فتح حساب | صفحة جديدة 1
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اعلانات تجارية |
صفحة جديدة 1
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| الرئيس مبارك في موسوعة إنكارتا | |
| كاتب الموضوع | رسالة |
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جيهان أدهم ملازم جيش
عدد المساهمات : 10 تاريخ التسجيل : 08/11/2011 العمر : 41 الموقع : الإسكندرية
| موضوع: الرئيس مبارك في موسوعة إنكارتا الثلاثاء نوفمبر 08, 2011 12:49 pm | |
| * Hosni Mubarak Hosni Mubarak, born in 1928, military leader and president of Egypt (1981- ). He was born in Kafr-al Meselha, the son of an inspector of the Ministry of Justice. Mubarak was educated at Egypt's national Military Academy and Air Force Academy and at the Frunze General Staff Academy in Moscow. Under Egyptian president Anwar al-Sadat, Mubarak served in a number of military posts, including deputy minister of war from 1972 to 1975; in 1975, he became vice president. After Sadat was assassinated, on October 6, 1981, Mubarak became president. He instituted a vigorous economic recovery program; remained committed to the peace treaty with Israel (signed in 1979); mended relations with other Arab states, which were damaged after Egypt's peace with Israel; and initiated a policy he called “positive neutrality” toward the great powers. He was reelected when his National Democratic Party won the October 1987 elections and was thus able to nominate him as the sole candidate for president. With serious economic problems and rising Islamic fundamental opposition at home, Mubarak continued to seek an end to the stalemate that had developed between Israel and Arab nations; in 1988 he visited the United States for talks on that subject. Mubarak, supported the 1990 United Nations (UN) sanctions against Iraq when that country invaded Kuwait, orchestrated Arab League opposition to the invasion, committed about 38,500 troops to the anti-Iraq coalition in the Persian Gulf War (1991), and supported postwar efforts to achieve peace in the Middle East. Reelected in 1993, Mubarak cracked down on Muslim fundamentalist opposition groups after an upsurge in guerrilla violence by Islamic extremists. Mubarak survived an assassination attempt unharmed in June 1995 in the Ethiopian capital of Addis Ababa. Five of the assailants were killed during or after the ambush and three escaped to Sudan, which is widely believed to have sponsored the attack. In November 1995, just before parliamentary elections, Mubarak's government accused the Muslim Brotherhood of helping violent Islamic groups. Many of the Muslim Brotherhood's members were arrested, and several who planned to run in the elections or monitor them were tried and sentenced to prison. Critics accused the government of trying to eliminate even peaceful opponents. In the elections that followed, Mubarak's National Democratic Party won an overwhelming victory. Mubarak was elected to a fourth six-year term in 1999. Microsoft ® Encarta ® 2006. © 1993-2005 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
Hosni Mubarak Hosni Mubarak became president of Egypt in 1981. He was reelected in 1987, 1993, and 1999. Woodfin Camp and Associates, Inc./Barry Iverson Microsoft ® Encarta ® 2006. © 1993-2005 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. Vice President Hosni Mubarak succeeded Sadat as president. Mubarak promised to stress continuity in foreign policy and betterment of economic conditions in Egypt. One of his first acts was to release the politicians whom Sadat had jailed. While maintaining Egypt’s close ties with the United States, Mubarak also pursued closer ties with other Arab countries and kept his distance from Israel. By 1987 most Arab states had restored their diplomatic ties with Egypt. Egypt was readmitted to the Arab League in 1989 and the league's headquarters was moved back to Cairo. Within Egypt, the government continued to move away from statecontrolled enterprises but also curbed some of the excesses of businessmen and speculators who had taken advantage of Sadat’s infitah policy. Corruption, even among members of Sadat’s family, was exposed and halted. Mubarak allowed new political parties to form and eased some curbs on press freedom, but he maintained the state of emergency that Sadat had imposed in 1981 to prevent the Islamist groups from gaining power. Yet the government seemed less able than the Islamists, who maintained a traditional Islamic social services network, to deliver medical, educational, and social benefits to poor people. Continued inequities between a rich and powerful minority and the impoverished masses appalled most Egyptians. In 1990 Iraq invaded Kuwait, and Mubarak supported the U.S.-led allied coalition that was formed to reverse the occupation (see Persian Gulf War). Egypt’s intellectuals widely criticized his support of the coalition, and many Egyptians sympathized with the Iraqis. Between 1990 and 1997, radical Islamist groups engaged in violent action to overthrow the government. Members of these groups murdered secular-minded politicians, a leading secularist writer, Copts, and foreign tourists. Mubarak himself barely escaped an assassination attempt in 1995. The government responded by imprisoning or executing numerous radicals. Economic reforms in the 1990s promoted economic development and raised Egypt’s per capita income, but the economy stagnated from 2000 to 2002. Afterward the economy picked up somewhat due in part to a devaluation of the currency in 2003. The peace policy with Israel and Egypt’s close ties to the United States remained widely unpopular. Nevertheless, the Egyptian government formally upheld the peace treaty with Israel and on occasion sponsored meetings aimed at promoting peace between Israel and the Palestinians. During the early 2000s Mubarak continued his policies of suppressing radical Islamists and permitting only weak opposition from other political parties. He was quick to condemn the September 11 attacks on the United States, and in the wake of those attacks reaffirmed the importance of his crackdown on Islamic fundamentalists. In the meantime more moderate Islamic groups were demanding a more overtly Islamist state based upon Sharia (Islamic law). Although Egyptian legislation is nominally based upon Sharia, some would like to see Sharia more rigorously enforced in practice. Such a policy was opposed by religious minorities, chiefly Coptic Christians (see Coptic Church); some secular liberals; and also by the United States. The holding of relatively free elections by Palestinians and in Iraq in early 2005 led to some publicly expressed Egyptian sentiment in favor of more democracy at home. As Mubarak’s fourth sixyear term drew to a close in 2005, some groups called for changes in the constitution, including a two-term limit on the presidency. Arthur Goldschmidt, Jr., contributed the History section of this article Microsoft ® Encarta ® 2006. © 1993-2005 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
1981: Egypt Sadat assassination. Egyptian President Anwar al-Sadat was assassinated in Cairo on October 6, as he watched a military parade marking the anniversary of Egypt's surprise attack across the Suez Canal opening the 1973 Arab-Israeli war. While Sadat and others fixed their eyes on a display of Mirage jets in the sky, a small group of men in military uniforms leaped from a truck in the parade and, with little resistance at first, approached the reviewing stand, hurling grenades and spraying submachine gun fire. Sadat was rushed by helicopter to a military hospital, where he died two hours later of multiple wounds. Several other spectators were reported killed, and more than 20 were wounded. The four assassins were captured at the scene and later indicted along with 20 others accused of complicity in the assassination. The government said that the assassins were "closely linked" to a wider group of conspirators within Takfir Wahigra, a violent Muslim fundamentalist sect, and that they had sought to set up an Islamic republic in Egypt. The alleged mastermind of the conspiracy was a former military intelligence officer named Aboud el-Zoumr; he was arrested after a gun battle with security officers, at a hideout near the pyramids at Giza. By November, several hundred Muslim militants also had been arrested in the investigation, some after grenade and machine gun battles with police. The government said there were indications that the conspirators received financial assistance from outside sources, but did not elaborate. Although Sadat's assassination shocked the world, his security had long been an object of concern, since his steps to achieve peace with Israel made him a traitor in the eyes of many Arabs. It was these same steps that brought Sadat the 1978 Nobel Peace Prize—shared with Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin—and caused him to be regarded by most Westerners as a statesman of extraordinary stature, boldness, and flexibility. He came from humble beginnings. One of 13 children, Muhammad Anwar al-Sadat was born on December 25, 1918, in a small village in the Nile delta. His father was a clerk and his mother an illiterate Sudanese. A devout Muslim, Sadat attended religious schools and entered the Military Academy in Cairo. After graduating in 1938, he joined a circle of young officers, also including his mentor, Gamal Abdel Nasser, who plotted against British rule. He was jailed in 1942 and again in 1944, the second time for alleged involvement in the assassination of a pro-British Egyptian aristocrat. Reinstated in the army after his acquittal in 1948, Sadat joined in the coup that toppled King Faruk and brought Nasser to power in 1952. Sadat attracted little attention as Nasser's loyal subordinate and, from 1969, vice-president. When Nasser died and Sadat became president in 1970, he was expected to be a weak interim leader. The new president, however, gradually began to strike his own course. Turning away from Nasser's brand of pan-Arabism, he stressed Egyptian nationalism. In a first step away from close military alliance with the Soviet Union, he expelled some 20,000 Soviet military advisers in 1972. His surprise thrust into the Sinai on October 6, 1973, did not lead to victory in the ensuing Arab-Israeli war, but it helped Egypt regain the self-respect lost by its quick defeat in the 1967 war and the occupation of the Sinai by Israel. As a cease-fire in place and two disengagement accords were reached, with U.S. mediation, after the 1973 war, Sadat developed close relations with the United States and with then Secretary of State Henry Kissinger, and he devoted himself energetically to the goal of peace with his longtime enemy, Israel. In late 1977, with progress waning, he made a historic journey to Jerusalem, where he addressed the Israeli Parliament, calling for peace and, at the same time, a return of occupied territories and a recognition of Palestinian rights. The next year, when negotiations bogged down again, he and Begin accepted the invitation of President Jimmy Carter to meet at Camp David, Md., where the three hammered out the outlines of an Egyptian-Israeli peace treaty and a framework for future talks on Palestinian autonomy. The Nobel Peace Prize followed, and in March 1979 the peace treaty was signed. Despite only limited progress in the Palestinian autonomy negotiations and the continued opposition of most Arab nations to what they regarded as a betrayal, Sadat persisted in attempting to foster the "peace process" in the last years of his life. His tendency to follow his own aims, regardless of controversy, was illustrated by his granting asylum in 1980 to the dying shah of Iran. Like the shah, Sadat encountered opposition from militant Islamic fundamentalists, whom he tried to suppress in a crackdown this September. Although he appeared to retain wide popularity, it was this opposition that apparently led to his assassination. Aftermath. On October 8, two days after Sadat's assassination, clashes between police and Muslim fundamentalists in the southern city of Asyut left more than 100 dead, according to unofficial estimates. Security was tight at Sadat's funeral on October 10, which was attended by all three living U.S. ex-presidents, among other foreign dignitaries, but was not open to members of the general public. Officials moved quickly to consolidate power behind Vice-President Muhammad Hosni Mubarak, who was unanimously nominated for president by a vote of the People's Assembly (parliament) and won easy approval in a national referendum on October 13. The former Egyptian Air Force commander and close Sadat associate was sworn in the next day; he repeatedly assured all parties that there would be no deviation from the foreign commitments agreed to by his predecessor. (However, in a speech in November, he added that Egypt was "fully committed to nonalignment and positive neutrality" in foreign policy.) Mubarak promptly ordered a roundup of antigovernment dissidents, supplementing earlier crackdowns ordered by Sadat, and by late October it was estimated that up to 1,500 people had been arrested since Sadat's death, many of them associated with fundamentalist Islamic associations in the universities. As a precaution against further antiregime activity, the government decreed a period of martial law, to last one year, and severely limited the size of public assemblies. The government also dismissed more than 130 members of the Egyptian Army because of "extremist religious leanings," although officials maintained that the army was basically loyal, with minimal infiltration by Muslim extremists, mainly in the lower ranks. The U.S. government promised to accelerate its delivery of weapons to both Egypt and the Sudan, and large-scale military exercises involving the United States and Egypt, as well as other countries in the region, were launched in November. Earlier domestic opposition. The government of President Sadat had repeatedly been placed on the defensive by the vociferous responses of the opposition parties to such events as the Israeli raid on an Iraqi nuclear reactor and Israel's bombing of Beirut. Al Shaab, the newspaper of the Socialist Labor Party (SLP), the major opposition party, led a persistent, vituperative attack on the government for failing to move Israel toward recognition of the Palestine Liberation Organization and for allegedly granting military base rights to the United States. The president attacked the opposition parties on numerous occasions, accusing them of trying to drag the country back into the political quagmire of prerevolutionary Egypt. His attacks, originally aimed largely at the Marxist National Progressive Unionist Party and the disbanded New Wafd, were extended to include the SLP. In July the government took action against the directing council of the Lawyers' Syndicate, after several anti-Camp David statements were made by the syndicate's president at a meeting of Arab "rejectionists" abroad and published in Al Shaab. People's Assembly hearings resulted in an order to dissolve the syndicate's council, and an interim council was set up to take its place. More significantly, the government encountered growing opposition among the religious fundamentalists organized in Islamic societies. In a country strained by rapid economic and social change, these societies were discovering a large audience among students, civil servants, and small shop owners. The Islamic societies sought to mobilize public opinion behind bringing Egypt's laws into conformity with the dictates of Islam. They also added their strong voices to those of others opposed to the 1979 peace treaty. The revival of the Islamic movement was viewed with increasing alarm by many members of Egypt's Coptic Christian community. Christian- Muslim tension reached its boiling point in mid-June, when Christian and Muslim neighbors resorted to violence in a dispute over a piece of land in a poor district of Cairo. The conflict spread rapidly and engulfed the entire district, resulting in at least ten deaths and scores of injuries. Some 4,000-5,000 police were dispatched to the scene, and they succeeded for the most part in confining the fighting to that section of the city. There were, however, subsequent reports of disturbances in the cities of Alexandria and Asyut. In Cairo, police were posted in front of all of the churches, but this precaution failed to prevent an explosion at a church on August 2, which killed three people and wounded many others. During the first week of September, President Sadat imposed a severe crackdown on religious groups and also on the secular political opposition. More than 1,500 Muslim fundamentalists (especially members of the militant Muslim Brotherhood), Coptic Christian priests, politicians (especially members of the SLP), and others were arrested. A number of Islamic and Christian societies were disbanded. Al Daawa, newspaper of the Muslim Brotherhood, was among several journals to be banned; also closed down was the SLP paper, Al Shaab. Pope Shenuda III, leader of the Coptic Christians, was deposed by Sadat, to be replaced by a committee of five bishops. The government also announced that it would assume supervision of the nation's 40,000 mosques and issue guidelines for excluding political material from sermons. In a three-hour address to the People's Assembly on September 5, Sadat asserted that his crackdown was aimed at those directly or indirectly inciting sectarian strife. He blamed agitators for provoking the Coptic-Muslim riots in June and castigated the Muslim Brotherhood for fomenting a "jihad," or holy war, asserting that he had been too lenient with these and other groups strongly critical of the government. Sadat was also highly critical of foreign press coverage of the crackdown, and in mid-September he expelled two foreign correspondents. A national referendum was called for September 10 in order to marshal popular backing for the crackdown; according to official results, 99.45 percent of the more than 11 million who cast their ballots expressed approval of Sadat's hard-line approach. In a further step, on September 15, the Egyptian cabinet announced the expulsion of the Soviet ambassador, six of his staff members, two Soviet journalists, and more than 1,000 Soviet technicians. The Soviets were accused of trying to "incite sedition and conflicts among Egyptians through the activities of Soviet intelligence and elements in the Soviet embassy." The action against the Soviet Union was the strongest taken by the government since the 1972 expulsion of Soviet military personnel. International affairs. During the early part of the year, Egyptian officials were forced to mark time on their Middle East diplomacy, while a new U.S. administration came into office and defined its foreign policy and while Israel awaited a general election. President Sadat took advantage of the lull in diplomatic activity to address the European Parliament in Luxembourg this February; there he expressed his support for the European initiative to secure mutual recognition between Israel and the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO). However, it was clear that this move by Sadat was designed primarily to exercise subtle pressure on the incoming Reagan administration, while Egypt awaited the reactivation of diplomatic efforts. Meanwhile, several regional conflicts demanded the attention of the Egyptians. Libya's decisive intervention during late 1980 in the civil war in Chad alarmed the Egyptian government. Egyptians feared that Libya, with its huge stockpile of Soviet weapons, might be seeking to encircle Egypt by using Chad as a base from which to move eastward into the Sudan. (These fears grew stronger after Sadat's death.) Sadat's repeated pledges that he would tolerate no such designs on the Sudan obviously struck a sympathetic chord, for by late March, Egypt and the Sudan had restored full diplomatic relations. These relations had been damaged by Egypt's signing of the Camp David peace agreement with Israel; the reconciliation represented a concerted reaction to a perceived Sovietbacked threat from Libya, as well as a modest breach in the solidarity of the Arab "rejectionists" (Arab nations united in opposition to the Egyptian-Israeli peace treaty). Of equal concern early this year was the escalation of tension and fighting in the Middle East. Syrian forces in Lebanon launched large-scale attacks against right-wing Christian Phalangists, and Syria installed SAM missiles in the Bekaa Valley of Lebanon. There were also repeated Israeli raids against Palestinian strongholds in Lebanon, and the prospect of a direct Israeli-Syrian confrontation was raised when Israel began issuing ultimatums over removal of Syria's SAM missiles. As tensions mounted, Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin called for an emergency summit meeting with Sadat to discuss the situation. The meeting, held on June 4 at Sharm al Shaykh in the Sinai peninsula, was to prove acutely embarrassing to Sadat, for just three days later Israeli jets destroyed a nuclear reactor in Baghdad, Iraq. The Israeli raid against an Arab nation outraged the Egyptian government and provoked heated debate in the People's Assembly. However, Egypt was determined to allow nothing to interrupt movement toward the regaining of the rest of its lost territories in the Sinai, scheduled to be returned by Israel in April 1982. The Egyptians, therefore, refrained from taking any action beyond condemnation of Israel before the United Nations Security Council and a plea for closer U.S. control over Israel's use of American-made weapons. Many Egyptian officials were disappointed over the reelection of Prime Minister Begin, shortly before the Sharm al Shaykh meeting, and they feared that his new coalition government would prove even less willing to compromise over the Palestinian autonomy issue than its predecessor. As if to confirm Egyptian fears, in mid-July the Israeli Air Force undertook a heavy bombardment of Palestinian guerrilla headquarters in Beirut, just as Egyptian and Israeli diplomats were nearing a final agreement (signed August 3) over the creation of a multinational peace force, to patrol their common border after the return of the last occupied territory in the Sinai. These events made it extremely difficult for Sadat to convince his Arab brethren that the Camp David agreement amounted to more than a separate peace with Israel and that the Soviet Union, not Israel, posed the major, long-run threat to stability in the region. On August 2, Sadat left Egypt for meetings with British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher in London and