Archive for Supreme Council of Armed Forces

Essam al-Erian, deputy head of the Muslim Brotherhood's Freedom and Justice Party, called on Egyptian Jews to leave Israel to the Palestinians and return to their own homeland.

Their presence in Palestine contributes to the Zionist occupation of Arab lands, and every Egyptian has the right to live in his country — nobody can deny that, Erian said during an interview on the privately operated Dream TV on Thursday.

“Why did Nasser expel them [the Jews] from Egypt?” he asked, claiming that Nasser’s decision contributed to the occupation of other Arab lands.

"Egyptian Jews should refuse to live under a brutal, bloody and racist occupation stained with war crimes against humanity," Erian said. 

During the interview, Erian also addressed the problem of money smuggled out of Egypt by former regime members.

"Most of the money that had been smuggled was done so under the [rule of] SCAF [Supreme Council of Armed Forces)]. Hundreds of billions have been smuggled to the United Arab Emirates," he said. Erian pointed out that the fact-finding committee that was formed by the dissolved People's Assembly had given him that information. He added that the UAE did not respond to the inquiries of People's Assembly on the smuggled money.

Also in the interview, Erian denied that the Armed Forces held a privileged role under the new Constitution.

Edited translation from Al-Masry Al-Youm

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The number of people arrested since the beginning of clashes on Mohamed Mahmoud Street last week has now reached 348, according to a security source in Cairo.

The source added that 216 policemen have also been injured, claiming 26 were injured by birdshot.

Prosecutors have decided to hold 109 suspects, while releasing 165 others and turning over 74 juveniles to their families.

Those still being held have been accused by prosecutors of assaulting security services personnel and damaging public installations.

Clashes broke out 19 November between protesters and security forces during a commemoration of similar clashes that took place in November, 2011 when security forces forcibly clear Tahrir Square of demonstrators protesting against the formerly ruling Supreme Council of Armed Forces. At least 40 people were killed in the clashes.

Edited translation from Al-Masry Al-Youm

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Hundreds of political activists belonging to different revolutionary movements and coalitions performed prayers in Tahrir Square Tuesday for the victims of last November's Mohamed Mahmoud Street clashes.

Activists had planned a march from Cairo University to Tahrir Square on Tuesday evening.

Ultras Ahlawy members who attended the event chanted slogans against the former ruling Supreme Council of Armed Forces and the Muslim Brotherhood. Many activists and politicians hold the SCAF responsible for the deadly Mohamed Mahmoud clashes.

The SCAF took power during the transition period following the ouster of former President Hosni Mubarak.

The march marks the first anniversary of the bloody events that took place in Mohamed Mahmoud Street near Tahrir Square after security forces used excessive force on 19 November 2011 to break up a sit-in of protesters who were injured or whose relatives were killed during the revolution.

The incident provoked many citizens to go to Tahrir Square, where clashes continued with security forces for several days, during which 45 people died and hundreds were injured.

The trial of suspects is ongoing.

Edited translation from Al-Masry Al-Youm
 

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Thursday’s newspapers are dominated by discussion of Muslim Brotherhood domination and the initial draft of the new constitution, which faces multiple challenges from political forces and judicial institutions.

In privately-owned Al-Shorouk newspaper, a number of constitutional experts express concern about Article 136, which allows dual nationals to run for president.

A judicial source tells Al-Shorouk that giving dual nationals the right to run for president raises many questions about whether the article was tailored toward certain potential candidates. The source adds that such a provision was not included in the Constitutional Declaration issued in 2011 by the Supreme Council of Armed Forces nor in the 1971 Constitution. The source notes that the article goes against the spirit of administrative and constitutional court rulings about “the national loyalty of those who assume leadership positions.”

Deputy head of the Supreme Constitutional Court Maher Samy says to Al-Shorouk that the current wording of the article on the SCC compromises its independence by giving the president the right to select the head of the court without consulting the court's judges.

It seems that those who were friends yesterday have become the most bitter opponents today. Salafi Nour Party leader and Constituent Assembly member Shaaban Abdel Alim tells state-run Al-Ahram daily that the constitution draft does not include articles agreed upon in subcommittee meetings. Abdel Alim says the inclusion of articles giving the president the right to appoint 25 percent of the Shura Council and the right to dissolve Parliament without a referendum was not approved by all Constituent Assembly members.

Leftist and liberal groups are planning a protest in Tahrir Square for Friday while the Freedom and Justice Party will hold internal elections on the same day to select a new chairman.

