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LayZie G.

Live from Cairo: Coup or Scoop?

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kickz   

Mad_Mullah;966738 wrote:
It's proof enough that the Saudi king congratulated the Egyptian army for ousting Morsi!

Add to that the clown Bashar Al Assad congratulating the ousting of Morsi. These Munafiqs are a bigger enemy than the West.

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ANWAR   

LOOOL I agree with the Egyptian people, if Al-Shabab gained power in somalia through democratic process, I will start civil war On My Own

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Apophis;966710 wrote:
What utter nonsense. This was a coup against a democratically elected leader and no weaving and dodging will change that fact. Some appear to be utterly blinded by their hate for anyone who is a Muslim.

+ 1

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*ANWAR*;966757 wrote:
LOOOL I agree with the Egyptian people, if Al-Shabab gained power in somalia through democratic process, I will start civil war On My Own

********* makes me sick. How are you going to compare Shabab with the MB?

 

Wallah some Somalis have become so anti-Deen they're even worse than these extremist right-wing groups. Even hearing the name Allah makes them go "We don't want shabab".

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nuune   

^^ Adigu maxaad ka taqaanaa Af-Ganbi other than inaad u doodo xaquuqda naagaha labeebka ah mooyaane, inaar

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kickz   

Mad_Mullah;966767 wrote:
********* makes me sick. How are you going to compare Shabab with the MB?

 

Wallah some Somalis have become so anti-Deen they're even worse than these extremist right-wing groups. Even hearing the name Allah makes them go "We don't want shabab".

Lol agreed, ignorance is mainstream. People just mimic like parrots what their told to think, no critical thinking involved.

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Carafaat   

LayZie G.;966709 wrote:
According to the Egyptian Envoy to the United States, Morsi's fall from grace was not a coup, but a scoop.

 

Mohamed Tawfik:

 

Similarly, Obama and his generals have been debating about this very same issue, the coup or the scoop debate well passed midnight. 4 out of the 6 generals that were said to be in the meeting voted for the scoop, but Obama said he will have

to sleep on it and will decide in the morning because the issue

of whether or not to withdrawl the remaining aid for the Egyptian military has to be decided, which makes this really a scoop as he cant afford to cut off his allies. But the fact that this is even an issue baffles me.

 

Somewhere between Tuesday night and Wednesday morning, a low ranking Morsy(Morsi) official had difficulty sleeping

well into the night and instead decided to write the following on his facebook page:

 

 

If this was a 'military coup', we would have seen target assassinations, overthrow of the entire government apparatus. This

was nothing like the Military coup of Nigeria in the 60s, 70s, 80, and well into the 90s, and not to mention, this so called

"Military coup" was nowhere close to the Red October 1979 Coup in El Salvador. So, is this really a coup or a scoop?

 

Since Canada day, the following actions were undertaken by high ranking member of the Egyptian Armed Forces

 

The EGYPTIAN army called for an emergency session, and invited Morsi's

gangs, along with leader ElBaradei, top Muslim cleric Sheik Ahmed el-Tayeb and the respected Coptic Pope Tawadros II,

as well as opposition activists and some members of the ultraconservative Salafi movements. (aka Jihadists)

 

But Morsi did not RSVP. Instead, he was reportedly making electronic wire transfer from the central bank...and making

travel plans as he was tweeting about his bravery to remain resilient in the face of adversary.

 

And to make matters worse, this supposed 'military coup' that dominated headlines for the last 18 hours had well over half a million people protesting for days leading to Morsi's ouster, while millions more followed on social media and television.

 

Talk about it being a military coup when it was a civilian led protests. lol...(A protest that drew a record number of protests

to naar square that chanted down with morsi and Islamists)..but that didn't stop twitter from

blowing up, or facebook, including the AP , and reuters. Most headlines went with the sleep derived official's label of this

madness that the average political scientist couldn't possibly begin to understand.

 

If this was a coup and not a scoop, the military would not have offered ultimatum, instead, they could have shot Morsi.

But the only killing that occured was on the hands of Morsi's stooges who shot unarmed protests days leading up to the

ouster.

 

So far, the allegations against the Military is unsubstantiated, and the Al Jazeera stooges are nothing short of a mouth

piece for the Islamists, so you can't really count on them to be fair and balanced.

 

Mida kale, the reports about possible censorship and the closing of TV Stations is half true. There is only one credible

source that has been confirmed that suggests Niqabi TV(or as Morsi likes to call it "WOMEN TV) was reportedly raided by members of the military. A soldier was said to have entered the premise, and approached a lady with a mask like garment and proceeded to remove the garment from her face, and moved to the next female, until there were no garments.