then with U.S. President Ronald Reagan in Washington, hoping to breathe new life into the autonomy talks. The British joined Sadat in urging both Israel and the PLO to arrive at a simultaneous, mutual recognition, but the Egyptian president failed to alter the U.S. policy, which opposed any official contact with the PLO until it acknowledged Israel's legitimacy. Sadat kept a promise made at Sharm al Shaykh to meet with Begin in Alexandria, in late August, and the two leaders at this meeting agreed to a resumption of Palestinian autonomy talks between their two nations (with the United States also participating). The talks resumed in Cairo in late September, and further sessions were held after Sadat's death. Economy. Egypt's prospects for economic growth were buoyed by a number of factors. Egyptians working in Arab oil-producing countries remitted an estimated $3 billion this year. The newly widened and deepened Suez Canal, now capable of accommodating supertankers, was expected to earn about $1 billion in 1981, compared with $660 million in 1980. Revenues from petroleum production continued to climb, and tourism remained a major earner of foreign currency. These sources of foreign exchange were backed up by a continuation of massive foreign aid from the United States, Western Europe, Japan, and major international financial institutions. At a meeting held in Aswan, on January 20-21, foreign creditors expressed confidence in the Egyptian development strategy and promised to provide aid and loan support of $2.9 billion over the year. In May, the Reagan administration endorsed a sharp aid increase to $1.65 billion for the 1982 fiscal year ($900 million in military aid, $750 million in economic assistance). These factors gave Egypt a strong balance-of-payments position and put its budget in the black for the first time in many years. Much of the improvement could be attributed to Sadat's strategy of seeking a peaceful accommodation with Israel, recovery of the occupied territories, and closer ties with the West. However, the economic situation was still problematic. The government continued to feel politically compelled to maintain and even increase price subsidies for many basic commodities, which could cost approximately $3 billion in fiscal 1982. With the population growing at about 2.8 percent each year, the problem of employing, feeding, and housing the populace became even more acute. Also, little progress was being made in attracting significant foreign investment by large multinational firms. Under pressure from inflation and other circumstances, the government in May announced substantial increases in private- and public-sector minimum wages. The government also promised to focus its economic development efforts on basic necessities. A rapid growth in demand for imported consumer goods, combined with an increase in the number of foreign firms wishing to repatriate capital, prompted moves by the government in July to reduce the demand for hard foreign currencies, especially the dollar. The exchange rate was modified for certain categories of imports, while importers were required to place initial letter-of-credit deposits in Egyptian currency rather than in dollars. An accord was signed with the United States in June, allowing Egypt to acquire U.S. materials and technology for the development of a nuclear energy program. Earlier, the government had ratified the 1968 nuclear nonproliferation treaty, obliging itself to refrain from nuclear weapons development and to allow its nuclear facilities to be inspected by the International Atomic Energy Agency. The Egyptian government was hoping to build eight nuclear reactors by the end of the century. Area and population. Area, 386,661 sq. mi. (including territory occupied by Israel). Pop. (est. 1981), 43.5 million. Principal cities (1976): Cairo (cap.), 5,084,463; Alexandria, 2,318,655. Government. Republic with unicameral People's Assembly. Pres. and prime min., Muhammad Hosni Mubarak. Finance. Monetary unit, Egyptian pound. E£1=US$1.23. Budget (1980), E£8,767 million. Trade (1980). Imports, E£5,221 million; exports E£2,655 million. Principal imports: cereals, machinery, minerals, transport equipment. Principal exports: petroleum, raw cotton, cotton yarn, cotton fabrics. Education (1978-1979). Enrollment: primary, 4,387,000; preparatory, 1,547,000; secondary, 928,000; university, 486,000; technical institutes, 40,000. Armed forces (est. 1980). Army, 320,000; navy, 20,000; air force, 27,000. Microsoft ® Encarta ® 2006. © 1993-2005 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
1982: Egypt Domestic politics. President Hosni Mubarak, who came to power in October 1981 after the assassination of Anwar al-Sadat, moved quickly and firmly during his first few months in office to reestablish internal political stability. In so doing, Mubarak concentrated primarily on exhibiting a new style in the conduct of presidential affairs, while leaving intact the basic outlines of Sadat's political and economic strategies. A significant aspect of this change in style was the new president's treatment of the political opposition. Just six weeks after Sadat's assassination, Mubarak summoned to his office 31 of the most prominent leaders of the secular opposition, all of whom were among the more than 1,500 political opponents arrested in Sadat's massive crackdown in September 1981. After a closed meeting during which Mubarak spoke of the need for calm, responsible political behavior, the group was freed from custody. Beyond this initial act of appeasement, Mubarak repeatedly demonstrated his desire to preserve good relations with all three opposition parties, by personally keeping their leaders well informed on major domestic and foreign policy developments. The president also gradually saw to the return of two secular opposition newspapers banned under Sadat, the weeklies of the Socialist Labor Party and the National Progressive Unionist Party. Mubarak was more cautious with the religious opposition, still widely believed to represent the most serious challenge to the regime. Many of the most prominent members of the Muslim Brotherhood organization, also arrested during the September 1981 crackdown, were released from prison within the first few months of the Mubarak presidency, but the organization's journal, Al Daawa, remained closed. The government did allow more moderate religious elements to publish a new weekly journal, Al Liwaa al Islaami. However, Mubarak remained quite adamant in his rejection of any religious-based political organizations. The release of most of those arrested in September and October 1981 was shrewdly spread out over the greater part of the next year, with the largest groups of detainees released in July and August 1982, after being cleared of involvement in efforts to overthrow the Sadat government. Sadat's assassins, of course, suffered a different fate. On March 6 a court sentenced five of the defendants to death, and 17 others were given prison terms ranging from one year to life. Mubarak ratified the sentences on March 20, and those given the death penalty were executed on April 15. The government also kept a sharp eye out for any reemergence of militant religious groups. On May 8 it indicted some 300 members of Jihad, an underground organization accused of seeking to transform Egypt, by violent means, into an Islamic state. Later in the month, members of a similar organization, Takfir Wahigra, were arrested, and in September additional members of Jihad were arrested for allegedly planning various acts of terrorism and sabotage. Mubarak shuffled the cabinet he inherited from Sadat. On January 2 he appointed Dr. Ahmed Fuad Mohieddin prime minister. The following day, Mohieddin introduced a new cabinet, with the most notable changes occurring in the economic, interior, finance, health, and agriculture ministries. Two ministers were dropped because of their association with a former politician convicted of corruption, a clear signal that the new government was determined to deal firmly with official wrongdoing. The next step in this series of official power realignments was Mubarak's election as chairman of the National Democratic Party on January 26. New economic policy. In his first major policy speech, delivered on November 8, 1981, Mubarak concentrated on economic affairs, declaring his eventual goal to be economic equality and social justice. The government's immediate economic goals included encouraging savings and investment in production, ensuring that subsidies on energy and food went only to the most deserving, streamlining the public sector, reforming import policies, and providing Egyptians with better housing, roads, sewers, schools, and food. Egypt restated its commitment to the "open-door" economic policy introduced by Sadat in 1974 as a means of attracting foreign investment. Mubarak stressed, however, that the policy should be "productive of what the majority needs." Critics had complained that the policy had flooded the country with expensive consumer goods, which only an affluent minority could afford and which brought wealth only to a few middlemen and entrepreneurs. As proof of its seriousness, the government announced in late February a number of regulations, developed at a national economic conference held earlier in the month, designed to control imports and tighten foreign currency regulations. In addition, Prime Minister Mohieddin introduced a bill in the People's Assembly (parliament) to reorganize the public sector, which the new government wants to develop as the backbone of the economy, a significant departure from the private-sector orientation of the previous government. The challenge of how to reduce subsidies on energy and food remained a difficult one, since the fear of mass rioting, such as occurred in 1977, looms over any attempt at substantial reductions. Although the government claimed early successes, it remained to be seen whether its economic policies as a whole would inspire the confidence of foreign and domestic investors. Many saw the new measures as merely another shift in policy, offering no assurances of stability for the long term. Casting a shadow over all efforts at economic reform was the country's rapid growth in population, which is increasing at the rate of 1.3 million persons annually. The population increase continued to put pressure on Egypt's scarce arable land. The cost of food imports, which meet about half the country's food needs, is a serious drain on the economy. Oil production, remittances from Egyptians working abroad, and Suez Canal fees remained the major sources of foreign capital; earnings from the export of industrial products continued to decline. On the plus side, a major oil reservoir discovered in the Western Desert could supply Egypt's oil needs for 17 years. Foreign policy. From the moment Mubarak became president, high priority was given to assuring other nations that there would be stability and continuity in Egyptian foreign policy. Such assurances were particularly urgent because Israel's return to Egypt of the final sector of the Sinai peninsula (occupied since 1967) was scheduled for April 25, 1982, under the Egyptian-Israeli peace treaty. It was feared that any sign of political instability or change in Egypt might jeopardize the plans for Israel's withdrawal. The domestic political situation, however, made it exceedingly difficult for Mubarak to exhibit no change in foreign policy at all. A crucial factor in unifying the diverse political parties and movements opposed to Sadat had been Sadat's failure to respond forcefully to the mid-1981 Israeli air raids on an Iraqi nuclear reactor and on Beirut. Therefore, although Mubarak enjoyed relative quiet from the opposition, he needed to show firmness in responding to any actions by Israel (including, for example, its invasion of Lebanon in June 1982) viewed as provocative by that opposition. Mubarak and his foreign policy advisers showed great skill in steering a middle course. Although the new president stated in his November 8, 1981, address that Egypt would adhere to a policy of nonalignment, he hastened to reassure Egypt's Western friends that no drastic change in foreign policy was being considered. From January 30 to February 8, 1982, Mubarak traveled for a series of face-to-face meetings with major leaders of the Western world. His tour took him to Rome, the Vatican, Paris, Washington, D.C., London, Bonn, and Vienna. Most discussions focused on continued political and economic support for Egypt, as well as on the need to work toward a comprehensive peace in the Middle East. The Western countries reaffirmed their economic aid commitments to Egypt. The U.S. government granted economic aid for the 1983 fiscal year totaling $1 billion; approval of $1.3 billion in military aid was pending late this year. At the same time, Mubarak took care to at least give the impression that a slightly different orientation in foreign policy was being considered. Egypt announced in January that it was ready to resume relations with all Arab countries, most of which had renounced Egypt in 1979, when Sadat signed the peace treaty with Israel. In addition, Mubarak declared it inconceivable that Egypt would undertake any act of aggression against a brother Arab nation, and in early February the Egyptian border with Libya (with whom Egypt has long had strained relations and with whom it fought a brief border war in 1977) was temporarily reopened in a show of good faith. In June, Mubarak took a major symbolic step toward improving relations with the Arab world by making a visit of condolence to Saudi Arabia after the death of King Khaled. In another slight policy shift, a small group of Soviet technicians was invited to return to Egypt, although no similar invitation was extended to the Soviet ambassador. Sadat had expelled some 17,000 Soviet military advisers and experts in 1972; in September 1981 he had expelled the Soviet ambassador and more than 1,000 technicians, on the grounds that the Soviets were trying to "incite sedition." Mubarak's new invitation of Soviet aid, along with some new pronouncements about the virtues of nonalignment, gave some reason for optimism to those domestic elements and Arab nations alienated by the pro-Western orientation of Sadat's foreign policy. Finally, Mubarak rejected Jerusalem as the site of a planned meeting with Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin in March—a move clearly designed to please other Arab states and domestic critics, by signaling Egypt's rejection of Israel's claim to sovereignty over the city. (East Jerusalem was captured by Israel in the 1967 Middle East war, and Arab nations have insisted on its return to Arab control.) Mubarak's refusal to visit Jerusalem led to cancellation of his trip to Israel. Sinai return. The April 25 return of the eastern Sinai took place as planned, despite two last-minute obstacles. In the Israeli settlement of Yamit, some 2,000 settlers had to be evicted by the Israeli Army, which then razed the settlement's buildings. The second obstacle was a dispute over how the border line would be drawn on a stretch of beach called Taba, where an Israeli concern was building a luxury hotel. The day after the April 25 deadline, Egypt and Israel signed an interim agreement calling for a resolution of the dispute under Article 7 of the 1979 peace treaty, which prescribes negotiation, conciliation, or arbitration of such problems. The beach was temporarily put under the jurisdiction of the multinational force of some 2,500 peacekeeping troops and observers from 11 countries that, under the 1979 treaty, is now stationed in a narrow zone that runs the length of the Sinai's border with Israel. (The United States provided about half the personnel for this multinational force.) Middle East conflicts. Reverses in its war with Iran led Iraq to reach out in the spring for rapid military assistance from all possible sources. Given the chance to display Arab solidarity, Egypt responded positively to Iraq's needs. Further evidence of a thaw in relations between the two countries came when direct flights between Baghdad and Cairo were resumed for the first time since November 1978. When Israel invaded Lebanon on June 6, to attack Palestine Liberation Organization strongholds, Mubarak immediately called for a withdrawal of Israeli forces. As the conflict dragged on, other Egyptian officials asserted that relations with Israel had been seriously affected but that the existing peace treaty would not be jeopardized. Egypt worked closely with the French government to line up support for a proposed UN Security Council resolution urging a withdrawal of Israeli and Palestinian troops from Beirut, calling on the PLO and Israel to recognize one another, and affirming the right of the Palestinians to "self-determination" (generally considered a diplomatic code word for the establishment of a national state); the proposal was not put to a formal vote. Throughout July and August, Mubarak urged U.S. President Ronald Reagan to pressure the Israelis into a withdrawal and to take advantage of the crisis to push for a comprehensive settlement in the Middle East. In early August, by which time Israeli troops had trapped the PLO leadership and thousands of guerrilla fighters in West Beirut, the Egyptian government stated that a PLO withdrawal from Beirut would be acceptable only in the framework of a comprehensive settlement. The agreement between the warring parties in Lebanon ironed out in late August by American envoy Philip Habib was obviously not totally satisfactory to the Egyptians, as PLO forces evacuated Beirut without any public promises from other parties that this would lead to a larger settlement. In an effort to keep the pressure on the United States and Israel to work for a solution to the Palestinian issue, Mubarak called for the United States to recognize the right of the Palestinians to selfdetermination and for Israel to halt the establishment of settlements on the West Bank (an area captured from Jordan in 1967). If these conditions were not met, he said, it would be "most difficult" to resume the stalled Egyptian-Israeli negotiations on autonomy for West Bank Palestinians. On September 1, President Reagan proposed a Middle East peace plan that included a freeze on new Israeli settlements and a proposal for Palestinian self-government in the West Bank—but as part of a federation with Jordan, not an independent state. The initial reaction of the Egyptian government, announced after a meeting between Mubarak and U.S. Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger in Alexandria on September 4, was to "welcome ... the positive aspects of the initiative" but indicate some reservations. During a visit to France later in September, Mubarak also expressed reservations about an Arab League peace plan which proposed, among other things, a complete Israeli withdrawal from all occupied territory and the establishment of a Palestinian state with its capital in East Jerusalem. Egyptian-Israeli relations were seriously strained by the mid-September massacre of Palestinians by Christian militia outside West Beirut, which took place despite the presence of Israeli troops in the city. In what the Foreign Ministry described as "an expression of resentment," Egypt's ambassador to Israel was recalled to Cairo—the strongest step taken by Egypt since the two countries established diplomatic relations in February 1980. Area and population. Area, 386,661 sq. mi. Pop. (est. 1982), 44.8 million. Principal cities (1976): Cairo (cap.), 5,084,463; Alexandria, 2,318,655. Government. Republic with unicameral People's Assembly. Pres., Muhammad Hosni Mubarak; prime min., Ahmed Fuad Mohieddin. Finance. Monetary unit, Egyptian pound; E£1 = US$1.22. Budget (1981): revenues, E£7,886.7 million; expenditures, E£7,145.1 million. Trade (1981). Imports, E£6,147.4 million; exports, E£2,263 million. Principal imports: machinery, foodstuffs (wheat). Principal exports: petroleum and petroleum products, cotton. Petroleum. Oil production (est. 1981), 578,000 barrels per day; proved reserves (est.; Jan. 1, 1982), 2.93 billion barrels. Education (1979-1980). Enrollment: primary, 4,434,557; preparatory, 1,526,462; secondary, 1,010,762; university (est. 1982-1983), 310,000. Armed forces (est. 1982). Army, 320,000; navy, 20,000; air force, 27,000. Microsoft ® Encarta ® 2006. © 1993-2005 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
{**صفحة جديدة 1} |
| | | جيهان أدهم ملازم جيش
عدد المساهمات : 10 تاريخ التسجيل : 08/11/2011 العمر : 41 الموقع : الإسكندرية
| موضوع: رد: الرئيس مبارك في موسوعة إنكارتا الثلاثاء نوفمبر 08, 2011 1:00 pm | |