Privately-owned Al-Watan newspaper reports on a confrontation between former Manpower Minister Ahmed Hassan al-Borai, deputy chairman of the Constitution Party, and Shura Council MP Abdallah al-Sayyaf, a member of the Muslim Brotherhood, over the upcoming protest. Borai says the protest is not a response to last week’s clashes between pro- and anti-Brotherhood protesters but an expression of popular rejection of a single movement dominating the constitution-drafting process.  

According to Al-Watan, Sayyaf opines that the demonstration does not have reasonable demands and is meant to settle accounts with the Brotherhood, even though the will of the people put the group in power. Sayyaf says the drafting of the constitution is going smoothly, and that commentary on the draft should take place through dialogue, not protests.  

The FJP’s official paper runs a headline reading, “Boycotting” in bold letters in reference to Islamists abstaining from Friday’s protest. The paper quotes Jama’a al-Islamiya sources as describing the protest as “sedition.”

Freedom and Justice quotes a number of citizens as saying that fuel shortages and bread prices are more important than Friday protests, saying they are just a “media show” orchestrated by the participating forces.

However, the FJP mouthpiece also reports that Islamist movements are not in agreement over the draft constitution.  

Jama’a al-Islamiya reportedly objects to keeping Article 2 unchanged from the 1971 Constitution, arguing that the article should be phrased more strongly to ensure the full application of Sharia. The article currently reads that the “principles of Sharia are the main source of legislation,” but the group would like the word “main” to be removed as it implies that there are other sources besides Sharia.

The FJP newspaper also allocates two pages to describing the platforms of former parliamentary speaker Saad al-Katatny and acting party head Essam al-Erian, who are competing to replace President Mohamed Morsy as the head of the party. On Friday, 1,117 FJP members will cast their votes in the election.

Katatny has said that the party would not be responsible for forming the Cabinet if it wins a majority in the next parliament, Freedom and Justice reports. His platform aims at restructuring the party’s organization and empowering women and youth members.

Erian tells the paper that the FJP has submitted 20 development projects from experts within and outside the party to the government over the last few months.

Al-Shorouk adopts an analytical perspective of the FJP internal elections, publishing the opinions of a number of experts and former Muslim Brotherhood members on each candidate’s chances, and how they may impact the party and political life in general.

According to the independent daily, Kamal al-Helbawy, former spokesperson for the Brotherhood abroad, says the results of the election will not have a significant impact on the relationship between the Freedom and Justice Party and the Muslim Brotherhood, or on relations between the FJP and other political forces.

Helbawy tells Al-Shorouk that the party’s recent performance shows that it is not willing to separate at all from the Muslim Brotherhood or include non-Islamists among its ranks.  

Translated from Arabic by Mai Mohsen

Egypt’s papers:

Al-Ahram: Daily, state-run, largest distribution in Egypt

Al-Akhbar: Daily, state-run, second to Al-Ahram in institutional size

Al-Gomhurriya: Daily, state-run

Rose al-Youssef: Daily, state-run

Al-Dostour: Daily, privately owned

Al-Shorouk: Daily, privately owned

Al-Watan: Daily, privately owned

Al-Wafd: Daily, published by the liberal Wafd Party

Youm7: Daily, privately owned

Al-Tahrir: Daily, privately owned

Freedom and Justice: Daily, published by the Muslim Brotherhood's Freedom and Justice Party

Sawt al-Umma: Weekly, privately owned

Al-Arabi: Weekly, published by the Nasserist Party

Al-Nour: Official paper of the Salafi Nour Party

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Sunday’s Al-Ahram leads with President Mohamed Morsy in New York preparing for his first General Assembly at the United Nations. The state-owned paper reports that Morsy has scheduled 15 separate meetings with various heads of state, including French president Francois Hollande as well as British Prime Minister David Cameron and UN Secretary General Ban Ki Moon. These meetings will, according to the paper, aim to “clarify the political vision produced by Egypt following the 25 January revolution.” Tuesday evening will see Morsy giving a speech at the closing session of the Clinton Global Initiative, followed by his address to the General Assembly on Wednesday morning, during which the president plans on stressing the importance of “clearing all Middle Eastern nations, with no exception, of weapons of mass destruction,” Al-Ahram reports via Yasser Ali, official spokesman for the presidency.

Morsy’s trip to New York is also covered by the Freedom and Justice Party’s Freedom and Justice paper, in a particularly unfocused report titled “Economic issues top the president’s list of priorities in New York,” but which mainly describes a meeting held between Morsy and the Supreme Council of Armed Forces in order to discuss upcoming 6 October celebrations.

