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

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A sad day in Egyptian history, no matter what the military apologists say.

Note: Please do not dub anyone who criticizes the military as a brotherhood lackey.
 
A sad day in Egyptian history, no matter what the military apologists say.

Note: Please do not dub anyone who criticizes the military as a brotherhood lackey.

You know, it was a bad hair day for us in KSA as well. Egypt is the heart of Arab World.

Pakistan is coursing through my body though :pakistan:
 
Islamist gunmen stage multiple attacks in Sinai

Islamist gunmen staged multiple attacks on security forces in Egypt's troubled Sinai Peninsula early on Friday, two days after the army overthrew elected Islamist President Mohamed Mursi, security sources and state television reported.

Attackers fired rocket-propelled grenades at army checkpoints guarding El Arish airport, close to the border with the Gaza Strip and Israel, in the latest of a string of security incidents in the lawless region, the sources said.

Separately, a police station in Rafah on the border with Gaza came under rocket fire, causing an unknown number of injuries among soldiers, according to the sources. The police post is close to the local headquarters of military intelligence.

They are trapped there. Bad idea.
 
Always entertaining when you perform according to script.

First it was the anti-Semitism victim card.
Now it's your usual 'Moooslims are evil" rant.

I don't want to derail this thread by talking about CIA's role in Mossadeq's ousting. The American media itself has done a good enough job exposing it. Oh, but they are "evil liberals" like Bill Moyers and all, so you will also dismiss them as "closet Mooslims".
No. Just gullible and often self deluding.

By the Muslims' standards, I am CIA agent just because I happened to had lunch with an admitted CIA officer while waiting for our flight. Waaay back during the Cold War. The CIA is a convenient distraction, strawman, and canard all rolled into one handsome figure. And the comments I see about Egypt today is no different than from any other debates where Muslims are against Muslims.
 
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Top ten mistakes that led to Mursi’s ouster

Thursday, 4 July 2013
1

A picture showing a protester opposing Egypt's President Mohamed Mursi. (Reuters)

Al Arabiya
Speculations of what could have led Egyptians to call for the ouster of Mohammad Mursi are many. Below are 10 reasons believed to be why the Islamist president failed to remain in power for his term.

1- The Brotherhoodization of the state
Within months, Mursi appointed Brotherhood members in various state institutions. He assigned five members in different ministries, eight in the presidential office, in addition to seven governors, 12 governorate assistants,13 governorate councilors and 12 city mayors, all in charge of 40 million Egyptians.

2- Judges and Judiciary
Mursi’s attempts to control the judiciary went against building a democratic state.
  • He dismissed public prosecutor Abdel Meguid Mahmoud last November, a step that was later ruled out by an Egyptian court as unconstitutional.
  • The president’s power grab last November was also considered a step that weakens the courts, as it excludes his decrees from judicial oversight.

3- Ousting Mubarak’s military strongman
  • The dismissal of Field General Mohammed Tantawy, the defense minister under former president Hosni Mubarak, the country’s powerful armed forces looked at Mursi with mistrust. Tantawy, along with other top commanders from the country’s Supreme Council of Armed Forces where the ones who forced Mubarak to leave power.
  • Consecutive attempts to insult the military by the Muslim Brotherhood, which the president hails from, have made the relation between Mursi and the establishment at unease.

4- Crackdown on media
  • The dismissal of editors heading some of the country’s newspapers, in addition to confiscating a number of newspapers, raised woes regarding the future of media freedom in Egypt under Mursi’s rule.
  • More than 200 journalists were questioned by the country’s public prosecutor.
  • The presidential office filed 100 suits against journalists and media figures, including the country’s popular satirist Bassem Youssef.
  • In a response, the government rebuffed critics, arguing that the move was aimed at suppressing media reports that incite violence or the ones that personally insult the newly-elected president.

5- Economic failures
  • -Failing to fulfill promises he had made during Egypt’s presidential elections fueled people against him. Failing to increase wages and improve living conditions.
  • There were about 558 demonstrations, 514 strikes and 500 sit-ins this year in Egypt.
  • The ousted president tried to resolve the country’s deteriorating economic crisis by his decision to amend tax laws last November. However, this resulted in increasing prices of essential commodities needed by citizens.

6- Foreign affairs
The timing of Mursi’s visit to Tehran and Moscow affected how his position from the Syrian crisis was viewed, especially that he came to power following a popular revolution that later inspired the Syrian uprising.

7- Real decision makers
Leaders at the Muslim Brotherhood continuously announced decisions and made statements regarding state affairs during public events. This gave people the impression that they were the real policy-makers behind Mursi’s decisions. This has weakened the president’s image in front of the public.

8- Emergency declarations
Mursi’s declaration of a state of emergency in three cities near Egypt's Suez Canal, following four days of civil unrest, was deemed as ineffective. The cities were subjected to a 30-day curfew, which according to the constitution, needs to be approved by the parliament or council members. The deceleration was challenged seriously by residents of the cities, who filled the streets despite the curfew.

9- Pardoning prisoners
Mursi’s decision to issue a decree to pardon 22 imprisoned defendants serving sentences in Wadi Natrun prison. Some of the pardoned prisoners faced charges of drug-selling and murder.

10-Accusing opposition
Filing complaints against opposition figures like former nuclear chief Mohammad ElBaradei, opposition leaders Hamdeen Sabahi and Amr Moussa, and a number of media personals accusing them of inciting people against the newly-elected president.
 
No. Just gullible and often self deluding.

By the Muslims' standards, I am CIA agent just because I happened to had lunch with an admitted CIA officer while waiting for our flight. Waaay back during the Cold War. The CIA is a convenient distraction, strawman, and canard all rolled into one handsome figure. And the comments I see about Egypt today is no different than from any other debates where Muslims are against Muslims.
Of course you are a CIA agent. I must be one as well, but even if we weren't, the one thing that is clear is that anything wrong with their country, indeed, anything wrong in that region of the world, is most certainly America's doing. If it weren't, well then it might mean that they are responsible for getting their own house in order and we can't entertain that idea! Far, far, easier to chalk it all up to big, bad, ole', America. That's always much easier than you know, actually governing one's own countries like responsible adults.
 
One confirmed dead at 22 years of age Conscript- يحيى محمد أبو المجد R.I.P
Two confirmed injured the first at 29 years of Captain-عمر عبد الرحمن and at 22 years of age Conscript-اسامة السعيد فتح الله

May the Apaches in the skies of the Sinai bring down hellfire on those who have disowned their country in favour of a chair.
 
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