| * 1983: Egypt Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak continued to steer a middle course at home and abroad as he entered his third year in power, having assumed the presidency after the assassination of Anwar al-Sadat in October 1981. In domestic policy, Mubarak sought to eliminate corruption and other sources of social tension that had marked the Sadat era; at the same time, he took a cautious but firm approach in dealing with the opposition. In foreign affairs he tried to enhance Egypt's role in the nonaligned movement while maintaining good relations with the United States. Crackdown on corruption. The government mounted a strong attack on corruption at all levels of society. Significant progress was made in curbing the hashish trade and curtailing the black market in foreign currencies, both of which represented tremendous drains on the economy. The anticorruption drive also struck several blows in high places. Among the most prominent victims was Ismat al-Sadat, half-brother of the late president, who was arrested with three of his sons in October 1982 and charged with fraud and influence peddling. Their activities had allowed them to amass a fortune estimated at more than $150 million. The Sadat trial, which kept the Egyptian public spellbound for months, came to a close in February, with the court finding Sadat and his sons guilty on several counts of fraud. The accused were sentenced to one year in detention, and most of their illegally acquired assets were expropriated. In early August, however, the Supreme Court of Ethics ordered their release, although it upheld the lower court's decision on impounding their property. The Sadat trial led to action against other prominent figures in government and society. Most notably, two government ministers were dismissed in March for allegedly having used their positions and influence to further Ismat al-Sadat's schemes. Domestic opposition. A major source of trouble to the regime was the increasing desire of the opposition parties to test the Egyptian president and discover his true political colors. Mubarak had restored cordial relations with the opposition parties soon after assuming power, and opposition leaders had granted the new president a "honeymoon" in return for his political largesse. But by 1983, they were growing anxious to see if Mubarak was willing to permit a greater liberalization of the political system. Thus there were repeated calls in the opposition press for an end to the emergency laws decreed by Sadat in September 1981, shortly before his assassination. The laws gave the president wide-ranging powers to detain anyone suspected of subversive activities and had been used effectively even after the assassination, especially against the clandestine religious opposition. Mubarak, apparently seeing no reason to relinquish such a powerful control mechanism, turned a cold shoulder to opposition protests on this issue, although in late September two laws were repealed that involved the banning of demonstrations and the punishment of people who spread rumors with the aim of harming national unity. A second, somewhat more aggressive test by the opposition came in late March, when an important faction within the Lawyer's Syndicate, most of whose members were associated with the various opposition parties, forced a showdown with the government, demanding that government control over the organization be lifted. Mubarak not only ignored the lawyers' demands but also went ahead and signed into law a new charter placing the syndicate under even closer government control. Soon after, Mubarak went on the offensive, attacking the opposition parties in his May Day speech for their "destructive" criticism of his government's economic policies. And the People's Assembly in July passed a law that will disqualify from representation any individual party failing to win at least 8 percent of the popular vote in a legislative election. At the time the law was passed, Egypt's opposition parties together held only 3 percent of the seats in the People's Assembly. A victory for the opposition came in October, when judges of the Egyptian State Council overturned a government ruling and declared the New Wafd, potentially a major opposition force, a legitimate political party. The government carried on with its prolonged investigation of suspected religious dissidents arrested en masse after Sadat's assassination. As was the case during the previous year, the state prosecutor periodically announced the release of scores of people arrested for suspected membership in one of the radical Islamic organizations. While most of the 1981 detainees were eventually released without trial, a group of 300 radical Muslims, most of whom were allegedly members of the Jihad (Holy War) organization, were placed on trial (20 of them in absentia) on December 4, 1982, on charges of having conspired to overthrow the government after the Sadat assassination. This trial dragged on for months, its outcome still unknown by late 1983. In the meantime, internal security forces at the Ministry of the Interior, in August, arrested another group of alleged conspirators belonging to the Jihad. Mubarak used the carrot as well as the stick in dealing with Islamic sentiment. The government-controlled People's Assembly appeared to be on the verge of legislating a thorough recodification of Egyptian law on the basis of sharia, or Islamic law. During Ramadan, the holy month when Muslims fast from dawn to dusk, summer time was suspended so that the evening mealtime could come more quickly. Economic pressures. During a visit to the United States in January, Mubarak reasserted his government's commitment to Sadat's "open-door" economic policy, designed to attract foreign investment; at the same time, he stated once again that he was resolved to use the open-door strategy to establish productive enterprises in Egypt, rather than to flood it with imported goods. Egyptian economic planners were confronted by many of the same old obstacles to development and a few new ones as well. The chronic problem of a high population growth rate (nearly 3 percent a year), combined with a failure to increase agricultural output dramatically, meant that Egypt had to import half its food, at an estimated cost of $4 billion in 1983. To cover the heavy cost of food and other essential imports, Egypt has relied in recent years on foreign exchange earnings from tourism, remittances from Egyptians working abroad, Suez Canal revenues, and growing oil exports. Tourism was finally rebounding from the shock waves of the Sadat assassination, and remittances by foreign workers were expected to remain high. Oil export revenues, however, were hit by the international economic recession and the related drop in world petroleum prices. Oil output continued to increase, reaching 500,000 barrels per day. But falling oil prices portended a $500 million shortfall in 1983-1984 oil revenues, as compared with those projected in the current five-year development plan. Egypt anticipated a total current account deficit approaching $3 billion for the 1983-1984 fiscal year; external debt at the end of the fiscal year 1981-1982 was $22 billion. Egypt found some relief in its position as one of the world's largest recipients of foreign aid. It received more than $1 billion in economic aid from the United States in the 1983 U.S. fiscal year, and a similar amount was slated for the following fiscal year. (These figures do not include even larger amounts for military aid.) Egypt also received $750 million in grants and credits from Western European countries and Japan, along with support from the World Bank and other international lending institutions. Relations in the region. The Israeli invasion of Lebanon in June 1982 severely strained relations between Israel and Egypt, and three months later, when Israel's Lebanese allies massacred Palestinians in the Sabra and Shatila refugee camps outside West Beirut, Egypt recalled its ambassador to Israel. Not until early March did Egypt resume any diplomatic contact with Israel, and even then, discussions centered almost exclusively on a boundary dispute in the Sinai, near Taba. In early April, Egyptian officials stated that there would be no resumption of talks with Israel on Palestinian autonomy, broken off at the start of the invasion of Lebanon, unless Israel withdrew its forces from Lebanon and put a freeze on the construction of new settlements in the West Bank and Gaza. Meanwhile, Mubarak proceeded with efforts to promote a more comprehensive peace in the Middle East. He repeatedly called upon the leaders of the Palestine Liberation Organization to recognize the state of Israel and thereby remove the major obstacle to recognition of the PLO by the United States and other Western powers. Beginning in late 1982 there were signs of improvement in relations with Arab nations that had broken diplomatic relations with Egypt after its peace treaty with Israel was signed in 1979. Iraq, to which the Egyptians had sold arms at a critical time in its war with Iran, edged closer to a full restoration of diplomatic ties. In late December 1982, Iraq said it did not oppose resuming ties with Egypt, and early in the following February, Egyptian officials paid their first official visit to Iraq since relations between the two countries were broken. In March, Mubarak met informally with King Hassan II of Morocco and other Arab dignitaries, when he attended a conference of nonaligned nations in New Delhi. The already excellent relations between Egypt and the Sudan, one of the few Arab countries that had refused to join the Arab boycott of Egypt, were enhanced by the signing and implementation of a "charter of integration" between the two countries. The charter, signed in October 1982, called for the creation of three joint institutions: a Supreme Council, a Nile Valley Parliament, and an Economic Integration Fund. Mubarak flew to the Sudan on May 23, for the opening of the Nile Valley Parliament, which was composed of the speakers of the Egyptian and Sudanese parliaments, along with 30 additional members from each country. At the same time, relations with another immediate neighbor, Libya, were at a low ebb. Libya's leader, Colonel Muammar al-Qaddafi, had long been suspected of attempts to destabilize the regime of Sudanese President Jaafar al-Nimeiry and thereby further isolate the Egyptians within the Arab world; a glaring instance occurred in February, when Libya appeared ready to provide air support for an attempted coup within the Sudan by a group of military officers. Egypt responded by dispatching its own fighter aircraft, to be guided by U.S. Awacs (airborne warning and control system) planes, to airfields near the Sudanese border; it also sent a squadron of transport aircraft to Aswan, from which troops could be flown quickly to Khartoum. However, the coup attempt was crushed without external assistance, and Libyan planes, according to Mubarak, were intercepted by Egyptian jet fighters near the Libyan border. Other foreign relations. On the international diplomatic scene, Mubarak made no secret of his hopes that Egypt would reassume a position of prominence within the movement of nonaligned countries. To that end he traveled to India in December 1982 and to China, Indonesia, and North Korea the following April. In addition, he delivered a speech at the 1983 summit of nonaligned countries, and he attended the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development in Yugoslavia in July. Egypt also stated an intention to resume full diplomatic relations with the Soviet Union, which had been cut back sharply by Sadat in September 1981. Mubarak could not, however, ignore Egypt's strong economic and military dependence on the Western world, and on the United States in particular. In addition to economic aid, the United States authorized more than $1.3 billion in military aid in the 1983 U.S. fiscal year, in the form of a $427 million grant and $900 million in credits. Mubarak continued to foster good relations with Western countries through visits to West Germany in December 1982, to the United States, Canada, Great Britain, and France in January and February 1983, and to Japan in April. In September, after addressing the United Nations General Assembly, Mubarak conferred again with U.S. President Ronald Reagan in Washington. For the second year in a row, the Egyptian armed forces also participated in military exercises with the U.S. Central Command (formerly the Rapid Deployment Force) in the summer. Microsoft ® Encarta ® 2006. © 1993-2005 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
1984: Egypt President Hosni Mubarak continued to move toward improving relations with Egypt's Arab brethren and with the Soviet Union, and his patient, persistent efforts along those lines began to bear fruit. At home, the government took steps to allow the opposition a greater voice and role. Foreign Affairs. The stage was set for conciliatory moves in 1984 after Mubarak met with Palestine Liberation Organization leader Yasir Arafat in December 1983, following the withdrawal from Lebanon of battered PLO forces loyal to Arafat. It was the first meeting between Arafat and an Egyptian head of state since the signing of the Camp David peace treaty with Israel in 1979. Encouraged by the meeting, other Arab leaders began to edge closer toward restoring relations with Egypt. On January 16, King Hussein of Jordan called on the Arab League to reinstate Egypt, whose membership had been suspended in 1979. The same week, Egypt received an invitation to rejoin the Islamic Conference Organization, from which it also had been suspended, and Egypt had resumed membership in that group by the end of the month. Significantly, these developments occurred in the absence of demands that Egypt renounce its treaty with Israel. These events paved the way for Mubarak's first formal post-Camp David meetings with other Arab heads of state. In February, Mubarak stopped off for discussions with King Hassan of Morocco on his way to the United States, and while in Washington, D.C., he met with King Hussein. These meetings, coupled with improved Egyptian-Iraqi relations brought about by Egypt's support for Iraq in its war with Iran, produced speculation that Egypt would be readmitted to the Arab League when that organization met in March. However, the League failed to follow the example set by the Islamic Conference Organization, voting only to express its regrets that Egypt continued to stand by the Camp David peace treaty with Israel. In late September, Jordan announced it was resuming diplomatic ties with Egypt. Two weeks later Mubarak traveled to Jordan to make the first state visit by an Egyptian leader to one of the Arab countries that had broken relations with Egypt after Camp David. Mubarak has also pursued the restoration of full diplomatic relations with the Soviet Union since his assumption of the presidency in 1981, although overtures were made cautiously, so as not to alarm U.S. officials. In December 1983, Egypt and the Soviet Union signed an economic accord that called for a 25 percent increase in bilateral trade. Then, on July 7, both countries formally announced the resumption of full diplomatic relations, with an exchange of ambassadors to take place. These changes apparently portended no fundamental shift in U.S.- Egyptian relations. U.S. military and economic assistance to Egypt for 1984 was kept at the 1983 levels of $1.3 billion and $1 billion, respectively, maintaining Egypt's position as the second greatest recipient of American aid, after Israel. However, relations between the two countries were not without problems. By the beginning of the year, Egypt's military debt had risen to some $3.6 billion, and the Egyptians were having trouble meeting the interest payments on these debts. The discussions between Mubarak and President Ronald Reagan in February focused in part on means to alleviate this problem. Less comfortable with the new foreign policy position staked out by the Mubarak government were the Israelis. Much to Israel's chagrin, Egyptian authorities saw few reasons to alter the climate of "cold peace" between the two countries. From the Egyptian point of view, Israeli control of the border settlement of Taba, Israel's occupation of South Lebanon, and Israel's continuing expansion of settlements on the West Bank were major irritants. On the other hand, the decision by Egypt to break off diplomatic relations with El Salvador and Costa Rica in April, in protest over the moving of their embassies from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem, upset the Israelis. Cairo further announced that it would deal similarly with any other nation that moved its embassy to Jerusalem—a threat at least indirectly aimed at the United States. During the summer attention was riveted on the mysterious mining of the Gulf of Suez and the Red Sea. By late September, at least 19 ships from diverse nations had been damaged by the mines, which threatened to disrupt traffic through the Suez Canal, traditionally one of Egypt's greatest earners of foreign exchange. Naval units from the United States and several Western European countries, including Great Britain, France, and Italy, conducted minesweeping operations at the request of the Egyptian government. Several Soviet ships also joined in the hunt for mines, at the invitation of South Yemen. Although a radical Islamic group claimed responsibility for the minings, many observers came to believe that Iran or Libya was responsible. Egyptian officials blamed Libya, partly on the basis of the fact that a Libyan freighter capable of placing the mines had passed through the area. In mid-September, British searchers found a sophisticated modern mine, apparently of Soviet manufacture, in the Gulf of Suez. This increased speculation about Libyan responsibility, since Libya obtains military matériel from the Soviets. Domestic Politics. The parliamentary elections of May 27, the first in five years, were widely viewed as a test of Mubarak's pledge to bring democracy to Egypt. And although certain groups such as the Communists and radical Muslims were still banned from the political competition, a total of five political parties did contest the elections, offering the voters a meaningful choice. Among those parties, the most closely watched was the New Wafd. Until it was outlawed after the military seized power in 1952, the liberal, generally pro-capitalist Wafd had been the leading political party in the country. Its successor, the New Wafd, had emerged briefly in the late 1970's, only to cease formal activity under government pressure. Just two months prior to the May elections, the New Wafd was granted formal recognition by a Cairo court, and by the end of March the first issue of its newspaper, al-Wafd, had hit the newsstands. In mid-April, the government confiscated copies of an issue of al-Wafd that allegedly violated legal restrictions on coverage of a fundamentalist group implicated in the 1981 slaying of President Anwar al-Sadat. Shortly thereafter, however, a Cairo court ordered the government to allow distribution of the newspaper. In the political maneuvering that preceded the elections, the largely secularist New Wafdists formed an unlikely coalition with representatives of the fundamentalist Muslim Brotherhood organization, which, because of its religious basis, was barred by law from fielding its own candidates. The elections themselves were marred by several unseemly incidents, including the murder of a Socialist Labor Party (SLP) candidate. Officials of the leftist National Progressive Unionist Party complained vociferously of election rigging, and their protestations were echoed by officials of the other opposition parties as well. Police and internal security authorities were not the object of these accusations so much as overzealous members of the ruling National Democratic Party (NDP) who apparently failed to heed Mubarak's call for peaceful and fair elections. How seriously the elections were affected by such incidents was difficult to ascertain. Only 40 percent of all eligible voters participated in the elections, in which the ruling NDP scored a resounding victory. In all, the NDP captured 390 of the 448 seats at stake in the People's Assembly, while the New Wafd won the remaining 58. No other party garnered the minimum 8 percent of the vote necessary to occupy seats in the People's Assembly. However, 12 of the 58 New Wafdist seats were to be occupied by members of the Brotherhood. Also, in a spirit of accommodation, Mubarak, who had the right to name ten additional People's Assembly deputies, granted four seats to members of the SLP. All things considered, the elections represented an important step toward establishing a truly democratic system. The 58 People's Assembly seats won by the New Wafd represented the greatest number achieved by any opposition party since the termination of the constitutional monarchy in 1952. It was nearly twice the number of opposition seats held in the outgoing 392-member Assembly, and livelier debate within that body seemed guaranteed. In other political developments, Prime Minister Fuad Mohieddin, who died of a heart attack on June 5, was replaced by General Kamal Hassan Ali, the former foreign minister. When a new government was announced on July 17, it included most other incumbent ministers. Among the returnees were Economics Minister Mustafa al-Said and Defense Minister Abdelhalim Abu Ghazala. Economy. The Mubarak government's strategy for economic development continued on track this year. In contrast to his predecessor's more liberal economic policies, Mubarak has focused on a return to stricter economic planning and a reaffirmation of faith in the public sector. Nevertheless, the private sector remained significant, and private capital was scheduled to account for 25 percent of total investment in the 1983-1984 fiscal year. The country's largest sources of foreign exchange, workers' remittances from abroad ($3.6 billion in 1983), Suez Canal revenues ($1 billion), oil revenues ($2.13 billion), and tourism ($1 billion), were expected to remain close to the same levels in 1984. Production from an important new oil field at Zeit Bay, brought on line in December 1983, was counted on to boost oil production from 80,000 barrels per day in fiscal 1983- 1984 to 830,000 bpd in 1984-1985. One trouble spot was the agricultural sector, where a 2 percent increase in output per year was failing to keep pace with a 2.8 percent annual increase in the population. As a result, the country once again was expected to import more than half of its food needs. Riots broke out in the city of Kafr ad Dawwar, near Alexandria, in September after the government raised food prices. A day after the protest — the first such episode since Mubarak came to power — food price rollbacks were announced. Microsoft ® Encarta ® 2006. © 1993-2005 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
{**صفحة جديدة 1} |
| | | جيهان أدهم ملازم جيش
عدد المساهمات : 10 تاريخ التسجيل : 08/11/2011 العمر : 41 الموقع : الإسكندرية
| موضوع: رد: الرئيس مبارك في موسوعة إنكارتا الثلاثاء نوفمبر 08, 2011 1:03 pm | |
