Egypt cuts ties with Syria amid mounting hard-line Sunni pressure
 In this Wednesday, May 8, 2013 file photo, Egyptian President Mohammed
Morsi attends a bi-lateral signing ceremony with Brazil's President Dilma
Rousseff, at the Planalto presidential palace in Brasilia, Brazil. /
FILE,APPHOTO/ERALDO PERES

http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-202_162-57589493/egypt-cuts-ties-with-syria-amid-mounting-hard-line-sunni-pressure/


CAIROEgypt's Islamist president announced Saturday that he was cutting off
diplomatic relations with Syria and closing Damascus' embassy in Cairo,
decisions made amid growing calls from hard-line Sunni clerics in Egypt and
elsewhere to launch a "holy war" against Syria's embattled regime.

Mohammed Morsi told thousands of supporters at a rally in Cairo that his
government was also withdrawing the Egyptian charge d'affaires from
Damascus. He called on Lebanon's Hezbollah to leave Syria, where the
Iranian-backed Shiite militant group has been fighting alongside troops
loyal to embattled President Bashar Assad against the mostly Sunni rebels.

"Hezbollah must leave Syria. This is serious talk: There is no business or
place for Hezbollah in Syria," said Morsi, Egypt's first freely elected
president.


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Morsi's address, particularly his call on Hezbollah to leave Syria, and the
fiery rhetoric used by well-known Muslim clerics this weekend point to the
increasing perception of the Syrian conflict as sectarian. At least 93,000
people have been killed since turmoil there began more than two years ago.

The rally that Morsi addressed on Saturday was called for by hardline
Islamists loyal to the Egyptian president to show solidarity with the
people of Syria. However, Morsi also used the occasion to warn his
opponents at home against the use of violence in mass protests planned for
June 30, the anniversary of his assumption to power.

 <http://www.cbsnews.com/video/watch/?id=50148948n>
****

Play VIDEO
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Assad?<http://www.cbsnews.com/video/watch/?id=50148948n>
<http://www.cbsnews.com/video/watch/?id=50148948n>Morsi repeated the
allegation that Egyptians loyal to the now-ousted regime of autocrat Hosni
Mubarak were behind the planned protests and that they were working against
the January 2011 uprising that toppled Mubarak.

 "Some who are delusionary want to pounce on the January revolution and
think that they can undermine the stability that is growing daily or
undermine the resolve that people have clearly forged with their will,"
said Morsi.

Morsi's government is widely thought to have failed to tackle any of the
seemingly endless problems facing the country, from power cuts and surging
crime to unemployment, steep price rises and fuel shortages. The declared
aim of the June 30 protests is to force Morsi out and hold early
presidential elections.

Morsi's allies say the protests have no legal basis and amount to a coup
against his legitimate rule. They have been calling on opposition leaders
to enter a national political dialogue to resolve the crisis, but the
opposition has turned down the offer, claiming that previous rounds of
dialogue did not yield results.

Spearheading the opposition to Morsi's rule now is a youth protest movement
called Tamarod, or rebel, which claims to have collected millions of
signatures of Egyptians who want Morsi to step down. Organizers say they
aim to collect the signatures of more people than those who voted for Morsi
in the June 2012 election.



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