The paper does mention, however, that Morsy’s visit will end Egypt’s 23-year-long absence from the General Assembly.

Al-Shorouk’s take on the trip predicts the president will face protests outside the United Nations headquarters by “Egyptian Copts, and Muslims who reject the ‘Brotherhoodization’ of the country,” as well as various other groups on the “map of the Egyptian opposition within the United States,” which the independent paper is “attempting to illustrate.” 

A more detailed report on the paper’s fifth page claims that, in a further attempt to express opposition to the president, 16 Coptic organizations based in the United States have issued a statement “criticizing several churches for cooperating with the Egyptian Consulate in New York in ‘inviting some Copts’ to greet Morsy during his visit.” The statement also asserted the coalition’s “rejection of the Coptic Church being turned into a tool of the state, to be used for controlling Copts.” In closing, the statement urged “all honest Copts to boycott such directions, which only serve to divide Copts abroad, and present to the world a false image of Copts in support of the Muslim Brotherhood’s regime.”

Al-Shorouk also reports on the owner of Al-Umma television channel Sheikh Ahmed Abdallah, also known as “Abu Salam,” or the man who allegedly tore up copies of the Bible — “both the old and new testaments” — in front of the American Embassy during last week’s riots. In response to the “numerous complaints filed against him for inciting religious hate,” State Security called Abu Salam in for questioning, with a warrant to be issued for his arrest should he fail to comply within 24 hours.

Meanwhile, Minister of Drinking Water and Sanitation Facilities Abdel Qawi Khalifa has announced that mosques and churches will no longer be exempt from paying their water bills, with Al-Shorouk reporting that the announcement comes following the minister’s inspection of a water station in Abnoub, where he was approached by three employees requesting they be exempt from the LE700 it would cost to install water in a local mosque, a request to which the minister reportedly replied, “the government has no God.”

In other news, Al-Akhbar reports on the Ismailia criminal court’s sentencing of 14 individuals to death for their involvement in last year’s deadly attacks on a police station in the North Sinai city of Arish, as well as the city’s Bank of Alexandria headquarters. Four other men were sentenced by the court to life in prison, while seven others were found innocent.

The state-owned paper also quotes Minister of Justice Ahmed Mekky who, discussing the recent ruling by the Higher Administrative Court allowing members of the dissolved National Democratic Party to run in the upcoming parliamentary elections, promises that a law prohibiting all “officials and ministers and deputies of the former regime from [exercising] any political rights, including the right to run for office, for the next five years,” will be put into effect with the start of the new judicial year, set to begin in early October. In the paper’s report, Mekky explains that such a law already exists, and was successfully passed, but never put into motion. “Laws are passed so that they can be enforced,” he adds, “not so that they can languish in drawers.”

Finally, Al-Shaab looks at the legacy of Egyptian Nobel-prize winning scientist Ahmed Zewail from a somewhat unusual perspective, with a series of articles led by one titled “The Zewail Legend must be brought to an end if we are to achieve any real progress in the field of scientific research.”

“We are not in the business of getting into personal battles with important public figures,” the article begins, before tearing into Zewail for a multitude of reasons, all clearly listed: from branding him as a “known American citizen, and consultant to the White House,” to his insistence on remaining a has-been who “hasn’t done anything in the past 10 years but talk” and occasionally “appear on television to flex his superior intellectual muscles.” Al-Shaab then devotes two articles to “exposing Zewail’s secret ties with Israel” (he helps them build weapons; mostly lasers), as well as his role as “an Egyptian resource manipulated into serving American interests.”

Egypt’s papers:

Al-Ahram: Daily, state-run, largest distribution in Egypt

Al-Akhbar: Daily, state-run, second to Al-Ahram in institutional size

Al-Gomhurriya: Daily, state-run

Rose al-Youssef: Daily, state-run

Al-Dostour: Daily, privately owned

Al-Shorouk: Daily, privately owned

Al-Watan: Daily, privately owned

Al-Wafd: Daily, published by the liberal Wafd Party

Youm7: Daily, privately owned

Al-Tahrir: Daily, privately owned

Freedom and Justice: Daily, published by the Muslim Brotherhood's Freedom and Justice Party