| * 1985: Egypt President Hosni Mubarak was forced to adopt a more aggressive attitude in his conduct of the affairs of state, breaking the calm he had brought to Egyptian politics following the 1981 assassination of his predecessor, Anwar al-Sadat. Copts and Muslim Fundamentalists. The year began on a conciliatory note when Mubarak allowed Pope Shenouda III, elected leader of the Coptic Christian community, to resume his papal duties after more than three years of forced internal exile. Shenouda was among those accused by Sadat—just one month prior to the latter's assassination—of having fomented sectarian strife and political unrest. Shenouda's restoration was applauded by the Coptic community, Egypt's largest minority, and was seen as a sign of Mubarak's confidence in the stability of his regime. Mubarak also demonstrated continued tolerance of lively debate by the legal opposition parties. Although Communists and Islamic fundamentalists were still prohibited from forming political parties of their own, their views could be seen in the weekly press or heard in other forums. In fact, Islamic fundamentalists were more active than ever before in seeking to gain influence over the government, and they met, at first, with success. In the spring, a liberal decree enhancing women's rights in divorce and other "personal status" matters was repealed by the People's Assembly under fundamentalist pressure. Around the same time, the government acceded to pressure from such interests and ordered the destruction of 3,000 copies of the classic Arabian story collection A Thousand and One Nights, on the grounds that its contents were morally corrupting. Emboldened by these victories, the sheikh of Noor Mosque, Hafez Salama, intensified his demands for the government to adopt Islamic law (sharia). He also preached on behalf of restoration of mandatory almsgiving, implementation of the Islamic penal code (including such penalties as amputations for thefts), removal of the existing banking system (which permits interest), abrogation of the Camp David peace treaty with Israel, and establishment of an Islamic republic similar to the one in Iran. In mid-July, Salama called upon the faithful to march on the Aruba presidential palace in support of his program. But the demonstration was postponed after Mubarak banned the march as a threat to national security and also deployed more than 1,000 riot policemen to quash any attempt by the fundamentalists to defy the ban. Salama, 13 of his supporters, and more than 30 others labeled as "extremists" were later arrested. Salama was released in August and vowed to continue his campaign. The July show of force was part of a new offensive being launched by Mubarak, who had become increasingly wary of the fundamentalist movement. In late June he had launched a verbal assault on "religious fanatics," accusing them of threatening national unity and collaborating with an unnamed foreign power. He also banned the use of bumper stickers voicing Islamic slogans, which were being distributed by the fundamentalists. On July 1 he backed the People's Assembly when it voted nearly unanimously to restore the earlier, more liberal "personal status" laws repealed in the spring. Two days later, the government announced that it was assuming control of all mosques in Egypt, in a move designed to undercut fundamentalist opposition. The events amounted to the first major showdown between the government and Islamic fundamentalists, and Mubarak was seen to have won a crucial test of strength. However, the August 20 assassination of an Israeli diplomat in Cairo, for which several militant Islamic groups claimed responsibility, was an indication that the fundamentalists had not given up the fight. Conflict Over Economic Policy. The government found itself embroiled in a divisive conflict over economic policy. On January 5, Minister of the Economy Mustafa Said had introduced new measures aimed at clamping down on black marketers, whose dealings in foreign currencies had grown so powerful that even the national banks had difficulty meeting their foreign currency needs. The measures also created several new restrictions on imports. But the arrest and trial of several of the biggest black marketers also led to charges from within the government that some of the confiscated money had been illegally handled. Furor over this matter, combined with opposition from some business leaders to other aspects of the January 5 measures, resulted in Said's resignation in late March. He was quickly replaced by Sultan Abu Ali, who restored the import/export regime that had been in place prior to January 5. Egypt's overall economic problems remained considerable. The country imported 60 percent of its total food requirements, including 75 percent of its wheat. Imports of foreign goods had soared during 1984, helping to force a devaluation of the Egyptian currency to 1.27 pounds to the dollar. This change in the official rate—which was one of the January 5 measures—did not, however, prevent the black market rate from reaching 1.5 pounds to the dollar. The budget deficit was nearly $5 billion, and the total foreign debt climbed to over $30 billion. Economic experts projected a balanceof-payments deficit for 1985 of $1.3 billion, a reversal from the small surpluses recorded in recent years. The stress of coping with burdensome economic problems may have had something to do with Prime Minister Kamal Hassan Ali's decision to resign on September 4, although other speculation—in the absence of any official explanation—centered on Ali's health. Ali Lofti, chairman of the Economics Department at Ain Shams University, a member of an economics advisory committee, and a finance minister under Sadat, was appointed by Mubarak as the new prime minister. Lofti immediately faced a crisis. In the first three weeks of September the pound lost 25 percent of its value on the unofficial open market. (It then apparently stabilized.) Contributing to the drop was a surge in demand for hard currency fueled by rumors that the pound would be devalued and that Lofti was planning to introduce severe import restrictions. Foreign Aid. In the effort to meet Egypt's rising food needs and realize other developmental objectives, the government continued to rely heavily on foreign assistance. For 1986, the U.S. aid package was expected to hit $2.3 billion, with Egypt continuing to be the second-largest recipient of U.S. foreign aid, after Israel. Over the 1979-1985 period, Egypt received $6.8 billion in military aid and $7.8 billion in economic aid from the United States alone. In fact, the flow of American loans had been so heavy that the accumulated interest was acknowledged as a serious problem. Interest payments on just the military component of the debt were projected at more than $500 million for 1985, of which Egypt was expected to pay at least $400 million. Egypt's ability to finance its debt was further inhibited by declining revenues from petroleum exports (caused by the decline in world oil prices) and by the lack of any significant improvements in tourism or exports. It thus came as no surprise that Mubarak discussed debt rescheduling and a request for supplemental emergency assistance during meetings with top U.S. officials when he visited Washington, D.C., in March. The Egyptian president succeeded in extracting a promise of $500 million in emergency aid above the $2.3 billion in aid already targeted for Egypt, but his hosts were not at all enthusiastic about debt rescheduling, apparently fearful of setting an undesirable precedent. Mideast Tensions. The other major topic broached during Mubarak's U.S. visit was the search for peace in the Middle East. To advance the peace process—and, perhaps, to enhance his image in the United States prior to the visit— Mubarak had actively promoted the peace initiative sponsored by Jordan's King Hussein and Palestine Liberation Organization chief Yasir Arafat. That plan, announced on February 11, called for the formation of a joint Jordanian-Palestinian delegation to enter into peace talks with Israel. The U.S. administration reacted favorably to the initiative and to Egypt's efforts, but in the months that followed American officials refused to engage in any diplomatic activity that might be construed as granting formal recognition to the PLO. Egypt's standing in the Arab world—and perhaps the peace process as well—suffered a setback as a result of the hijacking of an Italian cruise ship by Palestinian terrorists shortly after it left the Egyptian port of Alexandria. The Achille Lauro was seized on October 7 by four gunmen, who then demanded the release of 50 Palestinian prisoners in Israel. The ship eventually anchored near Port Said, and Egypt became a mediator. Egypt negotiated in conjunction with Italy and PLO officials, including Muhammad Abbas, leader of the PLO faction to which the hijackers belonged and the alleged mastermind of the plot. Two days after commandeering the ship, the gunmen turned themselves in to Egyptian authorities in exchange for a promise of safe passage out of Egypt. The terms angered the United States, which confirmed that the gunmen had killed an elderly, wheelchair-bound American passenger, Leon Klinghoffer. The following day, an Egyptian airliner carrying the four Palestinians, Abbas, and others left Egypt. It requested and was denied permission to land in Tunis, the site of PLO headquarters, and Athens. The plane was then intercepted by U.S. Navy F-14 jet fighters and forced to land at a NATO base in Sicily. Mubarak had said the hijackers were being turned over to the PLO, which claimed ignorance of the terrorists' plans (despite evidence to the contrary) and said it would put the men on trial. The gunmen were taken into custody by Italian authorities and charged with murder and kidnapping. Abbas was later allowed to leave Italy despite U.S. objections. Mubarak denounced the U.S. action as an "act of piracy" and demanded an apology; President Ronald Reagan instead sent a special envoy for talks with the Egyptian leader. Demonstrations broke out in Cairo protesting Egypt's ties with the United States and its treaty with Israel. Mubarak, doubly constrained by Egypt's financial dependence on the United States and by his desire to end Egypt's isolation in the Arab world, put down the protests for fear that fundamentalists might take advantage of the unrest. On November 23 an Egyptair jetliner bound from Athens to Cairo was hijacked by several men, apparently part of a group called Egypt's Revolution. The men made no demands during the hijacking, beyond ordering the plane to Malta and asking that it be refueled. The hijackers began shooting passengers while the plane was still in flight, and once it landed in Malta, they apparently killed one person and wounded several others, dumping their bodies out of the plane. Nearly 24 hours after the ordeal began, Egyptian special forces stormed the plane; the hijackers retaliated by tossing grenades at the passengers, setting off an inferno. Over 50 people were killed during the rescue operation. Meanwhile, relations with neighboring Libya were strained over several points. Libya's leader, Muammar al-Qaddafi, made good on a threat to expel some 10,000 Egyptians working in his country. Libya (and Ethiopia) also condemned the military exercises staged jointly by U.S. and Egyptian armed forces under the code name Bright Star '85. Microsoft ® Encarta ® 2006. © 1993-2005 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
1986: Egypt In 1986 Egypt's economic problems reached crisis proportions, giving rise to serious strains in the social fabric. Concomitantly, doubts arose over the ability of President Hosni Mubarak's regime to withstand the attendant political pressure. Economic Woes. Just as several major infrastructural projects were completed, providing much-needed relief of Egypt's communications and transportation headaches, the economy was beset by numerous negative developments over which Egyptian authorities had little control. Revenues from oil exports were expected to plummet to less than half of the $2.1 billion level attained in 1985, as the price of Egyptian crude dropped sharply during the first half of the year. The oil-based economies of Egypt's Arab neighbors were similarly affected by the worldwide oil glut, and the resulting contraction of economic activity sent hundreds of thousands of Egyptian migrant laborers back home to Egypt. This development undercut economic growth, previously stimulated by the massive foreign remittances of the migrant workers, and also posed seemingly insurmountable unemployment problems. As if these difficulties were not enough, a series of 1985 terrorist incidents and 1986 rioting discouraged foreign tourism in Egypt. Dozens of tourist hotels, many of them brand-new, operated at below the breakeven point for most of the year. The only relatively bright spot among Egypt's major sources of foreign currency was the Suez Canal, whose annual revenues topped the $1 billion mark for the first time ever in the 1985-1986 fiscal year. However, traffic and revenues were below projections for the first half of 1986. Other sectors of the economy failed to make up for these reversals. Imports continued to exceed exports, leading most observers to expect a current account deficit for 1986 of some $4.5 billion. By August, Egypt's total foreign debt had climbed to $36 billion, and nervous Egyptian business executives were believed to have transferred $40-45 billion to foreign banks. Many foreign financial backers stood ready to see Egypt through the economic crisis. In late 1985, the International Monetary Fund had extended an offer of $1.5 billion in standby credits. The U.S. Congress voted to maintain its high level of aid to Egypt — $2.3 billion in military and economic aid was appropriated for fiscal year 1987 — and several other countries echoed the promise of West German Chancellor Helmut Kohl to assist Egypt. Public understanding of the dire economic straits permitted the government greater freedom to implement price hikes for transportation, water, electricity, and gasoline. Price controls on fruits, vegetables, meat, and other products were gradually abandoned, with resulting price increases placing many commodities beyond the means of even middleclass families. It was not clear whether additional pressures by the IMF and other foreign creditors would bring government cuts in subsidies for bread, sugar, tea, and other Egyptian staple goods, which cost the government $2 billion a year. In any event, budgetary constraints seemed likely to continue to produce unrest and instability. In October, Prime Minister Ali Lutfi, an economist named in 1985 to deal with Egypt's financial problems, was replaced by economist Atef Sedki. Social Disturbances. A mere rumor relating to budgetary cutbacks produced a serious outbreak of violence early in the year. In February, the word spread among soldiers of the Central Security Forces that budgetary pressures would bring a government decision to extend their duty by one year. Poorly treated by their superiors and forced to subsist on salaries of about $7.38 a month in addition to their abysmal food and shelter provisions, Security Forces conscripts mutinied, setting fire to many hotels and nightclubs — symbols for them of luxurious and decadent life-styles — in the area of the Giza pyramids. Security Forces in other parts of Cairo also went on a rampage, and Muslim radicals apparently exploited the breakdown in order to wreak havoc on their own. Mubarak was obliged to summon the regular army to restore order, and the official toll for the February 26-27 events was 107 dead and more than 700 wounded. A series of trials of more than 1,300 alleged rioters began in October. The mutiny further undermined public confidence in the Mubarak regime, which had just been badly shaken by the repercussions of a 1985 incident in which a young Egyptian policeman went berserk and started firing at a group of Israeli tourists on a beach in the Sinai peninsula, killing seven and wounding four others. The policeman, Suleiman Khater, went on trial in November before a military tribunal and was sentenced to life in prison at hard labor on December 29. Both secular and religious opposition leaders took a strong interest in the Khater case from the outset, elevating Khater to the status of a national hero and staging demonstrations calling for his release. The opposition worked itself into a fury of antigovernment attacks in the press and elsewhere when it was learned in January that Khater had committed suicide in his prison cell. Opposition voices reached such a fever pitch that Mubarak responded with his own verbal lambasting of the regime's critics, warning them that he might not be able to maintain the relatively liberal political environment he had helped create should opposition leaders not exercise greater responsibility and utilize less inflammatory language. Most opposition leaders muted their attacks following Mubarak's threat, and the country regained its political calm. Nonetheless, the economic crisis, coupled with a growth in the strength of various opposition elements, indicated an uncertain future for Mubarak. Political Unrest. Increases in the cost of living helped trigger illegal strikes by publicsector textile workers in February and railroad engineers in July. Although not responsible for the direction of these strikes, the National Progressive Unionist Party (a coalition of Marxists, followers of the late President Gamal Abdel Nasser, and other independent leftists) and the Socialist Labor Party benefited from the opportunity to present themselves as representatives of working-class interests. Also, several Nasserite leaders presented cases before the Supreme State Constitutional Court to win the right to form their own political party. Many predicted that the entry of a true Nasserite party into the political arena might result in an even more successful mobilization of disgruntled public-sector workers and others against the regime's liberal economic strategy. Overshadowing these important political developments, however, was the continued growth in strength of Islamic fundamentalist forces of various hues. Although the most radical Islamic groupings, such as al-Jihad and Takfir wa-l-Higra, remained subject to tight government surveillance and frequent arrests, the much larger Muslim Brotherhood and Islamic Groups (Gama'at al-Islamiyya) appeared well on their way to establishing themselves as the dominant civilian political forces. Having already gained dominance on the nation's university campuses, these groups made requests of their own to the Supreme Court for the creation of political parties and arranged cooperative pacts with existing political parties (the New Wafd and Liberal parties). In the face of increasing popular support for the Islamic organizations' call for the implementation of Islamic law, the regime continued to insist on a more secular society and politics. During 1986, the view became widespread that socioeconomic duress would cause a major social upheaval, with the less moderate Islamic Groups perhaps most likely to exploit the situation. In the face of this challenge, the regime's National Democratic Party seemed almost dormant. Despite the absolute majority it held in the People's Assembly, the party seemed in need of a clearer ideological position to better combat opposition forces. Many expected such changes to be introduced when the party held its fourth annual national congress in July, but none were forthcoming. Foreign Affairs. Egypt's economic and military dependence on the United States and other capitalist industrial powers remained great in spite of strains produced by the 1985 Achille Lauro affair, in which U.S. jet fighters intercepted and forced down an Egyptian airliner carrying the hijackers of an Italian cruise ship, and in spite of domestic opponents' charges of excessive Western dependence. Joint U.S.-Egyptian military operations were again conducted in the Mediterranean in August, continuing what has become an annual event. There were some signs of a thaw in the "cold peace" with Israel. Negotiations over Taba, a 700-square-meter chunk of land on the Egyptian-Israeli border claimed by both states, were at the center of most Egyptian-Israeli diplomatic encounters. In September both parties agreed to submit the issue to binding international arbitration. This development, along with U.S. coaxing, induced Mubarak to end his long-standing refusal to meet with Israel's prime ministers. Israel's Shimon Peres and Mubarak met in Alexandria, Egypt, on September 11 and 12 to discuss further efforts to promote peace in the region, but no new proposals emerged from the talks. Prior to the summit, Egypt agreed to restore an ambassador to the Tel Aviv post, vacated in 1982 after Israel's invasion of Lebanon. Meanwhile, Mubarak's steadfast upholding of the 1979 Camp David peace treaty with Israel and his quiet diplomacy throughout the region continued to yield subtle, but real, political dividends. The July meeting between Peres and Morocco's King Hassan II left Egypt somewhat less isolated as regards its relations with Israel. Furthermore, in the same month Saudi Arabia's King Fahd made a significant overture for the restoration of normal ties with Egypt. Finally, Mubarak's numerous cordial meetings with Jordan's King Hussein, PLO leader Yasir Arafat, and the new regime in Sudan, as well as his continued strong support for Iraq in its war with Iran, placed Egypt on the verge of normal ties with most of the other Arab nations. Relations with the more radical anti- Israeli Arab states, such as Libya, Syria, and the People's Democratic Republic of Yemen, remained understandably cool, if not hostile, from the Egyptian perspective. Microsoft ® Encarta ® 2006. © 1993-2005 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
