Mungkin alasannya  ialah Mesir beraliran Suni  seperti Arab Saudia. Hal ini 
menyebabkan Árab Saudia menyatakan demikian. Hingga kini yang dikuatirkan oleh 
Mesir ialah aliran Shia. Hingga kini hubungan Mesir dengan Iran rengan atau 
juga tidak ada hubungan diplomatik. 

Di Mesir dilarang Hisbullah yang dicap kaki tangan Iran. Kalau musim haji yang 
dijaga ketat ialah jemaah dari Iran, hal ini bukan saja karena ada perbedaan 
dalam Islam, tetapi jemah Iran melakukan kekerasan di Mekkah. Sudah beberapa 
kali para jemah haji Iran melakukan pemberontakan di Mekkah, korban manusia 
ratusan.


  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Jusfiq 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Saturday, January 29, 2011 3:46 PM
  Subject: [proletar] CNN: Egypt protests draw mixed reaction in region


    


  CNN.com 

  Egypt protests draw mixed reaction in region

  Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates (CNN) -- Saudi Arabia slammed protesters in 
Egypt as "infiltrators" who seek to destabilize their country Saturday while an 
Iranian official called on Egypt to "abide by the rightful demands of the 
nation" and avoid violent reactions.

  Saudi King Abdullah called Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak and "was 
reassured" about the situation in Egypt, the state-run Saudi Press Agency 
reported.

  "During the call, the king said, 'Egypt is a country of Arabism and Islam. No 
Arab and Muslim human being can bear that some infiltrators, in the name of 
freedom of expression, have infiltrated into the brotherly people of Egypt, to 
destabilize its security and stability and they have been exploited to spew out 
their hatred in destruction, intimidation, burning, looting and inciting a 
malicious sedition,'" the news agency said.

  Saudi Arabia "strongly condemns" the protest, it said.

  Mubarak assured the Saudi king "that the situation is stable" and that the 
protests "are merely attempts of groups who do not want stability and security 
for the people of Egypt, but rather they seek to achieve strange and suspicious 
objectives."

  Mubarak added that Egypt will "deter anyone who tries to exploit the freedom 
of (the) Egyptian people and will not allow anyone to lure those groups or use 
them to achieve suspicious and strange agendas," the news agency said.

  In Iran, meanwhile, Foreign Ministry spokesman Ramin Mehmanparast said 
Egyptian authorities should respect the demonstrators.

  "Iran expects Egyptian officials to listen to the voice of their Muslim 
people, respond to their rightful demands and refrain from exerting violence by 
security forces and police against an Islamic wave of awareness that has spread 
through the country in form of a popular movement,"the state-run Press TV 
quoted Mehmanparast as saying.

  On the streets of Abu Dhabi, CNN spoke with people to gauge their views of 
the demonstrations.

  "It's great that everyone is coming together," said Ayat el-Dwary, an 
Egyptian. "These are not just one group of people or one faction... It's a 
revolution, absolutely."

  "Tunis opened the door, but it was bound to happen -- it was inevitable," 
el-Dwary added. "Change is coming to Egypt."

  Samar Barakeh, who is Lebanese, said, "It's time for them to change their 
government and they have the right to say whatever they want."

  Fellow Lebanese Antoinet Ghanem said, "It's about the whole regime 
structuring themselves to create more opportunities for these people to realize 
their ambitions and dreams... It's about the people trying to express what they 
need."


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  © 2008 Cable News Network.



  

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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