Sawt al-Umma: Weekly, privately owned

Al-Arabi: Weekly, published by the Nasserist Party

Al-Nour: Official paper of the Salafi Nour Party

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Sunday’s Al-Ahram leads with President Mohamed Morsy in New York preparing for his first General Assembly at the United Nations. The state-owned paper reports that Morsy has scheduled 15 separate meetings with various heads of state, including French president Francois Hollande as well as British Prime Minister David Cameron and UN Secretary General Ban Ki Moon. These meetings will, according to the paper, aim to “clarify the political vision produced by Egypt following the 25 January revolution.” Tuesday evening will see Morsy giving a speech at the closing session of the Clinton Global Initiative, followed by his address to the General Assembly on Wednesday morning, during which the president plans on stressing the importance of “clearing all Middle Eastern nations, with no exception, of weapons of mass destruction,” Al-Ahram reports via Yasser Ali, official spokesman for the presidency.

Morsy’s trip to New York is also covered by the Freedom and Justice Party’s Freedom and Justice paper, in a particularly unfocused report titled “Economic issues top the president’s list of priorities in New York,” but which mainly describes a meeting held between Morsy and the Supreme Council of Armed Forces in order to discuss upcoming 6 October celebrations.

The paper does mention, however, that Morsy’s visit will end Egypt’s 23-year-long absence from the General Assembly.

Al-Shorouk’s take on the trip predicts the president will face protests outside the United Nations headquarters by “Egyptian Copts, and Muslims who reject the ‘Brotherhoodization’ of the country,” as well as various other groups on the “map of the Egyptian opposition within the United States,” which the independent paper is “attempting to illustrate.” 

A more detailed report on the paper’s fifth page claims that, in a further attempt to express opposition to the president, 16 Coptic organizations based in the United States have issued a statement “criticizing several churches for cooperating with the Egyptian Consulate in New York in ‘inviting some Copts’ to greet Morsy during his visit.” The statement also asserted the coalition’s “rejection of the Coptic Church being turned into a tool of the state, to be used for controlling Copts.” In closing, the statement urged “all honest Copts to boycott such directions, which only serve to divide Copts abroad, and present to the world a false image of Copts in support of the Muslim Brotherhood’s regime.”

Al-Shorouk also reports on the owner of Al-Umma television channel Sheikh Ahmed Abdallah, also known as “Abu Salam,” or the man who allegedly tore up copies of the Bible — “both the old and new testaments” — in front of the American Embassy during last week’s riots. In response to the “numerous complaints filed against him for inciting religious hate,” State Security called Abu Salam in for questioning, with a warrant to be issued for his arrest should he fail to comply within 24 hours.

Meanwhile, Minister of Drinking Water and Sanitation Facilities Abdel Qawi Khalifa has announced that mosques and churches will no longer be exempt from paying their water bills, with Al-Shorouk reporting that the announcement comes following the minister’s inspection of a water station in Abnoub, where he was approached by three employees requesting they be exempt from the LE700 it would cost to install water in a local mosque, a request to which the minister reportedly replied, “the government has no God.”

In other news, Al-Akhbar reports on the Ismailia criminal court’s sentencing of 14 individuals to death for their involvement in last year’s deadly attacks on a police station in the North Sinai city of Arish, as well as the city’s Bank of Alexandria headquarters. Four other men were sentenced by the court to life in prison, while seven others were found innocent.

The state-owned paper also quotes Minister of Justice Ahmed Mekky who, discussing the recent ruling by the Higher Administrative Court allowing members of the dissolved National Democratic Party to run in the upcoming parliamentary elections, promises that a law prohibiting all “officials and ministers and deputies of the former regime from [exercising] any political rights, including the right to run for office, for the next five years,” will be put into effect with the start of the new judicial year, set to begin in early October. In the paper’s report, Mekky explains that such a law already exists, and was successfully passed, but never put into motion. “Laws are passed so that they can be enforced,” he adds, “not so that they can languish in drawers.”

Finally, Al-Shaab looks at the legacy of Egyptian Nobel-prize winning scientist Ahmed Zewail from a somewhat unusual perspective, with a series of articles led by one titled “The Zewail Legend must be brought to an end if we are to achieve any real progress in the field of scientific research.”

“We are not in the business of getting into personal battles with important public figures,” the article begins, before tearing into Zewail for a multitude of reasons, all clearly listed: from branding him as a “known American citizen, and consultant to the White House,” to his insistence on remaining a has-been who “hasn’t done anything in the past 10 years but talk” and occasionally “appear on television to flex his superior intellectual muscles.” Al-Shaab then devotes two articles to “exposing Zewail’s secret ties with Israel” (he helps them build weapons; mostly lasers), as well as his role as “an Egyptian resource manipulated into serving American interests.”