1987: Egypt In October 1987, Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak was returned to a second six-year term in office by a national referendum. However, daunting economic difficulties and rising Islamic fundamentalist opposition appeared certain to make his second term most challenging. Elections. During 1987, Egypt experienced significant political activity, much of it generated during the first months of the year by preparations for the April 6 legislative elections. Although most observers had little doubt that the regime-backed National Democratic Party (NDP) of Mubarak would emerge victorious, this did not preclude widespread campaigning and maneuvering by opposition parties and organizations, as well as by hundreds of independent candidates. Opposition leaders managed to patch together a single, nationwide electoral alliance early on and made a great show of solidarity at a large public rally on February 5. However, the coalition weakened soon after when the leaders of the secular, center-right New Wafd Party and the leftist National Progressive Unionist Party decided to compete on their own. Their defection, prompted in part by the Islamic fundamentalist objectives of the other parties, reduced to three the number of organizations comprising the alliance: the Liberal Socialist Party, the Socialist Labor Party, and the Muslim Brothers. The last group was legally banned by the Egyptian constitution but had grown to occupy a formidable position in the Egyptian body politic; Mubarak was said to have consented to such a role as a way of controlling the growth of Muslim extremism. The three-party alliance presented the implementation of Islamic law as its major objective, while the New Wafd and the National Progressive Unionist parties focused their campaigns on government corruption, mishandling of the economy, and Egypt's military and economic dependence on the United States. The non-religious issues were also emphasized by a handful of Nasserite and Communist candidates who, while also barred from the party arena, were allowed for the first time to participate in the elections as independents. Although open to a more ideologically diverse set of candidates than any others in recent years, the elections were marred once again by numerous acts of violence and widespread allegations of ballot rigging. On the eve of the elections, Ministry of Interior forces swept up some 750 opposition activists, mostly Muslim fundamentalists, on charges of plotting disruption of the electoral process. On election day there were several reports of violence and intimidation of opposition poll watchers by state security forces and officials of the ruling party. These clashes, most of them in the northern Nile delta region and the southern city of Sohag, produced at least one death and scores of injuries; the violence was said to account in part for the small turnout (50 percent). Mubarak's NDP won a substantial victory, capturing 77 percent of the vote, and 346 of the 448 contested seats, in the People's Assembly. Primarily because of the strength of the Muslim Brothers, the alliance won 13 percent of the vote and 60 seats. New Wafd Party representation shrank from 57 seats to 35, barely clearing the 8 percent minimum of the vote required to gain admission to the assembly. The National Progressive Unionist Party and the minuscule Umma Party both failed to break the 8 percent threshold, thus winning no representation. The remaining 7 assembly seats were filled by independents, most of them close to the government party. Overall, the results gave the opposition parties combined their greatest strength ever in any post-1952 legislative assembly. The elections also emphasized the growing strength of Islamic fundamentalist forces, with the Islamic alliance replacing New Wafd as the government's major legislative opponent. On July 6, Mubarak was renominated for the presidency by the assembly, which his party dominated. New Wafd deputies staged a walkout to protest the renomination, in keeping with their call for competitive, direct elections for the presidency. However, the alliance backed Mubarak's renomination, ensuring a sizable vote in his favor; he was returned to office by an overwhelming majority on October 5. Islamic Militancy. While Mubarak and his party, assisted by military and police forces, retained firm control of the machinery of the state, extralegal attacks on the regime by Islamic militants occurred with increasing frequency. They staged protest demonstrations on university campuses in Cairo, Alexandria, and many provincial cities, demanding the implementation of Islamic law and calling for the release of imprisoned comrades. Even more unsettling, despite repeated harsh warnings by the interior minister and the president, Islamic radicals apparently engaged in a series of terrorist acts. In early May former Interior Minister Hassan Abu Basha was badly wounded and narrowly escaped death; in June a magazine editor who had criticized the Islamic movement was shot and slightly wounded, as were two American security personnel, allegedly by underground Islamic terrorist groups. Hundreds of suspects were rounded up during this period by Interior Ministry forces; tales of torture increased the alienation between Mubarak's government and Islamic fundamentalists. Economic Conditions. Much of the political instability had its origins in the country's chronic economic woes. With the population growing at a rapid 2.6 percent annually, Egypt continued to produce far more mouths to feed than could be satisfied by domestic resources. Food imports were needed to meet more than half of domestic consumption, and government subsidies for food and other basic necessities were estimated to cost some $3 billion annually. The total foreign debt reached $40 billion in 1987, forcing authorities to meet some of their foreign creditors' demands for economic reform. On May 1, subsidies were slashed, producing increases of up to 85 percent in the cost of kerosene, diesel fuel, and gasoline. On May 11, banks were authorized to set the exchange rate for the Egyptian pound at the free market rate. These changes, coupled with foreign creditors' awareness of the government's political vulnerability — widespread rioting had erupted after radical cuts in staple goods subsidies in January 1977 — produced agreements with the International Monetary Fund and other creditors in mid-May. Existing debts were rescheduled and new credit extended on terms viewed as extremely lenient. Elsewhere, recovery in the tourist industry and higher prices for petroleum exports brought relief to the economy, but the overall picture remained grim. Foreign Affairs. Somewhat more auspicious were Mubarak's accomplishments in the area of foreign affairs. In January, Egypt attended the Islamic Conference Organization summit in Kuwait, for the first time since the signing of the 1979 Camp David peace treaty with Israel; at the meeting, Mubarak reportedly made considerable progress in repairing relations with Syria and other Arab nations. Also, Egypt's steadfast assistance to Iraq in men and matérial earned Iraq's gratitude and that of other regional powers siding with Iraq in the Iraq-Iran conflict. In early January, a Saudi Arabian military delegation visited Cairo for the first time since the Saudis' 1979 break with Egypt; several other Saudi dignitaries followed later in the year. Saudi officials also appreciated Mubarak's demonstration of solidarity with Saudi Arabia against Iran in the aftermath of the July 31 riots at the Grand Mosque in Mecca, where hundreds of Iranian pilgrims died in clashes with Saudi security forces. In May, Egypt broke off ties with Iran following the arrest of Tehran-backed fundamentalists charged with plotting to overthrow the Egyptian government. Improvements in Egyptian-Arab relations did not develop at the expense of Egypt's peace with Israel or ties with the United States. Israeli officials were angered by Egypt's action in inviting Austrian President Kurt Waldheim to visit Cairo, but this flap was offset by the Egyptian foreign minister's trip to Israel in July — the first visit by an Egyptian official of such rank since Israel's invasion of Lebanon in the summer of 1982. Moreover, the Israelis were pleased when Egypt closed down Palestine Liberation Organization offices in Cairo in April, following the Palestine National Council's sharp denunciation of Egyptian-Israeli relations. Egypt's advocacy of an international Middle East peace conference that would include a role for the Soviet Union received a mixed reception from both Israel (whose leaders were divided over the prospect) and the United States. Nevertheless, Egypt remained the second largest (after Israel) recipient of U.S. foreign aid, a solid indication of Washington's appreciation of the overall Egyptian policy of moderation. Mass Transit for the Mideast. In September, President Mubarak dedicated the first subway system in the Middle East, a French-financed project built in Cairo over the last six years by a French-Egyptian consortium. The 26.8-mile-long system has 21 stations and is partially underground. The Glory That Was Egypt. On May 3 the 3,000-year-old temple of Amenhotep III, in present-day Luxor, became the site of one of the international cultural events of the year — a gala production of Verdi's Aida in one of its original settings, ancient Thebes. Commissioned in 1869 to celebrate the opening of the Suez Canal, the opera was first performed in 1871 at the newly opened opera house in Cairo. Hundreds of celebrities traveled to Luxor to enjoy the spectacular 1987 performance, which featured a cast of some 1,500 led by Placido Domingo. Microsoft ® Encarta ® 2006. © 1993-2005 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
{**صفحة جديدة 1} |
| | | جيهان أدهم ملازم جيش
عدد المساهمات : 10 تاريخ التسجيل : 08/11/2011 العمر : 41 الموقع : الإسكندرية
| موضوع: رد: الرئيس مبارك في موسوعة إنكارتا الثلاثاء نوفمبر 08, 2011 1:05 pm | |
| * 1988: Egypt President Hosni Mubarak's diplomacy produced some significant victories for Egypt in late 1987 and 1988, while diverse Islamic fundamentalist groups remained a domestic challenge. The Arab World. Fearful of a victory by Iran in its war with Iraq, much of the Arab world had begun to seek better relations with Egypt as a potential counterweight to the Iranians. Cairo was already a major supplier of weapons to Iraq, selling it some $500 million in arms yearly, and silently approved as large numbers of Egyptians became mercenaries in the Iraqi Army. An Arab summit meeting held in Amman, Jordan, in November 1987 adopted a motion permitting the restoration of full diplomatic ties with Egypt; within months, most Arab nations had done so. (Ties had been broken by most Arab countries in 1979, when Egypt signed its peace treaty with Israel.) Many nations were quick to renew close economic, financial, and cultural ties as well, and Egypt was readmitted to numerous Arab organizations. Its exclusion from the Arab League remained in force, but the prospects for readmission in 1989 seemed high. There were strong rumors in 1988 of Egyptian-Syrian rapprochement, and relations with Libya were on the mend. By early April, Egypt had terminated radio broadcasts by Libyan opposition elements from Cairo, and Libya announced that it had withdrawn military forces from its Egyptian border. Egypt's moderate stance on the Mideast conflict, however, continued to cause friction between the two countries. In January, Mubarak put forth a five-point peace initiative in response to Israel's use of force in its efforts to crush a Palestinian uprising that had begun the month before in the Israeli-occupied territories of the West Bank and Gaza Strip. The five points included calls for a six-month cessation of violence in the territories, a freeze on new Israeli settlements there, and the convening of an international peace conference. Mubarak's proposal, announced just before he made a visit to the United States, elicited no strong support in Washington, nor did the Palestinians see fit to cease the civil disturbances. Mubarak's overture faded rapidly into oblivion, but the Egyptian regime remained steadfast in its commitment to an international conference to resolve the conflict. Jordan in July cut its administrative links to the West Bank, and some Palestinian leaders called on the Palestine Liberation Organization to establish a government in exile or a provisional government for the occupied territories. In September, with elections looming in the United States and Israel, Egypt reportedly advised the PLO to hold off on the formation of a government. Late the next month, Mubarak met in Jordan with PLO leader Yasir Arafat and Jordan's King Hussein. Progress was apparently made in healing rifts between Arafat and the king. An Economic Uptick. In general, the economic picture was somewhat brighter. Strong performances were registered by all of Egypt's major foreign currency earners: net oil export revenues jumped to $1.5 billion in 1987 from an abysmal $697 million in 1986, remittances by Egyptians working abroad were up by 76 percent and seemed likely to hit $4 billion for the 1987- 1988 fiscal year, Suez Canal earnings reached a record level of $1.22 billion in 1987, and earnings from tourism were also up. A reform of the foreign exchange system, begun in 1987 as part of a deal with the International Monetary Fund to help repay Egypt's foreign debt, brought positive results, as black market currency transactions declined and more remittances passed through official financial channels. The reform also cleared the way for the rescheduling of some $12 billion in debt with Egypt's creditor nations and international financial institutions. In March 1988 an additional exchange rate reform effectively placed transactions for all but a small (though significant) category of goods at the free market rate. However, foreign exchange shortages still led to periodic shortages of flour, sugar, tea, and cooking oil, and Egypt, unwilling to adopt the harsh and politically risky austerity program prescribed by the IMF, once again faced a credit squeeze. Islamic Investment Companies. The exchange system reforms led at least indirectly to a confrontation between the government and the so-called Islamic investment companies, a group of large, private financial concerns in Egypt long suspected as conduits for illegal foreign remittances and other black market currency transactions. The companies enjoyed a reputation for correct, Islaminspired financial behavior—for example, they adhered to the ban on paying fixed interest. Relying on risk-sharing schemes (with depositors sharing in profits or losses), they had paid investors dividends as high as 20 to 30 percent on deposits. Consequently, the companies had attracted hundreds of thousands of depositors in recent years. Some estimates placed total deposits held by the firms at $5.5 billion, enough to make the government reject direct confrontation for fear of creating economic chaos. Nevertheless, government officials could not afford to leave such a large sector of the economy unregulated and risk undermining the new foreign exchange system and leaving Egyptian depositors unprotected. The collapse of the al-Helal Islamic investment company in late 1987, accompanied by the flight of its owners from Egypt, brought urgency to the need to resolve the problem. In June the People's Assembly passed a law forcing the Islamic concerns to convert into joint stock companies with 50 percent of their capital open to public subscription. The law also required regular public disclosure of financial activities at home and abroad, mandated regulation by the Capital Markets Authority, and imposed limits on the companies' paid-up capital. Complaints were not long in coming. The directors of al-Hoda Misr called a general assembly on June 15 and labeled the new law as unfair. Several companies considered liquidation, a move that might have produced financial chaos. The government modified the law in August, giving the companies three months to decide whether to go public and submit to regulation or else pay back their depositors and liquidate. Underground Activity. As in previous years, the political cauldron was near the boiling point. Primary among government concerns was the effort to combat groups charged with responsibility for increasingly frequent acts of political terrorism. Most attention was focused on radical Islamic groupings that had been implicated in arson, assassination attempts, or other civil disturbances and engaged in numerous shoot-outs with the police in the streets of Cairo. In March police arrested 69 radicals for disrupting a music festival that the fundamentalists found objectionable. In June, 19 members of a Shiite Muslim cell, allegedly involved in an Iranian-backed conspiracy, were apprehended. In August several people were killed in a confrontation between police and religious militants at a Cairo mosque. Not all of the underground activity was undertaken by Islamic radicals. In fact, far more prominent was the mid-February indictment of 20 alleged members of the clandestine group Egypt's Revolution, a radical Nasserite organization. The accused—who included Khaled Abdel Nasser, son of former President Gamal Abdel Nasser—were charged with involvement in the assassination of two Israeli diplomats in 1985 and 1986, as well as an unsuccessful attempt on the lives of U.S. embassy personnel in May 1987. Khaled Nasser had managed to find refuge in Yugoslavia but vowed to return to Egypt to stand trial. However, he—along with a cousin and a third defendant—was still in exile when the proceedings began on November 1, and was tried in absentia. To facilitate Interior Minister Zaki Mostafa Badr's efforts to suppress terrorist attacks and internal unrest, the government surprised its parliamentary opponents in March by hurriedly legislating an extension of emergency laws permitting easy arrest and incarceration without formal charges of persons considered suspicious. Opposition parties have long opposed the existence of such laws but to little avail. In May the Supreme Constitutional Court invalidated a law that prevented the formation of new parties by people opposed to the 1979 treaty with Israel. The law had been challenged by a Nasserite group. The ruling barred the Nasserites from forming a party, however, on the constitutional ground that their platform was too similar to that of an existing party, but the Nasserites hoped that a pending ruling in another case before a different court would eliminate this obstacle. Lake Nasser Replenished. Drought in East Africa over the past few years had reduced the level of Lake Nasser, behind Egypt's Aswan High Dam, to the point where operation of the dam's hydroelectric plant was threatened. However, flash floods from rainfall in the Sudan in August restored the water level to that of the early 1980s, ending the threat to power supplies and agriculture. Microsoft ® Encarta ® 2006. © 1993-2005 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
1989: Egypt Years of patient diplomacy and moderation on the part of Egypt yielded major achievements in 1989 in relations with the Arab world; Egypt also was energetically pursuing a Mideast peace initiative. Meanwhile, despite some hopeful economic signs, the domestic scene continued to be fraught with crisis. Arab Relations. Since succeeding Anwar al-Sadat to the presidency in 1981, Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak has worked diligently to end Egypt's isolation from the Arab world, brought on by Sadat's 1979 peace treaty with Israel, without having to renounce the treaty. Most Arab nations had restored ties with Egypt by the beginning of 1989, but Egypt at that point remained ostracized from the Arab League. Mubarak's objective of reintegration into the Arab fold received a major boost in February, when the Arab Cooperation Council was formed by Egypt, Iraq, Jordan, and the Yemen Arab Republic. Egypt's partners in the council immediately let it be known that they would refuse to attend any meeting of the Arab League to which Egypt was not invited. These moves paved the way for Egypt to be invited to an extraordinary Arab League summit in Casablanca, Morocco, in May; Mubarak's attendance marked the end of a ten-year absence on Egypt's part. Egypt's readmission to the Arab League opened the door to restoration of full diplomatic relations with Lebanon in June and to improved relations with Arab hard-liners Libya and Syria, the only two Arab states with which Egypt now did not have diplomatic ties. Mubarak met with Libyan leader Muammar al-Qaddafi at the Casablanca summit, and by early June their nations had reopened air and ground transportation routes. Similarly, warmer relations with Syria allowed flights between Egypt and Syria to be resumed after a hiatus of 12 years. Mubarak and Qaddafi met again in mid-October and agreed to a number of joint undertakings. Relations With Israel. Egypt's improved status in the Arab world did not come at the expense of its relations or treaty with Israel. In fact, a major irritant to Egyptian- Israeli relations was removed when Israel in March returned to Egypt the Taba enclave in Sinai, the last remnant of Egyptian territory held by Israel as a result of the Six Day War of 1967. Obvious tensions remained, as Israel refused to support Egypt's call for an international conference to resolve the Arab and Palestinian-Israeli conflicts and Egypt initially balked at the peace plan proposed by Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir, involving elections in the occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip. However, Mubarak later sent Shamir a more detailed, ten-point plan for elections in the occupied territories, with the hope that the election proposal might be made acceptable to the Palestinians. Mubarak also was seeking direct talks between Israel and Palestinians. In mid-September, Mubarak met in Cairo with Israeli Defense Minister Yitzhak Rabin for discussions of his peace proposal; Mubarak also met with Yasir Arafat, leader of the Palestine Liberation Organization, who withheld any public endorsement of the Egyptian initiative at this point but indicated a willingness for "dialogue" with Israel under certain conditions. On October 2, Mubarak met with President George Bush in Washington, D.C., and received encouragement for his peace initiative; however, the Israeli government a few days later rejected the Mubarak proposal for Israeli-Palestinian talks. In mid- October the PLO turned down both the Egyptian plan for negotiations and a new U.S. proposal for Egyptian-Israeli-U.S. talks on the makeup of a Palestinian delegation to meet with the Israelis. In November, at a meeting in Cairo, the PLO said that it reserved the right to decide who would represent the Palestinians. Mubarak endorsed this position. Other Foreign Relations. Heavy U.S. military and economic assistance to Egypt continued at the rate of some $2.3 billion annually. Egypt registered further improvement in relations with the Soviet Union, as the two nations signed several economic accords. One dark spot in foreign policy appeared in relations with Egypt's southern neighbor, Sudan. Sudanese Prime Minister Sadiq al-Mahdi unilaterally abrogated the joint defense pact with Egypt in early June, after allegations that Egypt had made efforts to destabilize his regime. However, al-Mahdi was deposed by a military coup on June 30, and the new regime was recognized by Egypt the following day. Economic Aid Reprieve. Strapped with an external debt estimated at around $50 billion and with the prospect of penalties from the U.S. Congress if it failed to meet debt obligations by the end of June, Egypt entered 1989 walking an economic tightrope. Negotiations with the International Monetary Fund had broken down in October 1988, with the Egyptians claiming that the IMF was trying to impose an impossibly rapid time schedule for numerous reforms. By April, however, dialogue had resumed, and by late May an initial agreement had been worked out. It called for a 3 percent increase in interest rates to help stem the 30-40 percent inflation; reductions in subsidies on nonfood items like electricity, petroleum products, and cigarettes; and adjustment of foreign exchange rates. These reforms accompanied more liberal laws on inheritance and investment, both of which pleased the IMF. In exchange, the IMF acquiesced to government wishes that food subsidies be continued, as well as to a 13.3 percent increase in government and public sector salaries. The IMF also cleared the way for a rescheduling of some $3.5 billion in debts to 1990 and for an infusion of about $2 billion in assistance from various donors. Such aid promised to breathe new life into the economy. Islamic Opposition. The undeniably liberal attitude taken by the IMF in its negotiations with Egypt could be explained in part by its recognition of the difficult domestic position facing Mubarak. Clashes pitting the police against Islamic extremists, who seek establishment of an Islamic republic and implementation of Islamic law, were becoming a fact of life in the nation. A huge confrontation occurred during December 1988 in the Cairo district of Ein Shams, where extremists had virtually imposed their control for several months. After the killing of a police officer there, a massive police raid yielded more than 300 arrests; three extremists were killed in the raid, and many were injured. The government sought to engage the extremists in a dialogue early in 1989, enlisting the support of prominent sheikhs such as Muhammad Mutawalli al-Sha'rawi and Muhammad al-Ghazali to urge them to avoid violence, but these and other efforts failed to bear fruit. In April another major confrontation, in Al Fayyum, south of Cairo, resulted in the arrest of hundreds of demonstrators, including the blind sheik Omar Abdel- Rahman, reputed spiritual leader of Jihad. (Jihad, or "Holy War," is an Islamic fundamentalist movement implicated in the 1981 assassination of Sadat.) Abdel-Rahman had previously been tried for inciting Sadat's assassination but had been released for lack of sufficient evidence. News of these arrests triggered demonstrations in many other cities, culminating in the arrest of more than 1,500 extremists around the country. In August, Abdel-Rahman and 23 others were released from custody pending future hearings on the April events, in a move designed to help decrease domestic political tension. Meanwhile, in September, 26 other Muslim extremists were convicted on charges relating to three attempted murders in 1987. They were sentenced to prison terms ranging from one year to life. Domestic Politics. In what many described as one of the biggest governmental changes undertaken by Mubarak, Field Marshal Abdel Halim Abu Ghazala, the minister of defense, was made an assistant to the president and was replaced at the Defense Ministry by Major General Youssef Sabri Abu Taleb, the former governor of Cairo. Abu Ghazala had been appointed defense minister by Sadat in 1981. He had built a powerful base in the military and was noted for his very warm relations with the United States. His change of post was widely interpreted as a demotion, although Mubarak simply described the move as a normal rotation in military command. Some observers felt that Abu Ghazala had been hurt by allegations of involvement in an attempted theft of secret military materials from the United States to Egypt, which had been uncovered by the United States in mid-1988. It was also thought that he and Mubarak might have clashed over other issues, such as the size of the defense budget. Elections for the Consultative Council were held in June. All 153 contested seats were won by the regime's National Democratic Party; subsequently, all opposition parties leveled charges of election fraud. The liberal Neo-Wafd party and the leftist National Progressive Unionist Grouping boycotted the elections on the grounds that the council was purely advisory and had no genuine legislative function. Microsoft ® Encarta ® 2006. © 1993-2005 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
1990: Egypt Egypt and its president, Hosni Mubarak, faced major challenges this year as the unity of the Arab world was shattered by Iraq's invasion of Kuwait in August. The economy was also a major source of worry. Gulf Crisis. Years of skillful diplomacy and moderation had earned Mubarak and Egypt newfound prestige in the Middle East and warm relations with both the United States and the Soviet Union. Without breaking its peace treaty with Israel, Egypt had been accepted back into the Arab fold and was set to witness the return of the Arab League to its original home in Cairo. Due in no small measure to the efforts of Egyptian foreign policymakers, the Arab world, while still confronting serious difficulties, seemed more united than at any time in recent history. In July, however, Iraq mobilized troops along the Kuwaiti border, after accusing Kuwait of driving oil prices down by overproduction and stealing oil from a field straddling the border. These events thrust Mubarak into the role of peace maker. On July 23 he hosted visits by the Iraqi foreign minister, Tariq Aziz, and King Hussein of Jordan, and the following day, in an attempt to contain the crisis, he flew to Iraq, Kuwait, and Saudi Arabia for emergency meetings with their leaders. Mubarak came away from the meetings believing he had helped reduce tension by putting an end to the war of words between Iraq and Kuwait. This allowed him to focus on other international and regional political and economic developments when, on July 31, he addressed 45 foreign ministers, assembled, for the first time ever in Cairo, under the auspices of the Islamic Conference. The good will and expressions of solidarity generated by that assembly were shattered by Iraq's surprise invasion of Kuwait at dawn on August 2. The Iraqi aggression was immediately denounced by Mubarak, who called upon Iraq to withdraw its forces immediately and unconditionally. While Mubarak attempted to keep the crisis an Arab affair, to be settled through negotiations within the Arab community, he was soon overtaken by events, especially the U.S. government's decision on August 7 to dispatch massive air, ground, and naval forces to protect the Persian Gulf and Saudi Arabia. Mubarak responded to the American deployment by calling an emergency Arab summit for August 10. At that meeting a majority of Arab states voted to condemn the Iraqi aggression and to send a multinational Arab force to Saudi Arabia. By mid-August, several thousand Egyptian forces had been dispatched to the Arabian Peninsula, where they teamed up with Moroccan, Syrian, and Saudi troops, and by late in the year, Egypt had over 15,000 troops in the region. Mubarak pronounced himself pessimistic about any peaceful resolution of the conflict but, following the summit, pursued talks with Libyan leader Muammar al-Qaddafi, Algerian President Chadli Bendjedid, and Syrian President Hafez al-Assad in Alexandria in an attempt to reach such a resolution. An emergency gathering of the Arab League was held on September 9 in Cairo to discuss the gulf crisis. As a result of the split in the Arab world caused by the crisis, only 12 of the league's 21 members attended. However, there was a quorum, and those present passed the motion, for which preliminary agreement had been reached in March, to return the Arab League headquarters to its original home in Cairo. Iraqi President Saddam Hussein made several appeals to the Egyptian public to rise up in arms and overthrow the Mubarak government, presenting the crisis as one pitting Islam against the West. But these appeals appeared to fall on deaf ears, even among most of Egypt's Islamic fundamentalists, who were all too aware of Saddam Hussein's secular, socialist past. Economic Problems. The gulf crisis seemed likely to bring dire consequences for the Egyptian economy. The country was already facing the prospect of tough new austerity measures to meet conditions set by the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank in exchange for aid from numerous donors to relieve its $55 billion foreign debt. Among the major stumbling blocks were IMF demands for significant changes in Egypt's currency exchange rate and interest rates. Egypt's foreign aid donors and creditors were taking a tough stance to force Egypt to accept such reforms. The gulf crisis added to Egypt's difficulties. The events in Kuwait, combined with Egypt's position against Iraq, set in motion the exodus of hundreds of thousands of the nearly 2 million Egyptian laborers working in Iraq. Their return to Egypt, together with the loss of remittances they had sent home and the decline in tourism, threatened to strain Egypt's ailing economy to the breaking point. This threat did not go unnoticed elewhere. U.S. President George Bush quickly earmarked $163 million in emergency relief for Egypt, and Congress later forgave $6.7 billion of Egypt's military debt to the United States in appreciation of its role in the crisis. With additional emergency relief from Europe, Saudi Arabia, and Japan, it appeared that a domestic economic crisis would be averted. Indeed, the debt forgiveness reduced Egypt's interest payments by hundreds of millions of dollars. Islamic Opposition. Widespread solidarity with the government's stance against Iraq provided a moment of calm on the domestic front in what had been a fairly turbulent year. The major source of disturbance derived from Islamic extremists who continued their quest to establish an Islamic republic in Egypt, resorting to violence in their attempts to achieve their objectives. Most major disturbances occurred outside Egypt's major cities, but virtually every province experienced some unrest. Provocative incidents, such as the burning of churches and businesses owned by Coptic Christians and the staging of rallies, resulted in numerous clashes with internal security forces, especially in March, April, and May. The Jihad (Holy War) organization was behind most of these activities, but a splinter group called New Jihad battled police armed with machine guns in one of the bloodiest confrontations, in the village of Kahk. Over a dozen extremists were killed. Ironically, the year had started off with a victory of sorts for Islamic extremists. Their most hated adversary, Minister of the Interior Zaki Badr, was removed from office by President Mubarak after Badr delivered two public speeches in which, using the vilest language, he heaped curses upon his detractors, including many prominent establishment figures. Badr was replaced by General Abdel-Halim Musa, who had earned respect as a provincial governor for his dialogues with Islamic extremists. When immediately put to hard tests by those elements after becoming the country's top police official, however, Musa showed no hesitation in meeting force with force. In October, after Speaker of the People's Assembly Rifaat al-Maghoub was assassinated, police arrested members of Jihad who, they said, had killed the speaker in a botched effort to kill Musa. Domestic Politics. A ruling by the country's highest constitutional court in the spring upheld a lower court's finding that 39 Socialist Labor Party and Wafdist candidates had been fraudulently denied victory in the People's Assembly elections of April 1987. Despite urging by regime hard-liners to ignore the ruling, Mubarak called for a referendum on whether to dissolve the People's Assembly. After the referendum endorsed dissolution, elections were scheduled for late in the year. In April three new political parties were legalized: the Green Party (environmentalists), Young Egypt Party (pursuing a Nile development scheme), and the Democratic Unionist Party (seeking political union with Sudan). This concession to pluralism was offset, however, by continued rejection of efforts by the Muslim Brotherhood and Nasserites to form parties of their own. Microsoft ® Encarta ® 2006. © 1993-2005 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
{**صفحة جديدة 1} |
| | | جيهان أدهم ملازم جيش
عدد المساهمات : 10 تاريخ التسجيل : 08/11/2011 العمر : 41 الموقع : الإسكندرية
| موضوع: رد: الرئيس مبارك في موسوعة إنكارتا الثلاثاء نوفمبر 08, 2011 1:07 pm | |
| * 1991: Egypt The Persian Gulf War and its ramifications dominated events in Egypt during 1991. Gulf Crisis. Following Iraq's invasion and occupation of Kuwait in August 1990, Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak had attempted to defuse the crisis through diplomacy. When these efforts failed, Egypt endorsed the United Nations resolution calling for Iraq's withdrawal and committed troops to the U.S.-led coalition deployed in the Arabian Peninsula to enforce those sanctions. When fighting broke out in January 1991, Egyptian forces were at first involved only in exchanges of long-range artillery fire. However, Egypt had the second-largest allied army contingent (about 45,000 troops) committed to the war, and Egyptian forces were actively involved in the liberation of Kuwait in February. While Egyptian casualties were minimal (only ten Egyptian soldiers were killed in action), the scope of Iraqi casualties inflamed public opinion in Egypt, stirring protests especially by fundamentalist Islamic forces. Mubarak, who had been an outspoken critic of the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait, responded to growing internal criticism of the war by stressing that Egypt remained obligated by its commitments to the United Nations and the Arab League to come to the rescue of Kuwait. Although the Gulf War pitted Egypt against Iraq and strained relations with Iraq's principal supporters (Jordan, the Palestine Liberation Organization, Yemen, and Sudan), cooperative relations with all but Iraq and Sudan were soon restored. The catalyst for this improvement was the felt need to close Arab ranks and use the outcome of the war as a springboard for resolution of the long-standing Arab-Israeli conflict. Indeed, participation in the anti-Iraq coalition by Egypt and other Arab forces was motivated in part by U.S. promises to address the issue of Arab-Israeli relations. Mideast Peace Efforts. During the months following the war, U.S. Secretary of State James Baker repeatedly visited the area to arrange an Arab-Israeli peace conference. Egypt, the only Arab country that had a peace treaty with Israel, sent a diplomatic contingent to help broker such a conference, whose initial phase opened on October 30 in Madrid. Egyptian officials expressed concern that the heavy influx of Soviet and Ethiopian Jews to Israel and Israel's policy of allowing new settlements in the Israelioccupied territories might damage peace negotiations; accordingly, Egypt was pleased when U.S. congressional consideration of $10 billion in loan guarantees to finance the settlement of immigrants to Israel was postponed. Improved Foreign Relations. Egyptian officials expressed relief that Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev survived a coup attempt in August. Diplomatic exchanges, coupled with a Mubarak-Gorbachev meeting in September, resulted in increased cooperation with the Soviet Union prior to its disintegration at the end of the year. Meanwhile, Egypt remained a close U.S. ally, and the second-largest recipient of U.S. foreign aid, some $2.2 billion per year. Relations with Libya continued to improve, and the Egyptian-Libyan border was reopened to normal traffic in August. Egypt and Iran each set up an "interests office" in the other's capital, the first step toward the resumption of full diplomatic relations. During the year, two Egyptians were chosen to head international diplomatic organizations. In May, Foreign Minister Esmat Abdel Meguid was elected secretary-general of the Arab League. Meguid, who served in the past as Egypt's ambassador to the United Nations, was the first Egyptian to head the league since Egypt's expulsion in 1979 for making peace with Israel. Later in 1991, Deputy Prime Minister Boutros Ghali was elected secretary-general of the United Nations, becoming the first Arab and the first person from Africa in the post. A veteran diplomat, Ghali played an important role in the 1979 peace process with Israel and helped mediate many disputes involving African nations. Elections. Elections to the People's Assembly in November and December 1990 were boycotted by most major opposition parties, on the grounds that the government had not complied with their conditions for safeguarding fairness in the election process. The elections were marred by several violent incidents, which resulted in 5 deaths and more than 100 injuries. The government-backed National Democratic Party (NDP) won 79 percent of the vote; independent candidates took most of the remainder. The NDP's Ahmed Fathi Surur was elected assembly speaker. Internal Friction. Acrimony over the elections set the stage for additional difficulties with opposition parties throughout 1991. Egypt's participation alongside anti- Iraq forces in the Gulf War led to many opposition attacks on the government. With the important exception of the liberal Neo-Wafd party, which backed Mubarak's position for the most part, opposition parties decried the government's cooperation with the "Zionist-crusader" alliance against Iraq, despite their general disapproval of the Iraqi invasion and occupation of Kuwait. As antiwar demonstrations spread, protests at several universities led to clashes with government security forces that resulted in bloodshed. The relatively quick conclusion to the war helped return life to normal on university campuses. However, the cease-fire in Iraq by no means put a stop to the government's trouble with opposition forces, particularly the very well-organized Islamic extremist groups. Members of the Jihad (Holy War), the largest of these organizations, as well as scores of other groups, carried on repeated battles with Egyptian security forces. The lengthy, celebrated trial of Gamal Abdel Nasser's son, Khaled, and other members of the "Egypt's Revolution" group, accused of assassination attempts against U.S. and Israeli officials in Egypt, came to an end in April. Khaled Nasser was acquitted, while several other members of the group were found guilty and sentenced to long prison terms by the Supreme State Security Court. Economic Problems. The Egyptian economy experienced dramatic ups and downs during the year. The Gulf crisis caused hundreds of thousands of Egyptian expatriate workers in Iraq and the Arabian Peninsula to scurry home to safety. Their return damaged the economy in two major respects: first, it signaled an end to billions in hard currency earnings that they had previously repatriated to Egypt; second, it greatly boosted the ranks of the unemployed and placed an enormous strain on government services and subsidies. In addition, the crisis frightened away huge numbers of foreign tourists. These factors would have created dire economic circumstances had the country not received massive assistance and debt reductions from its Western and Far Eastern donors. As a reward for political and military support during the crisis, the U.S. government canceled Egypt's existing $6.7 billion military debt. France and many other donor nations took similar actions, helping to reduce Egypt's total foreign debt from roughly $46 billion to about $24 billion by early 1991. In March a memorandum of understanding was signed with the World Bank. Egypt agreed, among other things, to float the exchange rate, grant greater freedom to the private sector, reduce government subsidies, phase in market-determined costs for energy and agricultural products, privatize public sector companies, and implement tariff reforms. The agreement cleared the way for a $300 million structural reform loan from the International Monetary Fund in April, as well as for promises of $4 billion in aid over the next two years by the Paris Club, an international consortium of Egypt's creditors. The government announced in August that Egypt's oil exports for fiscal 1990-1991 were 70 percent higher than projected, earning $2.5 billion in revenues. Tourism rebounded strongly late in the year. Despite these gains, Egypt faced new economic difficulties in the aftermath of the Gulf War. Recognizing that reform-inspired price increases in many areas would squeeze most of the Egyptian public, Mubarak reiterated government promises to maintain price freezes on a list of heavily subsidized basic commodities. Microsoft ® Encarta ® 2006. © 1993-2005 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