 

Is this really censorship? These women havent seen sunlight in months......

 

More updates to follow......be sure to be part of the coup or scoop debate.

Hada Majnuun. bal wexe so qorisoo eeg.

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kickz   

Lol @ all of these Jaahil arab leaders congratulating the situation, only our Turkish brothers are calling out the hypocrisy of the coup.

 

Region reacts to Morsi’s ouster

 

Qatar, a key political and financial backer of Egypt's deposed Islamist president Mohamed Mursi, congratulated his successor on Thursday while Gulf neighbors were more unequivocal in their support for the coup.

 

Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Kuwait and Bahrain all congratulated Mansour Thursday.

Turkey was harshly critical of Egypt's army, saying its overthrow of Mursi was "unacceptable" - a marked difference from its would-be partners in the European Union, which avoided repeated questions on whether it was a military coup.

 

"It is unacceptable for a government that has come to power through democratic elections to be toppled through illicit means and, even more, a military coup," Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu told reporters in Istanbul.

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kickz;966716 wrote:

HATE.COM

 

these mad dogs were orphaned by Mubarak's departure and lost status and influance, they are stup!dly blaming an Honorable man who was not even fully in-charge on the country for just 360 days. how could you fix a 7000 years old woes in just 360 days with daily protest and abuse.

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kickz   

Very nice of them

Egyptian army demolishes tunnels with Gaza

 

On Thursday afternoon, Egyptian bulldozers began to demolish the tunnels between Egypt and the Gaza Strip which have functioned as the life-line to the besieged Gaza Strip since the beginning of the Israeli siege in 2006.

Tunnels between Egypt and Gaza have been the main life line to the 1.8million residents of Gaza since the Israeli siege was imposed in 2006.

 

The ministry of health in Gaza announced that fuel for electricity generators and ambulances will run out within days. "We are facing an unknown future with the closure of the tunnels," a statement said.

- See more at:

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Duufaan   

Both turkey and Iran survived many similar attempt. MB are very moderate organization infact they have spoken women rather spoken male. Egyptian like somalian they want feeded by foreigners.

 

 

 

TEHRAN, Iran (AP) — Egypt's now-toppled Islamist president made a tactical blunder by not exerting stronger influence over the country's security and intelligence services after taking office last year, a prominent Iranian lawmaker said Thursday in comments that reflect Tehran's disappointment over the fall of Mohammed Morsi.

 

Morsi's Muslim Brotherhood-led government ended more than three decades of diplomatic estrangement with Iran that dated back to the 1979 Islamic Revolution when Egypt offered refuge to Iran's deposed shah. Ties further deteriorated after Egypt's landmark peace deal with Israel.

 

Alaeddin Boroujerdi, head of the Iranian parliament's Committee on National Security and Foreign Policy, said Morsi "mistakenly" failed to reshape Egypt's powerful military and other security agencies.

 

"The first mistake by the ... Brotherhood was that they thought they would be able to conclude the revolution only by toppling Hosni Mubarak," he said, adding that Morsi also failed to solve key economic problems in Egypt.

 

After Iran's Islamic Revolution, the new leadership formed military and security forces loyal to the clerics and others.

 

Morsi, however, had little opportunity to make inroads with Egypt's powerful armed forces and intelligence services, which had taken part in a crackdown on the Muslim Brotherhood under Mubarak, who was brought down in 2011.

 

The military or police did not come to Morsi's aid during massive protests this week. The military pushed out Morsi on Wednesday, opening the way for an interim civilian government to run the country until new presidential elections are held. A date for that has yet to be given.

 

Boroujerdi described the events as a "coup" — echoing declarations by Morsi and his backers.

 

Earlier, state TV also called the anti-Morsi uprising a "coup." But, in a possible sign of trying to keep ties unraveling, the broadcasts included the swearing-in ceremony of the interim President Adly Mansour.

 

On Sunday, the first day of the protests in Egypt, the chairman of Iran's Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen. Hassan Firouzabadi, urged Egyptians to "stand by revolutionary and elected President Morsi."

 

In February, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's became the first Iranian president to visit Egypt in more than three decades. It followed an earlier groundbreaking visit by Morsi to Tehran, where disdain for Egypt was once so high that officials named a street after the ringleader of the assassination team that gunned down Egyptian President Anwar Sadat in 1981.

 

Despite the diplomatic outreach, there are still deep-seated tensions.

 

Some Sunni leaders in Egypt see Shiite Iran as a foe. Egypt also has sided with most other Arab states to support Syrian rebels seeking to overthrow the regime of Bashar Assad, who is Iran's chief ally in the region

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