{"id":3925,"date":"2016-09-07T00:00:00","date_gmt":"2016-09-07T00:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www2.memri.org\/polaco\/egipscy-politycy-media-wielka-brytania-prowadzi-kampanie-medialna-i-polityczna-przeciwko-al-sisiemu\/3925"},"modified":"2016-12-01T23:14:13","modified_gmt":"2016-12-01T23:14:13","slug":"egipscy-politycy-media-wielka-brytania-prowadzi-kampanie-medialna-i-polityczna-przeciwko-al-sisiemu","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www2.memri.org\/polish\/egipscy-politycy-media-wielka-brytania-prowadzi-kampanie-medialna-i-polityczna-przeciwko-al-sisiemu\/3925","title":{"rendered":"Egipscy politycy, media: Wielka Brytania prowadzi kampani\u0119 medialn\u0105 i polityczn\u0105 przeciwko Al-Sisiemu"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><!-- Document Body --><br \/>\n<DIV ALIGN=\"justify\" CLASS=\"bodytext\"><br \/>\n<P>Autor: C. Meital*<br \/>\n<P><B>Wprowadzenie<\/B><br \/>\n<P>Media egipskie ostro krytykowa\u0142y ostatnio Wielk\u0105 Brytani\u0119 i jej media za ich stanowisko wobec obecnych w\u0142adz w Egipcie. Twierdzono, \u017ce przedstawiciele i media Wielkiej Brytanii atakuj\u0105 w\u0142adze Al-Sisiego, okazuj\u0105c r\u00f3wnocze\u015bnie sympati\u0119 i udzielaj\u0105c platformy opozycjonistom egipskim z Bractwa Muzu\u0142ma\u0144skiego (BM).<br \/>\n<P>Gniew medi\u00f3w egipskich wywo\u0142a\u0142 dokument z wskaz\u00f3wkami og\u0142oszony przez brytyjskie Home Office 8 sierpnia 2016 r., w kt\u00f3rym dokonano przegl\u0105du sytuacji BM w Egipcie podczas prezydentury Muhammada Morsiego (lipiec 2012 &#8211; lipiec 2013) oraz za obecnych w\u0142adz i ustalono polityk\u0119 Home Office w sprawie przyznawania azylu politycznego w Wielkiej Brytanii cz\u0142onkom BM. Dokument zezwala na przyznawanie azylu politycznego znanym aktywistom BM, kt\u00f3rzy mog\u0105 wykaza\u0107, \u017ce \u201egro\u017c\u0105 im prze\u015bladowania [przez w\u0142adze egipskie], w\u0142\u0105cznie z internowaniem, gdzie mog\u0105 by\u0107 maltretowani, procesy bez nale\u017cytej staranno\u015bci i nieproporcjonalne kary\u201d. Zanotowano w dokumencie, \u017ce \u201eka\u017cda sprawa musi by\u0107 rozwa\u017cona na podstawie fakt\u00f3w&#8221;<A name=\"_ednref1\"><\/A> <A href=\"http:\/\/www.memri.org\/report\/en\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/9433.htm#_edn1\">[1]. <\/A><br \/>\n<P>Ten dokument Home Office wywo\u0142a\u0142 ostr\u0105 reakcj\u0119 egipskiego Ministerstwa Spraw Zagranicznych. Egipski minister spraw zagranicznych, Sameh Szoukry, powiedzia\u0142 na konferencji prasowej w Kairze, \u017ce Wielka Brytania opiera si\u0119 na dezinformacji o BM i dlatego Egipt poinformuje partner\u00f3w mi\u0119dzynarodowych o terroryzmie BM, kt\u00f3ry zagra\u017ca bezpiecze\u0144stwu narodowemu Egiptu i jego ludno\u015bci<A name=\"_ednref2\"><\/A> <A href=\"http:\/\/www.memri.org\/report\/en\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/9433.htm#_edn2\">[2]. <\/A> Prasa egipska, szczeg\u00f3lnie oficjalna gazeta \u201eAl-Ahram\u201d, opublikowa\u0142a artyku\u0142y, kt\u00f3re ostro pot\u0119pi\u0142y to, co nazywaj\u0105 pe\u0142n\u0105 hipokryzji polityk\u0105 Wielkiej Brytanii wobec Egiptu.<br \/>\n<P>Gniew medi\u00f3w egipskich skierowa\u0142 si\u0119 tak\u017ce na pismo brytyjskiej \u201eEconomist\u201d za publikacj\u0119 6 sierpnia dw\u00f3ch artyku\u0142\u00f3w o kryzysie ekonomicznym w Egipcie. Artyku\u0142y, widniej\u0105ce na ok\u0142adce z tytu\u0142em <I>Jak Sisi rujnuje Egipt<\/I>, obwiniaj\u0105 prezydenta egipskiego 'Abd Al-Fattaha Al-Sisiego za kryzys ekonomiczny, a w jednym z nich pada tak\u017ce stwierdzenie, \u017ce by\u0142oby najlepiej, gdyby Al-Sisi og\u0142osi\u0142, \u017ce nie b\u0119dzie ponownie stawa\u0142 do wybor\u00f3w w 2018 r.