1992: Egypt Egypt expanded its role as mediator in regional affairs in 1992. On the domestic front the government struggled to quell increasing violence by Islamic militants and to reform a heavily centralized economic system. International Relations. In April, after concerted efforts by the United States and Britain, the United Nations issued economic sanctions, coupled with the threat of military reprisals, against Libya to pressure that government into turning over two Libyans implicated in the bombing of Pan Am Flight 103, which exploded over Lockerbie, Scotland, in December 1988. The UN action left Egypt caught between the interests of its major Western aid donors and pan-Arab sensitivities. The prevailing sentiment in Egypt was defiant toward the Western demands, largely due to perception of a Western double standard — that is, the West forced compliance with UN resolutions affecting Arab nations but not with those concerning Israel. Also, because more than 1 million Egyptians were working in Libya, there was great fear of any developments that might result in the rapid return of those workers to Egypt. The government of President Hosni Mubarak sought to defuse the situation, urging the United States not to undertake any precipitous military action that might destabilize the region, while working with the Arab League to pressure Libya's leader, Colonel Muammar al-Qaddafi, into turning over to Western officials the two men accused of the Pan Am bombing. Egyptian-Israeli relations had been deteriorating under the conservative Likud government of Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir, which pursued a policy of settling the occupied territories of the West Bank and the Gaza Strip at the same time as it was participating in Middle East peace talks. The Arab — and Egyptian — view of Israel's hard-line position once again left Egypt in an awkward position. As a party to the multilateral negotiations component of the peace talks, Egypt struggled to convince all Arab representatives to attend talks relating to regional issues and was successful in one important instance — at a mid-March meeting in Cairo, Mubarak persuaded Syrian President Hafez al-Assad to continue participating in the talks. In June the Egyptian government was heartened by the electoral victory of the Labor party in Israel and its immediate call for a partial freeze on new building in the occupied territories. The following month, when Israel's new prime minister, Yitzhak Rabin, met with Mubarak in Cairo, Mubarak pressed for a total freeze on settlements. By October the change in the Israeli government and the strength of Egyptian diplomacy resulted in Israel's decision to allow Palestinians not residing in the occupied territories to participate directly in the peace talks. But the significance of this concession remained uncertain given Israel's refusal to meet with the Palestine Liberation Organization. While the Mideast peace talks progressed, Egypt faced a new threat from its southern neighbor, Sudan. Intelligence reports indicated that the Sudanese government, which had been adopting an increasingly strong Islamic fundamentalist stance, was setting up military training camps run by Iranian Revolutionary Guards in the Halaib triangle, an area on the border between the two countries. This led to an Egyptian-Sudanese dispute over the region. In March a joint committee was established to resolve the issue, but a clash between Egyptian and Sudanese security forces in the area in early April left two Sudanese dead. By September, Egypt had doubled its border posts and had established its own local administration in the Halaib triangle. In January the former deputy prime minister, Boutros Boutros-Ghali, began his first term as secretary-general of the United Nations, replacing Javier Pérez de Cuéllar. Domestic Turmoil. Citing the 1971 constitution, which bans any political party based on religion, social class, or geographic region, a state administrative court in February rejected the fundamentalist Muslim Brotherhood's bid for legal party status. In the spring, however, a high court allowed followers of former President Gamal Abd al-Nasser to set up a Nasserist Democratic Party headed by Dia al-Din Dawud to pursue Nasser's ideals of socialism, Arab nationalism, and pan-Arab unity. Radical Islamic elements continued to pose a serious domestic threat, particularly south of Cairo. In January two state irrigation inspectors were killed after they happened across a group of Islamic extremists engaging in weapons training. After a senior security official was assassinated in early March, some 150 alleged Islamists were arrested. Counterdemonstrations in Beni Suef resulted in the shooting deaths of four Islamists by security forces. In early May, 14 people were massacred by Islamic extremists in the village of Mansheit Nasser in the Asyut region in retaliation for the killing of members of the Islamic Group organization in the region in March. Most of them were Coptic Christians, but at least two were Muslims who were defending their Coptic neighbors. On June 8, Egyptians were shocked by the assassination of Farag Foda by the Jihad organization. Foda was a writer who advocated formation of a party uniting Muslims and Christians. In mid-June, clashes between security forces sent to protect Christians and Islamic extremists broke out in Sanabu, leaving nine dead and many wounded. Revenge attacks launched by extremists in nearby Dayrut resulted in the killing of three security officials and two civilians, which in turn triggered a huge dragnet operation in the Asyut region involving thousands of security personnel. More than 200 people were arrested in the dragnet. A potentially more alarming development resulted from the decision of extremists to strike at the government by disrupting the nation's lucrative tourist industry. In late June a crudely fashioned grenade was tossed into the Karnak Temple in Luxor, one of the world's premier tourist attractions, and in July a gasoline bomb was thrown at a tourist bus in Luxor. At the end of August, Islamic militants warned tourists against visiting areas in southern Egypt. In October a British tourist was killed, and in November a tourist bus was fired upon, resulting in the wounding of seven occupants. By November, officials were reporting a decline in the tourist trade from 30 to 50 percent. With tourism supplying Egypt with some $3 billion in annual revenue, the government took strong steps to meet the crisis. In June strong antiterrorist legislation was pushed through the People's Assembly, and in November police cars with automatic weapons were assigned to patrol the highway from Cairo to Luxor. In December, 600 militants were arrested in the biggest crackdown on dissent in a decade. The antiterrorist legislation was opposed by the parliamentary opposition and by the Egyptian Organization for Human Rights, both of which feared governmental abuse of the loose definition of "terrorist." Such groups have long contended that the government is the root cause of Islamic extremists' violence because of its refusal to grant legal and political status to religious parties and by engaging in human rights abuses, including torture, against political opponents. Indeed, the human rights organization Amnesty International had repeatedly levied similar charges against Egyptian security forces. However, the Mubarak government's commitment to checking Islamic extremists was evident not only in its actions at home but in its support for the January coup in Algeria, which blocked a likely electoral victory by the fundamentalist Islamic Salvation Front. Earthquake. On October 12 a rare earthquake struck Cairo and the surrounding area, killing over 500 people, injuring nearly 10,000, and leaving 3,000 families homeless. The relief efforts of the governing National Democratic Party drew criticism from the Islamic fundamentalist community, which quickly began ad hoc relief efforts of its own, hoping especially to strengthen its political foothold in the capital city. Economic Reform and Improvement. A massive reduction in Egypt's foreign debt from $46 billion to about $29 billion — resulting from Egypt's Gulf War participation on the side of the U.S.-led forces against Iraq — helped buoy the economy and enable the government to promote several areas of economic reform. Thus, in keeping with requests from the International Monetary Fund (IMF), the government continued to chip away at subsidies on several basic goods and services, including railway fares, gasoline, kerosene, diesel fuel, and electricity. Such measures helped reduce the budget deficit to below the targeted level of 10 percent of gross domestic product. The Egyptian pound remained stable against the dollar, and inflation, though still somewhat high at 20 to 25 percent, did not race out of control. The government assured the IMF that it was close to meeting one of the organization's recommendations: reform of Egypt's bloated, largely inefficient public sector. But efforts to privatize hundreds of nonstrategic public-sector companies were slowed for several reasons. First, privatization was to be preceded by reorganization of the public-sector companies into 27 holding companies, which led to much jockeying for position by the directors on the boards of the companies; they also sought assurances that they would be able to retain their posts after privatization was complete. Second, with unemployment already estimated at 20 percent, the government feared the political and economic repercussions of widespread privatization, which was certain to increase unemployment initially. Finally, the domestic capital market was said to be underfunded. While the delay in privatization led to friction with the IMF and other donor organizations, it seemed unlikely that these groups would press the Mubarak administration too hard, given the country's overall domestic and foreign policy outlook. Microsoft ® Encarta ® 2006. © 1993-2005 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
1993: Egypt Egypt was plagued by political violence as the confrontation continued between government security forces defending the secular regime of President Hosni Mubarak and radical groups seeking the establishment of an Islamic republic. This tension affected foreign policy as well. Domestic Violence. Though the Islamic fundamentalists were estimated to include only 10,000 activists, their depth of commitment and the tightly knit structure of their organization made them a formidable foe. Hardly a week passed without some new development in this struggle, which by year's end had claimed the lives of well over 200 people since March 1992. Responding to several attacks on tourists by the extremist Islamic Group in the fall of 1992, as well as to claims that an autonomous Islamic republic had been created in a poor district of Cairo called Imbaba, some 10,000 security personnel invaded Imbaba on December 8, 1992, and arrested the local Islamic Group leader and hundreds of other Islamic militants. Similar security sweeps were undertaken in other poor districts of Cairo. The militants retaliated by striking at tourists in January and February 1993. Unlike previous attacks, which took place in tourist areas far from the capital, these were carried out for the first time in Cairo itself. The attacks on tourists were designed to cripple Egypt's economy and to topple the Mubarak regime, as well as to rid Egypt of so-called corrupting Western influences. On February 27, just one day after the World Trade Center bombing in New York City, for which several individuals of Egyptian origin, including Sheikh Omar Abdel Rahman, were later put on trial, a bomb exploded at the Wadi al-Nil cafe in central Cairo's Liberation Square, killing four, including two tourists. Although major Islamic militant organizations denied responsibility, Islamic extremists headed the list of suspects in the cafe bombing. The violence intensified in March and April. On March 3 a police officer and his six-year-old son were killed, and one month later a high-ranking security officer was also gunned down. A fax sent from Peshawar, Pakistan, reputed haven for several key leaders of Egypt's radical Islamic elements, threatened foreign interests in Egypt. A March 9 clash in Imbaba left 23 extremists dead, while a shoot-out 12 days later in the southern city of Aswan brought the death of ten militants and two policemen. On April 20 an attempt was made on the life of Information Minister Safwat al-Sharif; he escaped with minor injuries. Two days earlier, Interior Minister Abdel-Halim Moussa had been relieved of his duties because of his approval of mediation efforts between the police and Islamic activists undertaken by several prominent Islamic sheikhs. His replacement, Hassan Muhammad al-Alfi, former governor of Asyut, promised a "decisive confrontation" with the militants. Incidents of violence continued throughout the year. Although several new attacks on foreign tourists resulted only in injuries, far more deadly were the explosions of several nail bombs in Cairo. For example, a bomb in the North Cairo district of Shubra took the lives of seven civilians and wounded 20 others. Such wanton acts of violence raised anew the question of responsibility. Although the government blamed Islamic radicals (who themselves denounced the attack), some observers speculated that foreign governments, ranging from Iran to Israel or the Sudan, were guilty. Nevertheless, security forces again responded by broad sweeps throughout most of the country's governorates; these netted hundreds of activists and massive quantities of explosives and firearms. On October 26 two Americans and a Frenchman were killed, and three other foreigners were wounded by a gunman at Cairo's Semiramis Inter- Continental Hotel (one of the wounded died later). It appeared, however, that the attacker was mentally ill and was not connected to any militant groups. Attacks on policemen escalated in December, and late in the month a tourist bus was attacked in Cairo, leaving 16 people wounded. At year's end the authorities announced that paramilitary forces had raided a militant stronghold on an island in the Nile and foiled a plot to bomb government buildings and assassinate government officials. Death Warrants Issued. To expedite the prosecution of militants, Mubarak had already bucked domestic and foreign criticism by deciding to use military tribunals instead of the slow-moving civilian judiciary. Military courts began issuing death sentences, with the first executions occurring on June 13, prompting new threats of antigovernment violence by Islamic extremists. Numerous police officers were assassinated during the ensuing months, and Interior Minister al-Alfi narrowly escaped an attempt on his life on August 18, as did Prime Minister Atef Sedki on November 25. Secular and moderate religious opposition leaders criticized Mubarak for his handling of the domestic crisis. They attributed the crisis to deteriorating socioeconomic conditions and glaring social inequalities, not to "foreign forces." Most opposition leaders called for greater democracy as the best means of defusing the crisis, but Mubarak saw things differently. In February he oversaw the introduction of new legislation that would diminish the still outlawed, yet powerful, fundamentalist Muslim Brotherhood's chances of controlling and utilizing major professional organizations and trade unions as centers of opposition activity. The brotherhood had already gained control of roughly half the professional associations. Next, Mubarak ignored calls for opening up the presidential election process and stuck to the old format, allowing the People's Assembly (dominated by his own party) to renominate him, virtually unopposed, for a third term. In the public referendum held on October 2, Mubarak was reelected president for another six years. Privatization Proceeds Slowly. Mubarak's task was likely to remain exceedingly complex. On the one hand, he had committed his government to following economic reforms prescribed by the International Monetary Fund (IMF), including liberalization of trade and privatization of inefficient and grossly overstaffed public sector companies. Yet with unemployment at 20 percent, the crucial tourist sector facing a 30 percent to 50 percent downturn because of antitourist violence, and a related decline in projected gross domestic product growth rate from 4 percent down to 1.5 percent, further privatization represented a politically volatile choice. Thus, privatization proceeded slowly, and Prime Minister Sidqi promised that there would be no increase in the price of bread, the staple food in Egypt. Despite these hitches in economic liberalization, Egypt met IMF and World Bank conditions that cleared the way to negotiate a new IMF standby agreement. This agreement, in turn, would enable Egypt to obtain cancellation of $3 billion in debts to the Paris Club of Western creditor nations. International Relations. The radical Islamists' threat to the Mubarak regime had a heavy impact on Egyptian foreign policy. In spite of Syrian-mediated efforts aimed at improving Egyptian-Iranian relations early in the year, the violence in Egypt kept Iran's Islamic fundamentalist regime high on Egyptian officials' list of suspected foreign enemies who were inspiring and funding militant attacks. More specifically, Iran was accused of establishing terrorist training camps in the Sudan. During the year dozens of armed militants were captured as they crossed Egypt's borders with the Sudan and Libya. Most of them were allegedly Egyptians who had fought in the Islamic resistance in Afghanistan against Soviet troops and now sought to return home to create an Islamic republic. Their Egyptian leaders were based in Peshawar, and the Egyptian government asked to have them apprehended and handed over by Pakistani security forces. Despite Pakistani promises of assistance, however, no top leaders were arrested. Mubarak had better luck in enlisting Tunisian and Algerian support to combat the growing terrorism, and in May he convinced Gulf Arab states of the need to isolate Iran and move against elements in their own countries who had abetted radical Islamists. Elsewhere, Egypt continued to play the role of facilitator and mediator in the Arab-Israeli conflict. Mubarak met on numerous occasions with Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) leader Yasir Arafat, hosted Israeli Prime Minister Shimon Peres in early July, and was particularly active in furthering Syrian-Israeli peace discussions. The signing of a mutual recognition accord between Israel and the PLO in Washington in early September was warmly received in Cairo and seen as a vindication of Egypt's longstanding efforts to bring peace between Israel and its neighbors. Microsoft ® Encarta ® 2006. © 1993-2005 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserve
{**صفحة جديدة 1} |
| | | جيهان أدهم ملازم جيش
عدد المساهمات : 10 تاريخ التسجيل : 08/11/2011 العمر : 41 الموقع : الإسكندرية
| موضوع: رد: الرئيس مبارك في موسوعة إنكارتا الثلاثاء نوفمبر 08, 2011 1:11 pm | |
| * 1994: Egypt The struggle between President Hosni Mubarak's government and Islamic extremists seeking to topple it dominated Egypt's political and economic affairs in 1994. Egypt experienced an unprecedented level of violence in early 1994, as extremists attacked tourists, businesses, and the government. Passenger trains and cruise ships were fired upon, and bombs exploded outside several banks in January and February. In March, Mubarak escaped an assassination attempt by two Islamist-sympathizing Army officers, and one high-ranking police official was assassinated in early April. The Interior Ministry responded with heightened force: Two prominent extremists were killed in police raids in April, and more than 20,000 extremists were incarcerated. Among those arrested in late April was a lawyer, Abd al-Harith Madani, accused of abetting the extremists. His death within 24 hours of his arrest provoked accusations that police officials had used torture and culminated in government suppression of a protest march by sympathetic lawyers on May 17. The government's show of force seemed to seriously weaken the major Islamic extremist organizations — the Islamic Group and Jihad. Both sought dialogue with the government, and many imprisoned extremists appeared on television to renounce the use of violence. Nevertheless, the convening of a world conference on population in Cairo in September provided the backdrop for a new spate of violence in which several people died. Mubarak had hoped the heavily attended conference would serve indirectly to revive tourism; extremists were bent on foiling this hope, as well as on displaying their rejection of the conference's objectives regarding population control, which they perceived as a Western attempt to impose "corrupt values" upon the Islamic world. Egyptian diplomats were actively engaged as mediators in several regional conflicts. Palestinian-Israeli talks in Cairo finally produced an agreement on how to resolve their differences, and, on July 1, Mubarak escorted Palestinian President Yasir Arafat to Egypt's border with the Gaza Strip for Arafat's historic return to Palestinian territory. Elsewhere, diplomacy proved more nettlesome. Northern Yemenis accused Egypt of a pro-South Yemen bias, frustrating Egypt's efforts to mediate in Yemen's civil war. Egypt also experienced little success in resolving Libya's crisis with the West over the 1988 bombing of a plane over Lockerbie, Scotland. Egyptian relations with the Sudan remained very strained over Sudanese appropriations of Egyptian assets in Sudan and alleged Sudanese support for Islamic extremists. On a brighter note, Egypt restored diplomatic relations with South Africa on May 10 in recognition of the end of apartheid. With tourism badly hit by extremist violence, economic growth remained sluggish. Plans for further economic liberalization through privatization stalled because of fears that increased unemployment would provide new recruits to the Islamic fundamentalist camp. Slowed privatization produced friction with the World Bank and International Monetary Fund, since both organizations linked progress toward privatization to the delivery of additional debt relief and economic assistance. Egypt maintained a low rate of inflation and reduced the budget deficit, but government expenditures on low-income citizens were increased to counter the spread of Islamists' influence. Microsoft ® Encarta ® 2006. © 1993-2005 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
1994: Egypt The struggle between President Hosni Mubarak's government and Islamic extremists seeking to topple it dominated Egypt's political and economic affairs in 1994. Egypt experienced an unprecedented level of violence in early 1994, as extremists attacked tourists, businesses, and the government. Passenger trains and cruise ships were fired upon, and bombs exploded outside several banks in January and February. In March, Mubarak escaped an assassination attempt by two Islamist-sympathizing Army officers, and one high-ranking police official was assassinated in early April. The Interior Ministry responded with heightened force: Two prominent extremists were killed in police raids in April, and more than 20,000 extremists were incarcerated. Among those arrested in late April was a lawyer, Abd al-Harith Madani, accused of abetting the extremists. His death within 24 hours of his arrest provoked accusations that police officials had used torture and culminated in government suppression of a protest march by sympathetic lawyers on May 17. The government's show of force seemed to seriously weaken the major Islamic extremist organizations — the Islamic Group and Jihad. Both sought dialogue with the government, and many imprisoned extremists appeared on television to renounce the use of violence. Nevertheless, the convening of a world conference on population in Cairo in September provided the backdrop for a new spate of violence in which several people died. Mubarak had hoped the heavily attended conference would serve indirectly to revive tourism; extremists were bent on foiling this hope, as well as on displaying their rejection of the conference's objectives regarding population control, which they perceived as a Western attempt to impose "corrupt values" upon the Islamic world. Egyptian diplomats were actively engaged as mediators in several regional conflicts. Palestinian-Israeli talks in Cairo finally produced an agreement on how to resolve their differences, and, on July 1, Mubarak escorted Palestinian President Yasir Arafat to Egypt's border with the Gaza Strip for Arafat's historic return to Palestinian territory. Elsewhere, diplomacy proved more nettlesome. Northern Yemenis accused Egypt of a pro-South Yemen bias, frustrating Egypt's efforts to mediate in Yemen's civil war. Egypt also experienced little success in resolving Libya's crisis with the West over the 1988 bombing of a plane over Lockerbie, Scotland. Egyptian relations with the Sudan remained very strained over Sudanese appropriations of Egyptian assets in Sudan and alleged Sudanese support for Islamic extremists. On a brighter note, Egypt restored diplomatic relations with South Africa on May 10 in recognition of the end of apartheid. With tourism badly hit by extremist violence, economic growth remained sluggish. Plans for further economic liberalization through privatization stalled because of fears that increased unemployment would provide new recruits to the Islamic fundamentalist camp. Slowed privatization produced friction with the World Bank and International Monetary Fund, since both organizations linked progress toward privatization to the delivery of additional debt relief and economic assistance. Egypt maintained a low rate of inflation and reduced the budget deficit, but government expenditures on low-income citizens were increased to counter the spread of Islamists' influence. Microsoft ® Encarta ® 2006. © 1993-2005 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