Egypt’s papers:

Al-Ahram: Daily, state-run, largest distribution in Egypt

Al-Akhbar: Daily, state-run, second to Al-Ahram in institutional size

Al-Gomhurriya: Daily, state-run

Rose al-Youssef: Daily, state-run

Al-Dostour: Daily, privately owned

Al-Shorouk: Daily, privately owned

Al-Watan: Daily, privately owned

Al-Wafd: Daily, published by the liberal Wafd Party

Youm7: Daily, privately owned

Al-Tahrir: Daily, privately owned

Freedom and Justice: Daily, published by the Muslim Brotherhood's Freedom and Justice Party

Sawt al-Umma: Weekly, privately owned

Al-Arabi: Weekly, published by the Nasserist Party

Al-Nour: Official paper of the Salafi Nour Party

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The Muslim Brotherhood’s Freedom and Justice Party on Sunday urged Egyptians to demonstrate in Tahrir Square in support of President Mohamed Morsy’s decision to retire the heads of the Supreme Council of Armed Forces and abolish the supplement to the Constitutional Declaration.

“The president proved his ability to face challenges, complete the march of the revolution, and achieve our aspirations for dignity and social justice,” the party wrote on its Facebook page.

Earlier in the day, President Morsy sent Defense Minister Hussein Tantawi and Chief of Staff Sami Anan to retirement. He also appointed Mahmoud Mekky as vice president, Abdel Fattah al-Sisi as defense minister and Sidqy Sobhy as military chief of staff.

He also granted Tantawi the Nile Medal, Egypt’s top state honor, and Anan the State Medal, and appointed them as his advisers.

Edited translation from Al-Masry Al-Youm

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President Mohamed Morsy attended an Armed Forces iftar Sunday at the Armed Forces Club.

The iftar was held on the on the lunar anniversary of the 1973 war, on 10 Ramadan. The war marks a major event in Egyptian modern military history, that resulted in the peace treaty with Israel and the return of Sinai to Egypt.

Morsy was received by the Chairman of the Supreme Council of Armed Forces, Hussein Tantawi, and Chief of Staff Sami Anan. Commanders of the military forces, and a number of national figures attended the iftar.

In the tenth episode of his daily Ramadan radio show “The People Ask and the President Answers,” Morsy said that the 1973 victory is a pride for all Egyptians, as it came after the Egyptian people were eager to liberate their land, and that the victory marks the harmony between the military forces and the people.

"The same way that the Egyptian army held a great responsibility in crossing of the Suez Canal, they also bear responsibility since 2011 until now. These conditions are as important as the October War." said Morsy.

Edited translation from Al-Masry Al-Youm.

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In an attempt to shore up the Constituent Assembly days before the Administrative Court's decision on its dissolution, President Mohamed Morsy ratified the law regulating its formation in order give it legal immunity against being disbanded by the court.  Although the law was ratified and published in the official gazette last Thursday, 12 July, it is the top story in Egypt's local newspapers on Monday. The Supreme Council of Armed Forces had originally refused to approve the law drafted by Parliament before its dissolution in 14 June.

Newspapers' take on the news differed across the private and state newspapers. Privately-owned Al-Shorouk's front-page headline described Morsy's action as a "maneuver" as the headline reads, "Morsy negotiates with the military council and maneuvers by immunizing the assembly." Hours after holding a meeting with the SCAF to assuage the Parliament dissolution crisis and reach a mutual agreement, the president blew up a legal bomb yesterday by ratifying the Constituent Assembly Law, reported Al-Shorouk.

Privately-owned Al-Tahrir newspaper uses a sharp tone against Morsy by running a headline that says, "Nobody knows what Morsy wants: The president breaches the law again by immunizing the Constituent Assembly 24 hours before the verdict on its constitutionality." Provocatively, the story leads with, "Nobody knows what President Mohamed Morsy wants, all his decisions until now are taken in violation of the laws and to preserve the Muslim Brotherhood's interests."

The new privately-owned Al-Watan newspaper highlights a conflict between Morsy and the SCAF by connecting Morsy's actions to Field Marshal Hussein Tantawi's words from a recent speech during a military celebration, "We won't allow one group to control Egypt."

"The president defies and the field marshal warns," says Al-Watan's front-page headline as it places stories about Tantawi's speech and Morsy's decision on the Constituent Assembly opposite each other under one headline.

