and citizens throughout the world who uphold and defend the rights of people to support our cause of freedom, justice and human rights in Egypt.”

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Egypt, revolutionary, Turkey

Egypt warns Turkey of worsening ties

July 26, 2014 By administrator

CAIRO – Associated Press

Egypt69644_1Egypt’s Foreign Ministry on July 26 condemned Turkey’s prime minister for calling Egyptian President Abdel-Fattah al-Sisi a “tyrant,” warning already sour relations between the two countries could worsen.

In a strongly-worded statement, the ministry said it summoned the Turkish charge d’ affaires, the highest-ranking Turkish official in the country, over the comments. It said Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan is driven by “narrow ideological interests,” referencing Turkey’s support to the Muslim Brotherhood group, branded as a terrorist organization in Egypt.

“The continuation of the insults against Egypt and its elected leadership will undoubtedly lead to more measures from Egypt, leading to limited progress of bilateral relations,” the statement said.

Relations between Egypt and Turkey soured after al-Sisi led the last year’s ouster of Islamist President Mohammed Mursi, a Brotherhood leader. Egypt expelled Turkish ambassador in Cairo and withdrew its ambassador in Turkey after it called for Mursi release from prison.

July/26/2014

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Egypt, Turkey, tyrant, warning

Egypt summons Turkish diplomat over Erdoğan’s criticism of Sisi calling Egypt President “illegitimate tyrant,”

July 20, 2014 By administrator

July 20, 2014, Sunday/ 22:39:54/ REUTERS / CAIRO
Egypt-FMCairo’s Foreign Ministry on Sunday summoned the Turkish charge d’affaires in protest over derogatory comments by Turkey’s Prime Minister Tayyip Erdoğan, aimed at the Egyptian president, state media reported.

Erdoğan, a long time supporter of Egypt’s outlawed Muslim Brotherhood which was removed from power by the army last year, called President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi an “illegitimate tyrant,” according to media reports.
The prime minister also slammed Egypt’s efforts to mediate a ceasefire to end the conflict in Gaza between Israel and Islamist Hamas, which has rejected the truce proposal.

Erdoğan is a vocal supporter of Hamas, which Egypt sees as a security threat because it is an offshoot of the Muslim Brotherhood.
He has ratcheted up his rhetoric against Israel and its allies in recent days, accusing the Jewish state of “surpassing Hitler in barbarism,” and criticising the US and the rest of the Muslim world for failing to intervene.
It is not the first time Turkey’s premier has lashed out at Sisi, having previously accused him of toppling Egypt’s Islamist president, Muhammad Morsi, in a “military coup.”
Late last year, Egypt expelled the Turkish ambassador to Cairo, accusing him of undermining the country. Ankara responded by declaring the Egyptian ambassador to Cairo persona non grata.
Erdoğan is hoping to become Turkey’s first directly elected president in polls due on Aug. 10. Anti-Israel and pro-Muslim Brotherhood feeling is rife amongst the largely Sunni conservative voter base he is relying on to give him victory.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Egypt, Erdogan, Sisi

Erdogan slams Egypt’s Sisi as ‘tyrant’ over Cairo policy toward Hamas

July 18, 2014 By administrator

By HERB KEINON, JPOST.COM STAFF

ShowImageashx“Is Sisi a party (to a ceasefire)? Sisi is a tyrant himself,” Erdogan told reporters. “He is not different from the others.”

Turkey’s Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan addresses members of parliament from his ruling AK Party Photo: REUTERS

Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Friday lashed out at Egypt’s newly installed president, Abdul Fattah al-Sisi, for Cairo’s antagonistic attitude toward Hamas.

When asked about Egyptian mediation efforts aimed at bringing about a cease-fire between Israel and Hamas, Erdogan scoffed.

“Is Sisi a party (to a ceasefire)? Sisi is a tyrant himself,” Erdogan was quoted by AFP as telling reporters. “He is not different from the others.”

Turkey has been critical of Egypt’s decision to seal the Gaza-Sinai border crossings. Ankara also opposed the Egyptian military’s toppling of Islamist leader Mohammed Morsi, leading to Sisi’s ascension.

In November, Egypt expelled Turkey’s ambassador from Cairo due to Ankara’s expressed support for Morsi.
“Egypt is not a party, they are trying to legitimize (the Sisi administration) in Egypt. It is not a legitimate administration. It is illegitimate,” Erdogan said.

The Turkish leader, who accused Israel of “genocide” against the Palestinians, slammed Jerusalem’s policy – supported by Egypt and the West – of shunning Hamas.

“Hamas is a party there,” he said.

Earlier Friday, Israel recalled the families of diplomats in Ankara and Istanbul following violent protests outside the embassy and consulate in those cities Thursday night.Friday.

Foreign Minister Avigdor Liberman said Israel also decided to further reduce its diplomatic entourage in Turkey, which is already small following Turkey’s expulsion of Israel’s ambassador following the 2010 Mavi Marmara incident.