1995: Egypt In 1995 the government of Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak made significant gains against extremists seeking to establish an Islamic republic. However, the conflict slowed economic growth and affected foreign relations. Islamist Movement. Interior Ministry forces reduced the sphere of most Islamist extremist activities to the province of Al Minya and the areas around the city of Samalut in Upper Egypt. Nevertheless, the extremists' violent campaign to overthrow the government and set up an Islamic state resulted in the death of over 150 civilians, security personnel, and militants in 1995. More than 800 people had been killed in the conflict since March 1992. Security sweeps had left thousands of extremists imprisoned, and there were widespread allegations of torture and other human rights violations committed by Egyptian authorities. Having gained the upper hand against the most radical Islamists, the government began to take a stronger stance in 1995 against the more moderate Islamists in the Muslim Brotherhood organization and some members of its ally the Socialist Labor Party. Numerous individuals were detained in December 1994 and in early 1995, including journalist and SLP Secretary-General Adel Hussein, for allegedly abetting the extremists. In November, 54 Islamic leaders were convicted in a military court of nonviolent offenses and sentenced to prison terms of up to five years. The government's actions seemed designed to weaken moderate Islamists prior to elections set for the Shura Council in June and the People's Assembly late in the year, as well as anticipated elections for several key professional syndicates. By banning many Islamist candidates, the government ensured that Islamists would for the first time in many years fail to win control of the university student councils. In June, Mubarak's National Democratic Party (NDP) won 88 of the 90 vacant Shura Council seats; the Muslim Brotherhood won none and was barred from competing as a political party in the People's Assembly election. Predictably, the NDP won 317 of the 444 seats decided in two rounds of voting in November and December. On June 26 radical Islamists attempted to assassinate Mubarak during a state visit to Ethiopia. Members of the Egyptian Islamic Group organization claimed responsibility for the failed attack, but the Egyptian government laid most of the blame on the Sudanese government, which has long been accused by Egypt of helping to arm and train such extremists. The incident provoked yet another clash between Egyptian and Sudanese forces in the disputed border region of Hala'ib. Foreign Affairs. Allegations of human rights violations and official corruption, as well as continued Egyptian sympathy for UN-ostracized Libya, produced some tension in U.S.-Egyptian relations, but U.S. aid to Egypt remained at its high level of over $2 billion per year. This aid remained a testimony to Egypt's peace with Israel and to its extensive diplomatic efforts in trying to broker a Syrian-Israeli accord, as well as to the crucial assistance lent by Mubarak in hammering out a Palestinian-Israeli agreement in September. Egyptian-Israeli relations were tested by two issues in 1995. In the spring Egypt held out on re-signing the UN-sponsored Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty and lobbied others to follow suit until the Israelis themselves became signatories. U.S. officials ultimately persuaded Egypt to drop its demand. In the fall former Israeli military officers revealed that Egyptian prisoners of war in the 1956 and 1967 conflicts had been summarily executed and dumped into mass graves. Opposition parties in Egypt pressured Mubarak to demand that Israel investigate the matter more fully and punish the responsible officers. Slow Economic Growth. The economic growth rate improved slightly in 1995. However, overall economic activity remained depressed by domestic violence, which reduced earnings in the key tourism industry. The sluggish economy made it difficult for the government to deliver on its promise to the International Monetary Fund to privatize nonprofitable public sector companies, although some progress was recorded in this area. Egyptian officials feared that privatization would boost unemployment, which was already high, and that this in turn might add even more recruits to the ranks of the radical Islamic organizations. Microsoft ® Encarta ® 2006. © 1993-2005 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
1995: Egypt In 1995 the government of Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak made significant gains against extremists seeking to establish an Islamic republic. However, the conflict slowed economic growth and affected foreign relations. Islamist Movement. Interior Ministry forces reduced the sphere of most Islamist extremist activities to the province of Al Minya and the areas around the city of Samalut in Upper Egypt. Nevertheless, the extremists' violent campaign to overthrow the government and set up an Islamic state resulted in the death of over 150 civilians, security personnel, and militants in 1995. More than 800 people had been killed in the conflict since March 1992. Security sweeps had left thousands of extremists imprisoned, and there were widespread allegations of torture and other human rights violations committed by Egyptian authorities. Having gained the upper hand against the most radical Islamists, the government began to take a stronger stance in 1995 against the more moderate Islamists in the Muslim Brotherhood organization and some members of its ally the Socialist Labor Party. Numerous individuals were detained in December 1994 and in early 1995, including journalist and SLP Secretary-General Adel Hussein, for allegedly abetting the extremists. In November, 54 Islamic leaders were convicted in a military court of nonviolent offenses and sentenced to prison terms of up to five years. The government's actions seemed designed to weaken moderate Islamists prior to elections set for the Shura Council in June and the People's Assembly late in the year, as well as anticipated elections for several key professional syndicates. By banning many Islamist candidates, the government ensured that Islamists would for the first time in many years fail to win control of the university student councils. In June, Mubarak's National Democratic Party (NDP) won 88 of the 90 vacant Shura Council seats; the Muslim Brotherhood won none and was barred from competing as a political party in the People's Assembly election. Predictably, the NDP won 317 of the 444 seats decided in two rounds of voting in November and December. On June 26 radical Islamists attempted to assassinate Mubarak during a state visit to Ethiopia. Members of the Egyptian Islamic Group organization claimed responsibility for the failed attack, but the Egyptian government laid most of the blame on the Sudanese government, which has long been accused by Egypt of helping to arm and train such extremists. The incident provoked yet another clash between Egyptian and Sudanese forces in the disputed border region of Hala'ib. Foreign Affairs. Allegations of human rights violations and official corruption, as well as continued Egyptian sympathy for UN-ostracized Libya, produced some tension in U.S.-Egyptian relations, but U.S. aid to Egypt remained at its high level of over $2 billion per year. This aid remained a testimony to Egypt's peace with Israel and to its extensive diplomatic efforts in trying to broker a Syrian-Israeli accord, as well as to the crucial assistance lent by Mubarak in hammering out a Palestinian-Israeli agreement in September. Egyptian-Israeli relations were tested by two issues in 1995. In the spring Egypt held out on re-signing the UN-sponsored Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty and lobbied others to follow suit until the Israelis themselves became signatories. U.S. officials ultimately persuaded Egypt to drop its demand. In the fall former Israeli military officers revealed that Egyptian prisoners of war in the 1956 and 1967 conflicts had been summarily executed and dumped into mass graves. Opposition parties in Egypt pressured Mubarak to demand that Israel investigate the matter more fully and punish the responsible officers. Slow Economic Growth. The economic growth rate improved slightly in 1995. However, overall economic activity remained depressed by domestic violence, which reduced earnings in the key tourism industry. The sluggish economy made it difficult for the government to deliver on its promise to the International Monetary Fund to privatize nonprofitable public sector companies, although some progress was recorded in this area. Egyptian officials feared that privatization would boost unemployment, which was already high, and that this in turn might add even more recruits to the ranks of the radical Islamic organizations. Microsoft ® Encarta ® 2006. © 1993-2005 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
1996: Egypt Egypt's foreign policy in 1996 was focused mainly on political developments in neighboring Israel. At home the government pursued economic reform and took some steps toward privatization. Tensions With Israel. Egypt hosted a summit meeting in March at which 27 heads of state and government voiced support for the Middle East peace process and for the fight against terrorism. The following month relations between Egypt and Israel were strained by Israel's shelling of a UN base in southern Lebanon where refugees had taken shelter. The assault, in which around 100 civilians were killed, was part of a series of reprisals for rocket attacks by Hezbollah guerrillas on villages in northern Israel and Israeli soldiers in Lebanon. Israeli elections in May brought to power the rightwing Likud bloc with Benjamin Netanyahu as the new prime minister, creating consternation in Cairo. Within just a few weeks Egypt's Foreign Ministry had abandoned its wait-and-see attitude and adopted a posture more critical of Netanyahu's course. As it became clearer that Netanyahu would further delay implementing crucial aspects of the Oslo accords, Egyptian, Syrian, and Saudi leaders called an Arab summit in Cairo for June 21-23. At that summit, attended by all Arab countries except the Iraqis (who were not invited), the Arab leaders warned the new Israeli government that if it reneged on the Oslo accords or tried to drop the "land for peace" formula, it risked a heightening of regional tension and a possible review of existing peace arrangements between other Arab nations and Israel. By July 4, Egypt's foreign minister, Amr Moussa, was warning that the peace process was on the verge of collapse. The Israeli government's controversial opening in September of an ancient tunnel near holy sites in Jerusalem for both Jews and Muslims triggered riots by Palestinians, followed by their bloody suppression by Israeli security forces. In an attempt to end the violence and advance the peace process, U.S. President Bill Clinton called upon Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak to join Netanyahu, Palestinian leader Yasir Arafat, and Jordan's King Hussein for talks in Washington. Mubarak, however, declined the invitation out of a belief that the talks would provide no fruitful results. His refusal reflected a growing sense of frustration on the part of the Egyptian leadership, which felt that the U.S. government, whether out of election-year calculations or not, was granting too wide a range of maneuver to the Israelis. Additional strains in relations with the United States were caused by concern that U.S. military and economic assistance to Egypt might soon suffer cutbacks as a result of U.S. budgetary constraints. Freeing up the Economy. In January, President Mubarak appointed the longtime minister of planning, Kamal al-Ganzouri, to replace Atef Sidqi as prime minister. Sidqi had held the post for nine years. However, the long-awaited government shuffle left many important portfolios, such as defense, foreign affairs, and interior, in the same hands. Al-Ganzouri made the acceleration of economic reform — in particular, opening the door to foreign investment and privatizing public sector firms — his primary goal. In February the Egyptian government presented a list of some 100 public sector companies to be offered for sale. The government also pushed through legislation that reduced controls on housing rents, permitted the sale of government-owned agricultural lands, and allowed foreign interests to become majority shareholders in joint venture banks in Egypt. In the fall the International Monetary Fund approved an Egyptian program of economic reforms, which led to the reduction of roughly $4 billion in debt, the third and final portion of debt relief for Egypt. Islamic Activists. Muhammad Hamed Abu al-Nasr, the supreme guide of the influential Muslim Brotherhood organization, died in January and was replaced by a hard-line activist, Mustafa Mashhour. Throughout the year, Egyptian security forces maintained tight reins on Islamic opposition forces and kept violence to a relatively low level. An April attack by Islamic extremists on Greek tourists — who were mistaken for Israelis — left 18 dead, but the nation's important tourist industry rebounded well from the incident. Microsoft ® Encarta ® 2006. © 1993-2005 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
1997: Egypt Egypt's political scene was relatively tranquil for much of 1997 — until mid-November, when a terrorist attack at a popular tourist site left dozens of people dead. Domestic Politics. President Hosni Mubarak sought to maintain an aggressive posture in dealing with the Islamist opposition. With government repression of the relatively moderate Muslim Brotherhood, this group refrained from competing in local government elections, held in April. For the most part, security forces contained Islamist extremists to a small area of operations in central Egypt. Until November, violence was at a much lower level than that experienced during the peak years of 1992-1995. Incidents prior to November included the mid-February murder of nine Coptic Christians in a church in Minya Province; the killing of 13 people, including several Copts, in a village in Qena Province a month later; the killing of nine tourists in September when a gasoline bomb was hurled at a bus in Cairo; and the killing of 11 people, including nine policemen, in Minya Province in October. Some members of the Islamic Group, one of the two largest extremist organizations, called in June for a cessation of violence, but this gesture did not bring a government reprieve. On November 17 six gunmen killed 58 foreign tourists and four Egyptians near a 3,400-year-old temple at historic Luxor before they were finally themselves killed by police. The Islamic Group claimed responsibility for the attack, the bloodiest since the 1992 beginning of its campaign to undermine the government by hitting economic targets, such as tourism. Earlier in the year, tension grew on another front, especially in rural areas, as the September 30 deadline approached for liberalization of agricultural landowner-tenant contracts. Opposition parties responded to peasant fears of escalating market-value land rents and eviction from rented lands; during the summer demonstrations and arrests heightened stress, as did several deaths in landlord-peasant clashes (15 by the end of September). In July the government made efforts to allay peasant fears, using compensatory schemes, loans, and mediation boards. Economic Picture. Although the government's ability to fulfill economic liberalization and privatization plans remained in question in 1997, there were positive developments — including Mubarak's more explicit commitment to an export-led development strategy, the privatization of many public sector companies, and reduction of trade barriers. In addition, Prime Minister Kamal al-Ganzouri appointed as minister of the economy the young, reform-minded Youssef Boutros-Ghali. A reduced, 6 percent rate of inflation, as well as sound foreign reserves, contributed to increased foreign and domestic economic investment. Gross domestic product growth rose to nearly 6 percent. The November killings at Luxor, however, had a devastating effect on foreign tourism, which had reached record heights, fueling a boom in the construction sector. In April the government unveiled a 20-year plan for Egypt's socioeconomic development. Among objectives were construction or expansion of over 40 agricultural and industrial communities in the Sinai Peninsula and the Western Desert, major infrastructural initiatives, and a sevenfold increase in tourism. Private-sector investors would be encouraged to provide roughly three-fourths of the essential investment capital. Regional Tensions. Relations with Israel deteriorated as Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu pursued policies perceived by Egypt as violating agreements made in the Israeli-Palestinian and Arab-Israeli peace processes. In particular, Netanyahu's support of new West Bank construction by Israeli settlers brought repeated warnings from the Egyptian government, acting alone or in concert with other Arab nations. On several occasions throughout the year, Mubarak met with Netanyahu to encourage cessation of settlement activity, but to no avail. When Egypt reached out to other Arab countries, including Libya and Iraq, for regional support, these initiatives were frowned upon by some members of the U.S. Congress. But despite congressional threats to terminate U.S. aid, the administration of President Bill Clinton maintained assistance to Egypt at the level of $2.1 billion, second only to the amount of U.S. aid given to Israel. Microsoft ® Encarta ® 2006. © 1993-2005 Microsoft Corporation.
بالمناسبة أرجو التركيز على التعليق على رد فعل الرئيس مبارك تجاه المواقف الأمريكية لكي نعرف جميعا لماذا كان يجب الإطاحة به وهو الذي لم يستجب لضغوطات أمريكا قط {**صفحة جديدة 1} |
| | | جيهان أدهم ملازم جيش
عدد المساهمات : 10 تاريخ التسجيل : 08/11/2011 العمر : 41 الموقع : الإسكندرية
| موضوع: رد: الرئيس مبارك في موسوعة إنكارتا الثلاثاء نوفمبر 08, 2011 1:17 pm | |
| * Achille Lauro In 1985 the Italian cruise ship Achille Lauro was hijacked off the coast of Egypt by members of the Palestinian Liberation Front. One American passenger was killed, and subsequent diplomatic conflicts over the hijackers’ fates strained American relations with Italy and Egypt. In 1994 the Achille Lauro caught fire in the Indian Ocean. One passenger died, but all others on board were transferred to other ships.The ship sank two days later. Woodfin Camp and Associates, Inc./Sipa Press Microsoft ® Encarta ® 2006. © 1993-2005 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. Achille Lauro Achille Lauro, Italian cruise ship hijacked off the Mediterranean coast of Egypt on October 7, 1985, by members of the Palestinian Liberation Front (PLF), a small guerrilla faction of the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), who were demanding the release of Palestinian prisoners in Israel. Two days later, the hijackers were induced to surrender by Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak and PLF leader Mohammed Abbas, also known as Abu Abbas. More than 400 passengers and crew of the Achille Lauro were released, but the hijackers had shot to death and thrown overboard an invalid Jewish American passenger, 69-year-old Leon Klinghoffer. Mubarak permitted Abbas and the hijackers to fly to PLF headquarters in Tunisia aboard an Egyptian commercial airliner. However, United States president Ronald Reagan sent U.S. Navy jet fighters to intercept the flight and, with the consent of Italy’s premier Bettino Craxi, to force the aircraft to land at the joint U.S.-Italian air base at Sigonella, Sicily. The United States and Italy contested jurisdiction in the case. When the Craxi government allowed the Egyptian plane to fly to Rome, U.S. officials requested that Abbas be held in Italy for extradition in view of evidence that he had engineered the hijacking. However, Craxi allowed Abbas to go to Yugoslavia. An Italian court convicted 11 of the 15 men charged with involvement in the cruise ship hijacking. Abbas and two of his associates, one of whom was captured in 1991, were tried in absentia and found guilty of organizing the hijacking. The jury sentenced them to life imprisonment. The incident weakened Craxi’s coalition government, strained U.S.-Italian and U.S.-Egyptian relations, and slowed Arab-Israeli peace efforts. All four of the Palestinian hijackers who carried out the hijacking were given sentences ranging from 15 to 30 years. The ringleader of the hijackers, Magied Youssef al-Molqi, was given 30 years. During the late 1980s and early 1990s, Abbas lived in Tunisia, Algeria, and Libya before settling in Iraq in 1994 where he lived under the protection of the government of Saddam Hussein. Abbas was granted amnesty in 1996 as part of the Oslo Accords, the peace agreement between Israel and the PLO. He moved from Baghdad, the capital of Iraq, to his home in the Gaza Strip, where he lived until 2000 before returning to Iraq. More than 17 years after the Achille Lauro hijacking, U.S. forces captured Abbas near Baghdad during the 2003 U.S.-led invasion of Iraq. In March 2004 he died in prison. Microsoft ® Encarta ® 2006. © 1993-2005 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
{**صفحة جديدة 1} |
| | | ماريال الرتبة العسكرية\عميد جيش
عدد المساهمات : 2039 تاريخ التسجيل : 19/06/2011
| موضوع: رد: الرئيس مبارك في موسوعة إنكارتا الأربعاء نوفمبر 09, 2011 3:06 pm | |
| * افضل تعريف للرئيس مبارك هو انه رئيس نادر الوجود ...... انسانية وهيبة وتاريخ {**صفحة جديدة 1} |
| | | | الرئيس مبارك في موسوعة إنكارتا | |
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