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The cash shortage is raising questions about Egypt’s ability to keep importing wheat that is essential to the food supply, stirring fears of an economic catastrophe.

Farmers already lack fuel for the pumps that irrigate their fields, and they say they fear they will not have enough for the tractors to reap their wheat next month before it rots in the fields.

Egyptian President Mohamed Morsi In 2010: No To Negotiations With The Blood-Sucking, Warmongering ‘Descendants Of Apes And Pigs’; Calls To Boycott U.S. Products

View this clip on MEMRI TV.

Following are excerpts from archival interviews with Egyptian President Mohamed Morsi, which were posted on the Internet in 2010:

Mohamed Morsi: “These futile [Israeli-Palestinian] negotiations are a waste of time and opportunities. The Zionists buy time and gain more opportunities, as the Palestinians, the Arabs, and the Muslims lose time and opportunities, and they get nothing out of it. We can see how this dream has dissipated. This dream has always been an illusion. Yet some Palestinians, who erroneously believe that their enemies might give them something… This [Palestinian] Authority was created by the Zionist and American enemies for the sole purpose of opposing the will of the Palestinian people and its interests.

[…]

“No reasonable person can expect any progress on this track. Either [you accept] the Zionists and everything they want, or else it is war. This is what these occupiers of the land of Palestine know – these blood-suckers, who attack the Palestinians, these warmongers, the descendants of apes and pigs.

[…]

“We should employ all forms of resistance against them. There should be military resistance within the land of Palestine against those criminal Zionists, who attack Palestine and the Palestinians. There should also be political resistance and economic resistance through a boycott, as well as by supporting the resistance fighters. This should be the practice of the Muslims and the Arabs outside Palestine. They should support the resistance fighters and besiege the Zionist wherever they are. None of the Arab or Muslim peoples and regimes should have dealings with them. Pressure should be exerted upon them. They must not be given any opportunity, and must not stand on any Arab or Islamic land. They must be driven out of our countries.

[…]

“Therefore, these negotiations must stop once and for all. Everybody must turn to the support of the resistance, which is the option chosen by the Palestinians and by us all – the Arabs and the Muslims, Palestinians and others. We must all realize that resistance is the only way to liberate the land of Palestine.”

[…]

Al-Quds TV (Lebanon) March 20, 2010, via the Internet

“The Zionists have no right to the land of Palestine. There is no place for them on the land of Palestine. What they took before 1947-8 constitutes plundering, and what they are doing now is a continuation of this plundering. By no means do we recognize their Green Line. The land of Palestine belongs to the Palestinians, not to the Zionists.

[…]

“We must confront this Zionist entity. All ties of all kinds must be severed with this plundering criminal entity, which is supported by America and its weapons, as well as by its own nuclear weapons, the existence of which is well known. It will bring about their own destruction. The peoples must boycott this entity and avoid normalization of relations with it. All products from countries supporting this entity – from the U.S. and others – must be boycotted.

[…]

“We want a country for the Palestinians on the entire land of Palestine, on the basis of [Palestinian] citizenship. All the talk about a two-state solution and about peace is nothing but an illusion, which the Arabs have been chasing for a long time now. They will not get from the Zionists anything but this illusion.

[…]

“They have been fanning the flames of civil strife wherever they were throughout history. They are hostile by nature.

[…]

“The Zionists understood nothing but the language of force.”

[…]

Bahrain Files Protest With Iran Over Translation. By The Associated Press

MANAMA, Bahrain (AP) — Bahrain said Saturday that it filed a protest with Iran over a broadcast translation that wrongly substituted Bahrain for Syria in a speech by Egypt’s president.

Bahrain’s government said that President Mohamed Morsi of Egypt referred to the Syrian rebels fighting an “oppressive” government during a speech in Tehran on Thursday.

Bahrain said Iranian state television replaced the word “Syria” with “Bahrain” in its translation.

Iran is an ally of Syria but has criticized Bahrain for cracking down on Shiite protesters.

