http://www.asharq-e.com/news.asp?section=2&id=31049


Al-Qaeda flags in Cairo

13/09/2012 
By Tariq Alhomayed




What happened in Egypt was amazing, specifically the attack on the US Embassy 
in Cairo, where the American flag was burned and the al-Qaeda flag was raised, 
all because of what is said to be an offensive film about the Prophet Mohammed 
(peace be upon him). The protests witnessed the participation of Islamic 
groups, Christians, and even so-called ultras - radical football fans. 
When I say that what has happened in Egypt is amazing, the reason is simple: no 
one knew anything about this film that is said to be offensive to the Prophet 
(pbuh) until now. Even the news agency Reuters, which broadcasted news of the 
attack on the US Embassy in Egypt, said in its initial report: “it was not 
clear which film prompted the protests”! This is a puzzling matter; no one had 
heard about this film; no one knew its name, so is it rational to set the world 
on fire whenever someone launches a trivial insult towards Islam, or one of its 
symbols? The truth that must be told, and especially with regards to the events 
in Egypt, is that the matter is more complicated than an offensive film. The 
earlier reaction of some Egyptians, for example, towards the case of an 
Egyptian national accused of smuggling illegal drugs into Saudi Arabia was 
similar to their reaction now against the US Embassy, the only difference being 
that in the former example the al-Qaeda flag was not raised, nor was the Saudi 
flag burned, which means that the problem in Egypt is much more complicated 
than a strong fervor for the Islamic religion. 

The real problem in Egypt, ever since the fall of former President Hosni 
Mubarak, lies in the adulation of a street that has no leader; in other words 
someone to act in accordance with the concept of a statesman and not to simply 
pander to the demands of the revolutionaries in the squares or social networks. 
Even the media crudely attempts to keep pace with the Egyptian street, where 
sometimes it is portrayed as the guilty defendant, and at other times it is the 
innocent who is found guilty without trial. This is Egypt’s illness today, and 
this will hamper Egypt’s march towards the future. Countries are not built on 
screams, chaos and revenge, but with wisdom, prudence, laws and reconciliation. 
Unfortunately, this is not the case in Egypt, the evidence being that those who 
protested against the US Embassy were Islamic, Christian and even football 
hooligans. 

The puzzling and amazing problem is that no one knows anything about the film 
they are talking about. If they were aware of the film, they would see it is 
clearly the trivial work of an individual, or a petty extremist group. What is 
incomprehensible, in the case of Egypt, is how there can be this reaction, even 
if it stems from religious fervor, similar to the reactions of extremists in 
Pakistan or Afghanistan, where they burn the American flag and fly the flag of 
al-Qaeda? How can we demand an apology from America for a film produced by a 
trivial or ignorant group, and not the US administration? Would it be 
conceivable, for example, for the Obama administration to demand that the 
Egyptians, whether the government or the people, apologize for the fact that 
Ayman al-Zawahiri, the current leader of al-Qaeda, is an Egyptian? This is both 
unreasonable and unacceptable. 

Therefore, we love and care for Egypt, and what is happening there means only 
one thing: the leaders of Egyptian public opinion must address the chaos of the 
Egyptian street. Intellectuals and politicians should respect their knowledge 
and awareness, and the same goes for the media, and they must stop trying to 
keep pace with the street to avoid igniting Egypt as a whole


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