Rocks were thrown and windows broken during the Thursday night protests, which followed virulent comments made by Erdogan who accused Israel of attempting “systematic genocide” against the Palestinians in Gaza.

In one incident the Israel flag was ripped down from the ambassador’s residence in Ankara, and replaced with a Palestinian one.

A statement from Liberman’s office said that the Turkish security officials did not take action to prevent the violence, and said that Turkey was responsible for the well-being of the diplomats who remain there. .

Liberman directed the Foreign Ministry to gravely protest the Turkish inaction, a violation of various international treaties meant to protect diplomats.

One official said it was ironic that Turkey wants to now play a role in mediating a cease-fire.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Egypt, Erdogan, Sisi, tyrant

Egypt says Qatar, Turkey and Hamas hurt Gaza ceasefire bid

July 18, 2014 By administrator

                 Egyptian Foreign Minister Sameh Shukri speaks during an interview with the Associated Press, July 17. AP Photo

CAIRO – Reuters

Egypt’s foreign minister accused Qatar, Turkey and Hamas on July 17 of conspiring to undermine Cairo’s efforts to bring about a ceasefire between the Palestinian militant group and Israel in Gaza, Egypt’s state news Egypt-FMagency reported.

Egypt sees Hamas as a threat because it is an offshoot of the Muslim Brotherhood, which the army removed from power last year, straining ties with the Gulf Arab state of Qatar and with Turkey, both countries that backed Egypt’s ousted president Mohamed Mursi of the Muslim Brotherhood.

Egyptian Foreign Minister Sameh Shukri made the accusation against Turkey, Qatar and Hamas in a briefing with local newspaper editors, the state news agency MENA reported.

“Had Hamas accepted the Egyptian initiative, at least 40 Palestinian souls would have been saved,” MENA quoted Shukri as saying.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on July 17 instructed the military to begin a ground offensive in Gaza, an official statement from his office said. Reuters witnesses and Gaza residents reported heavy artillery and naval shelling and helicopter fire along the Gaza border.

Egypt had proposed a permanent ceasefire plan on July 15, which Israel accepted. But Hamas, saying its terms had been ignored, rejected it.

Hamas wants Israel and Egypt to lift border restrictions that have deepened economic hardship among Gaza’s 1.8 million populace and caused a cash crunch in the movement, which has been unable to pay its employees for months.

Egypt accuses Hamas of supporting militant groups in the Sinai seeking to topple the Cairo government, an allegation it denies.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Egypt, Gaza, Israel, Qatar

Egypt’s Sisi visits Sudan after Africa ’terrorism’ warning

June 28, 2014 By administrator

KHARTOUM – AFP

Sudan’s President Omar al-Bashir (L) shakes hands with Egypt’s President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi (R) before Sisi departures the Khartoum International Airport in Khartoum June 27, 2014. REUTERS/Mohamed n_68406_1Nureldin Abdallah

Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi landed in Islamist neighbour Sudan on Friday for a lightning visit, which an analyst said would attempt to shore up a regional alliance against Islamic “terrorism”.

An AFP photographer at Khartoum airport confirmed the Egyptian leader’s plane had touched down and said Sisi, wearing a dark suit and sunglasses, left about two hours later.

The official SUNA news agency said Sisi was “on a short visit” for talks with President Omar al-Bashir.

“The two presidents held talks at the Guest House on bilateral relations and issues of mutual concern,” SUNA said.

About 300 Islamists protested the visit outside a downtown Khartoum mosque, a witness said.

Sisi arrived a day after he told the African Union summit in Equatorial Guinea the continent must reinforce cooperation to face a “plague” of cross-border terrorist groups.

He took a similar message to Algeria on Wednesday during his first foreign trip since his election in May.

“Egypt, the Gulf countries and now Algeria — Egypt is trying to build a regional alliance to fight Islamic terrorism,” University of Khartoum political scientist Safwat Fanous told AFP.

“So they would like to see Sudan as part of this alliance in order to isolate Qatar and Turkey, who are… the main supporters of the (Muslim) Brotherhood Movement.”

Egypt jointly ruled Sudan with Britain until 1956.

Sisi, while he was still army chief, toppled Islamist president Mohamed Morsi last July. Sisi then won the May presidential poll by a landslide after crushing the opposition.

Egypt designated Morsi’s Muslim Brotherhood movement a terrorist organisation in December and its members have been subjected to a crackdown which has left more than 1,400 people dead and at least 15,000 jailed.

Saudi Arabia also declared the Brotherhood a “terrorist” organisation, and it is banned in many Gulf countries.

Before his ouster, Morsi visited Sudan in a visit which President Bashir’s office hailed as “historic”.

Bashir’s 25-year-old regime relies on a base of support which is essentially the same as the Muslim Brotherhood, although it does not use that name.

Sudan is close to regionally-isolated Qatar, which was accused of backing groups like the Brotherhood.