Egypt a dictatorship again. By Guy Bechor

After a year and a half of semi-anarchy, Egypt is once again ruled by one person – Morsi

President Morsi Photo: APWhen all the analysts were dealing with newly-elected Egyptian President Mohamed Morsi’s dramatic decision to dismiss senior military commanders, only a few addressed his second “presidential declaration” of the day, which saw him seize control of the country’s corridors of power. Morsi took advantage of the incident in Sinai to justify the ousting of senior officers, thus expanding his presidential authority to the point where it is absolute.

Morsi is now the head of the executive branch, he appoints and dissolves governments in Egypt, and he is also the legislative branch in the absence of a parliament and due to his ability to enact any law he wants. He is also in charge of foreign policy, domestic policy, security, economy and more. He finalizes international agreements, interprets the constitution, and has the power to appoint a taskforce that will draft a new constitution. And so, after a year and a half of semi-anarchy, Egypt is once again a country ruled by one person – a dictatorship. But the current dictatorship is even harsher than Mubarak’s, whose decisions were reached together with parliament, political parties and the courts. Here we are talking about one man who controls everything.

Even the young revolutionaries, who spoke of democracy and freedom of expression, failed to notice Morsi’s takeover due to their enthusiasm over the sacking of the senior military officials. There is no correlation between the current autocracy and what Egypt wanted to project to the world.

It is amazing that all this has taken place a mere month and a half after Morsi took office. During this time he has tamed the military, the political parties, the courts and mainly the press. The new president and the Muslim Brotherhood movement that backs him are currently replacing the chief editors and senior journalists with government mouthpieces. Dozens of journalists are being replaced by Islamist representatives, and according to the new instructions it is prohibited to criticize the Brotherhood or the president. Publishing caricatures of the president is also forbidden, and journalists may not refer to him or his aides directly.

The private press, which has begun to take root in Egypt, is being muzzled. The private al-Dustour newspaper (“The Constitution” – how ironic) dares to criticize the president? The newspaper is removed from the stores. Such measures were not taken even under Mubarak’s rule. A private television channel was shut down after its owner, Tawfiq Okasha, dared to express pro-Israel views, and anyone who displays an ‘exaggerated’ amount of independence is put on trial – all in the name of “completing the revolution.”

Israel has a long history of disappointment from Egypt. Over the past few decades, every attempt to strengthen relations and boost economic cooperation has been rejected by Egypt because “normalization of ties” with Israel is forbidden, as though the countries had never signed a peace treaty. The result of this rejection is that Egypt’s GDP per capita is $3,000, compared with Israel’s $30,000.

Now, as Egypt enters the next phase in its history, with an autocratic regime, Israel has no expectations, apart from minimal stability along the border. That’s it. No one in Israel has any illusions regarding economic cooperation, which would have benefited both sides. Israel can only wish Egypt success in the path it has chosen and in its continued search for identity.

Hamas seeks to ‘emancipate’ Gaza from PA. By Roi Kais

Strip’s rulers reportedly wish to separate two Palestinian entities in order to cut commercial ties with Israel in favor of Egypt

The London-based Arabic newspaper Al-Hayat reported Sunday that Hamas is considering declaring Gaza Strip a separate entity from the Palestinian Authority, whose seat of government is in the West Bank city of Ramallah.

Hamas officials told the newspaper that the move is likely to be backed by the new Egyptian regime and will serve as a way for Gaza to cut its commercial ties with Israel, while bolstering them with Egypt, instead.

According to the report, Hamas has been mulling the option for over two years, but the move was delayed over the fierce objection of the Egyptian intelligence services and Palestinian officials in Ramallah.

Hamas PM Ismail Haniyeh Photo: AFPThe rise of the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt, and the subsequent election of Mohamed Morsi for president, have revived the notion.

The potential emancipation was reportedly the focus of recent talks held by Hamas Politburo Chief Khaled Mashaal and Morsi in Cairo, last week.

“Our relations with the new Egyptian regime are based on a balance of needs,” a Hamas official said. “Gaza Strip needs a commercial pathway with Egypt and Egypt needs someone to maintain the security on its eastern front.”?

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