CNN.com 
 
Israel gas deal sparks attacks in Egypt

Flames shot into the sky in the northern Sinai desert, close to Egypt's border 
with Israel. It was the second attack this year on the al-Sabil gas terminal - 
and the third attempt to sabotage a network of pipelines that supplies Israel 
with natural gas.

It's not clear who carried out the attack on April 27 - but it once more drew 
attention to a controversial deal to supply natural gas to Israel - a deal that 
allegedly involved the ousted President, Hosni Mubarak, his family and close 
associates.

In 2005, Egypt's Eastern Mediterranean Gas Company agreed to sell gas to 
Israel's Electric Corporation. The exports began three years later and amount 
to some 1.5 billion cubic meters.

It was never a popular deal in a country where animosity to Israel is still 
common, even 30 years after a peace accord was signed. Egypt's opposition says 
it is "illegal" and that ousted Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak's government 
kept negotiations secret. They also claim the 15-year gas deal is "unethical" 
and "insulting" to the Palestinians across the border in Gaza.

One of the most active opponents of the deal is Talaat Sadat, the nephew of 
assassinated Egyptian president Anwar Sadat, who signed the Camp David Peace 
Treaty with Israel in 1979. Other opponents launched a legal challenge to the 
deal; and in February 2010 a court in Cairo ordered a halt to gas exports to 
Israel. The government appealed, saying the contract was valid and must be 
honored.

Some oppose the deal because it exports energy supplies that Egypt badly needs. 
"By exporting natural gas we run the risk of not securing our energy needs. 
This is serious," commented Ayman Jaheen, general manager of the Egyptian 
Natural Gas Holding Company.

But many more reject it because of the alleged graft involved.

"There is great corruption in this agreement. They are neglecting a final court 
decision and they will have to pay for that," said energy consultant Ibrahim 
Zahran, who brought the case against the government.

"Under Mubarak's regime the gas was sold to Israel for approximately 75 cents 
per million BTUs (British Thermal Units). The going market price at the time of 
the deal was around 6 dollars per million BTUs," says Zahran.

The general prosecutor's office in Cairo is pursuing officials who allegedly 
profited from the contract. Last month it issued charges against former Oil 
Minister Sameh Fahmy and six of his assistants. They were accused of 
squandering public funds and are imprisoned while investigations proceed. 
Egyptian media quote Fahmy as saying that the deal had been the responsibility 
of former President Mubarak, and he had nothing to do with it.

The prosecutor has also sent investigators to the resort of Sharm El Sheikh to 
question Mubarak who has been detained in hospital due to illness. Accounts in 
the Egyptian press say Mubarak insisted "the responsible committees submitted a 
report to me saying the price Israel was offering was in accordance with world 
prices."

Mubarak's sons, Gamal and Ala'a, who are currently detained in Cairo's Tura 
Prison, have also been questioned about the gas deal - and specifically about 
commissions they may have received. The Mubaraks' attorney, Farid El Deeb, 
refused to comment on the case.

The deal appears to have involved others close to the Mubaraks, including 
billionaire Hussein Salem, a close confidant of Hosni Mubarak. The prosecutors' 
office has asked for help from Interpol in apprehending Salem, who is accused 
of paying Mubarak a commission in return for a monopoly on the sale of natural 
gas to Israel and remains a shareholder in Eastern Mediterranean Gas.

The whereabouts of 77-year old Salem are unknown. According to Egyptian Justice 
Minister Mohamed Al-Guindy, Salem fled the country immediately after Mubarak 
stepped down. Al-Guindy told CNN Interpol was co-operating with efforts to 
apprehend both Hussein Salem and Yousef Boutros Ghali, the former minister of 
finance.

Al-Guindy also said that the Oil Ministry had "negotiated a new price for the 
gas exports to Israel up to global standards and I believe this is sufficient."

The Israelis have also responded to the controversy. Uzi Landau, the 
Infrastructure Minister said reports that Israel received gas at subsidized 
rated were unfounded. "We pay twice as much as what Jordan pays," he said.

The issue has become a touchstone for anti-Israeli sentiment in Egypt. Protests 
outside the Israeli embassy in Cairo and the public burning of Israeli flags 
have become weekly events, with demonstrators demanding an end to the peace 
treaty with Israel and recognition of an independent Palestinian state.

CNN's Nima Elbagir contributed to this report
 
 
Links referenced within this article


 
Find this article at:
http://edition.cnn.com/2011/WORLD/meast/05/14/egypt.israel.al.Sabil.gas/index.html?hpt=C1
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© 2008 Cable News Network.




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