Qatar’s emir, Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al-Thani, visited Sudan in April and pledged $1 billion (730 million euros) to help boost cash-strapped Khartoum’s hard currency reserves.

But Khartoum’s ties to Doha do not preclude its rejecting advances from Sisi, Fanous said.

“In politics there are no permanent friends, nor permanent enemies,” he said. “I think it all depends on who will benefit the regime better.”

Sudan has a debt of more than $40 billion, much of it in arrears, and has been under American sanctions since 1997.

Adding to the country’s isolation, diplomatic and other sources said in March that major European and Saudi banks had stopped dealing with Sudan.

The country has been plagued by inflation, a declining currency and lack of reserves since South Sudan separated three years ago with most of Sudan’s oil production.

Egypt’s political turmoil that began with the ouster of longtime autocrat Hosni Mubarak in 2011 has had a ruinous effect on its economy, although Gulf states have pledged billions in support for Cairo since Morsi’s ouster.

Sisi, however, is unlikely to have any financial aid to offer Sudan.

“But he may mediate between Sudan on the one side, and the West and the Gulf countries on the other side,” to ease economic pressures on Khartoum, he said.

On another issue, Fanous said Sisi likely wants Sudan’s help to mediate a dispute with Ethiopia over the Grand Renaissance dam under construction in that country.

Egypt has expressed particular fears that the dam project could diminish the supply of Nile River water on which it is almost entirely dependent.

June/28/2014

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Egypt, Sisi, Turkey

Egypt’s Sisi sworn in and hails ‘historic moment’

June 8, 2014 By administrator

Abdul Fattah al-Sisi pledged to ”fully care about the interests of the people”

Egypt-PresidentEx-army chief Abdul Fattah al-Sisi has been sworn in as Egypt’s new president after a landslide win in May elections.

He said his election was “a democratic, peaceful handover of power” that represented “a historic moment and turning point” for the nation.

Security forces were deployed at key locations around the capital Cairo for the ceremony at the Supreme Constitutional Court.

The retired field marshal overthrew President Mohammed Morsi last July.

He has since been pursuing a crackdown on Mr Morsi’s Muslim Brotherhood, which urged a boycott of the elections.

Liberal and secular activists, including the 6 April youth movement which was prominent in the 2011 revolution that ousted long-serving President Hosni Mubarak, also shunned the 26-28 May poll in protest at the curtailing of civil rights.

‘No coup’

Mr Sisi, 59, was sworn in for a four-year term at a ceremony shown live on television.

He signed the document authorising him to take over power from interim president, Adly Mansour.

Mr Sisi said: “Throughout its extended history over thousands of years, our country has never witnessed a democratic peaceful handover of power.”

He said it was time “for our great people to obtain the fruits of their two revolutions… the time has come to build a more stable future”.

Mr Sisi’s victory came almost a year after he ousted Egypt’s first freely elected president, Mohamed Morsi, following mass protests against his rule.

At the swearing-in, the Supreme Constitutional Court deputy head, Maher Sami, said the ousting was not a coup, and that Mr Sisi had responded to the will of the people.

Justices present for the ceremony applauded after Mr Sisi took the oath.

Who is Egypt’s new president?

  •  Born in Cairo in 1954
  • Had long military career, latterly specialising mainly in military intelligence
  • Appointed army chief under Mohammed Morsi
  • Key figure in interim government after ousting Morsi in July 2013

Profile: Abdul Fattah al-Sisi

line

Mr Sisi vowed he would “establish a new Egypt – a strong, just and secure country which enjoys prosperity”.

_75282320_5251bc59-2dee-4336-a4f9-1158a3f00be5In the May elections, Mr Sisi secured 96.9% of the vote and his sole challenger, left-winger Hamdeen Sabahi, received only 3.1%. Turnout was less than 50%.

Crowds are expected to flock to Cairo’s Tahrir Square to celebrate his victory, the BBC’s Orla Guerin in the Egyptian capital reports.

Mr Sisi inherits a nation that is divided and weary, our correspondent says. Experts warn that if he cannot deliver in the next year or two he could also face a mass revolt.

One student, Israa Youssef, told Reuters: “Sisi has to do something in his first 100 days, people will watch closely and there might be another revolution. That’s what people are like in this country.”

Mr Sisi faces an array of challenges, including fixing the economy, preventing further political crises and easing poverty.

More than a quarter of Egyptians live below the poverty line. Mr Sisi has pledged to build 26 new tourist resorts, eight new airports and 22 industrial estates.

He has promised to restore security in a country where attacks by Islamist militants have left hundreds of security personnel dead over the past 11 months.

The militants have stepped up attacks in response to the crackdown on the Muslim Brotherhood and its allies, in which more than 1,400 people have been killed and 16,000 detained.

Mr Morsi and other senior leaders of the Brotherhood, which has been designated a terrorist organisation, are standing trial on a series of charges. They strongly deny any wrongdoing.

 

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Egypt, president, Sisi, sworn

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