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In his interview with Al-Mossawer
Magazine, to be published next Friday, President Mubarak voiced his belief that US
President George W. Bush Would fulfill his promise of establishing a Palestinian state and
that the Jewish pressure would not work with him.
Mubarak added that
Blair-Arafat meeting could be prelude for a meeting between Arafat and US President,
confirming that Israeli implementation of Mitchel recommendations would mean resuming
negotiations, and lifting the siege imposed on the Palestinians is the most urgent
necessity.
The President also stressed
that Egypt is clean of terrorist groups, hailing the efforts exerted by security systems,
intellectuals and the whole Egyptian people against terror.
Mubarak also praised the
courageous stance of religious scholars, men of letters, thinkers, writers and media men
against terrorism.
Mubarak noted that uprooting
terrorism means stability that, in turn, means progress and development, adding that todays
Egypt is safer than ever.
As for the Palestinian cause,
President Mubarak said he believes that leaving this issue unresolved accounts for more
than 50% of the reasons behind terrorism, elaborating that this percentage may amount to
80% and that failure of US policy in dealing with the Middle East crisis and oppression of
the Palestinians are among these reasons.
Leaving this issue
unresolved provokes Arab and Islamic worlds anger. So, the ongoing war against Afghanistan
must go in parallel with an active and serious action for finding a solution to the
Palestinian cause, Mubarak remarked.
President Mubarak also noted
that the meeting between British Prime Minister Tony Blair and Palestinian Leader Yasser
Arafat would be a prelude for a Bush-Arafat meeting.
Moreover, Mubarak said that
Old Jerusalem should be under Palestinian control and that space and potentials of the
state of Palestine will be defined through Palestinian-Israeli negotiations.
"Nobody in the Arab and
Islamic world would accept that Old Jerusalem will be under any non-Palestinian
sovereignty," said the President.
"After the establishment
of the state of Palestine, no fences or barriers will separate the Palestinians and the
Israelis so that the two peoples can co-exist," he pointed out.
Mubarak said he believes that
the US would not take any military actions against Syria, Libya or Lebanon.
The President concluded that
he told US President Bush that striking Syria, Lebanon or Libya would get the US to more
complicated problems and that any such strikes would increase the rage of Arab street. |