However, the Freedom and Justice daily, the Brotherhood's mouthpiece, interviews legal experts affiliated to the Islamist group confirming the legality of the decision and Morsy's jurisdiction to make it. The partisan paper interviews Brotherhood leader and lawyer Sobhi Saleh whom it titled as the "MP Sobhi Saleh, Parliament's Legislative Committee deputy head" despite Parliament's dissolution. Morsy has the right to ratify the Constituent Assembly Law, and it is binding immediately since the moment it has been published in the official gazette, said Saleh, who also expects that the Administrative Court will refer the law to the Supreme Constitutional Court.

In another preemptive move, all Shura Council members resigned from the Constituent Assembly, including two FJP members and two from the Salafi Nour Party, reported the Freedom and Justice daily. This step came as a response to those who would use the presence of some Shura Council members on the assembly as a legal argument against it in court. 

This case is the second to challenge the structure of the Constituent Assembly after a court dissolved the first formation two months ago on the grounds that it was half comprised of MPs. Article 60 of the Constitutional Declaration states that Parliament should elect the Constituent Assembly. According to the court, the word "elect" stipulates that MPs cannot elect themselves and all members of the committee have to be from outside Parliament.

In contrast, state-run Al-Ahram Newspaper downplays the whole issue by running a small story at the bottom of its front page while it leads with Tantawi's speech and that of Morsy at the 19th African Union Summit currently taking place in the Ethiopian capital Addis Ababa.

Morsy, whose visit marks the first of an Egyptian president to Ethiopia since the assassination attempt on former President Hosni Mubarak in 1995, asserted that Egypt is determined to be a powerful and effective focal center to support its brothers across Africa, reported Al-Ahram. "I completely believe that together we can solve the continent's political and security problems…including establishing a healthy relationship between Sudan and South Sudan, ending the conflict in Somalia and restoring stability in Mali and Guinea-Bissau," said Morsy, adding that Africa's issues will be among Egypt's top priorities.

In continuation of its war against the Brotherhood, privately-owned Al-Dostour newspaper runs a front-page headline, "The people chant 'Down with the Supreme Guide's rule,'" referring to the Brotherhood's top leader and protests held against Hillary Clinton's visit to Egypt and Morsy's meeting with her during the past two days.

"The US seeks to transform Egypt into an impoverished state. The Brotherhood and America's provocations confirm that the zero hour is near… America's occupation of the country's rule is unacceptable," says Al-Dostour. The private-owned paper also exaggerates the number of protesters outside the hotel where Clinton was staying by describing it as a "million-man protest" although other papers reported hundreds. The protest was against America's blatant interference in Egyptian affairs and making secret deals with the Muslim Brotherhood, reported Al-Dostour.

Presidential spokesperson Yasser Ali had said immediately after Clinton's press conference on Saturday that Egypt won't allow anybody to meddle in its affairs, in response to the protests.

Egypt's papers:

Al-Ahram: Daily, state-run, largest distribution in Egypt

Al-Akhbar: Daily, state-run, second to Al-Ahram in institutional size

Al-Gomhurriya: Daily, state-run

Rose al-Youssef: Daily, state-run

Al-Dostour: Daily, privately owned

Al-Shorouk: Daily, privately owned

Al-Watan: Daily, privately owned

Al-Wafd: Daily, published by the liberal Wafd Party

Youm7: Daily, privately owned

Al-Tahrir: Daily, privately owned

Freedom and Justice: Daily, published by the Muslim Brotherhood's Freedom and Justice Party

Sawt al-Umma: Weekly, privately owned

Al-Arabi: Weekly, published by the Nasserist Party

Al-Nour: Official paper of the Salafi Nour Party

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Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas plans to meet with President Mohamed Morsy on Wednesday after arriving in Cairo on Tuesday evening.

Palestinian Ambassador to Egypt Barakat al-Farra said that the two presidents will discuss the Palestinian situation and Israeli violations in the occupied territories, as well as the settlements and the pressure exerted on the Palestinians to return to negotiations without conditions.

Morsy will discuss with Abbas his conversation with US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton about the peace process.

Sources told Al-Masry Al-Youm that as soon as he arrives in Cairo, Abbas will meet with Major General Mourad Mowafy, director of the General Intelligence Services.  

According to sources, the Palestinian president will not meet with Field Marshal Hussein Tantawi, head of the Supreme Council of Armed Forces. This would be the first time since the fall of former President Hosni Mubarak that Abbas visits Cairo and does not meet with Tantawi.

Edited translation from Al-Masry Al-Youm

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