<A name=\"_ednref3\"><\/A> <A href=\"http:\/\/www.memri.org\/report\/en\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/9433.htm#_edn3\">[3] <\/A><br \/>\n<P>Rzecznik egipskiego Ministerstwa Spraw Zagranicznych, Ahmad Abu Zeid, podj\u0105\u0142 niezwyk\u0142y krok zakwestionowania twierdze\u0144 w \u201cEconomist\u201d w artykule, kt\u00f3ry zamie\u015bci\u0142 po arabsku i po angielsku na oficjalnych stronach internetowych Ministerstwa. Prasa egipska opublikowa\u0142a tak\u017ce artyku\u0142y przeciwko temu pismu. I odwrotnie, egipscy dzia\u0142acze praw cz\u0142owieka i publicy\u015bci medi\u00f3w niezale\u017cnych pot\u0119pili ostr\u0105 reakcj\u0119 Ministerstwa Spraw zagranicznych na artyku\u0142 w \u201cEconomist\u201d.<br \/>\n<P>Nale\u017cy zauwa\u017cy\u0107, \u017ce nie jest to pierwszy atak medi\u00f3w egipskich na Wielk\u0105 Brytani\u0119 od czasu, kiedy Al-Sisi zosta\u0142 prezydentem. Podczas wizyty Al-Sisiego w Londynie w listopadzie 2015 r. po zestrzeleniu samolotu rosyjskiego na Synaju, \u00f3wczesny premier Wielkiej Brytanii, David Cameron, powiedzia\u0142 na wsp\u00f3lnej z Al-Sisim konferencji prasowej, \u017ce samolot prawdopodobnie zosta\u0142 zestrzelony przez terroryst\u00f3w i usprawiedliwia\u0142 swoj\u0105 decyzj\u0119 zawieszenia lot\u00f3w do Egiptu. Jego wypowied\u017a, przed opublikowaniem wynik\u00f3w oficjalnego dochodzenia katastrofy<A name=\"_ednref4\"><\/A> <A href=\"http:\/\/www.memri.org\/report\/en\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/9433.htm#_edn4\">[4], <\/A> postawi\u0142a Al-Sisiego w k\u0142opotliwej sytuacji i wywo\u0142a\u0142a w\u015bciek\u0142e reakcje w prasie egipskiej. W artyku\u0142ach ostro krytykowano Camerona i polityk\u0119 brytyjsk\u0105 wobec Egiptu i twierdzono, \u017ce Egipt jest celem atak\u00f3w brytyjskich, by z\u0142ama\u0107 duch Egipcjan. Twierdzono tak\u017ce, \u017ce ani Wielka Brytania, ani USA nie traktuj\u0105 powa\u017cnie walki z terrorem<A name=\"_ednref5\"><\/A> <A href=\"http:\/\/www.memri.org\/report\/en\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/9433.htm#_edn5\">[5]. <\/A><br \/>\n<P>Poni\u017cej podajemy szczeg\u00f3\u0142y publikacji brytyjskich i reakcji prasy egipskiej [<B><I>dalszy tekst nie jest spolszczony<\/I><\/B>].<br \/>\n<P><B>The Home Office Guidance Document: Review Of Al-Sisi Crackdown On MB, Recommendation To Consider Granting Asylum To MB Activists<\/B><br \/>\n<P>The Home Office guidance document, published on August 8, 2016, provides a brief overview of events in Egypt between 2011 and the present, for the edification of Home Office decision makers in charge of handling certain types of protection and human rights claims, including requests for asylum.<A name=\"_ednref6\"><\/A> <A href=\"http:\/\/www.memri.org\/report\/en\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/9433.htm#_edn6\">[6] <\/A> Based on information, mostly in English, from research institutes, human rights organizations, and leading media outlets, it first reviews the brief period of MB rule in Egypt, and proceeds to review the ongoing crackdown on the MB by the Al-Sisi regime.<br \/>\n<P>Addressing Morsi&#8217;s term in office, the document notes that he incurred much criticism for moves that were construed as &#8222;heavy-handed&#8221; and &#8222;autocratic,&#8221; such as his attempt to declare the presidency and several legislative bodies immune from judiciary oversight; his appointment of 17 provincial governors affiliated with the MB, and his promotion of a new constitution that, according to critics, established Islam as the basis of law, guaranteed insufficient protection for democratic freedoms, and accorded sweeping powers to the presidency. The document notes further that his term in office was marked by growing frustration with economic mismanagement and poor governance, provoking state institutions and bureaucracies to mutiny and leading Egypt to the brink of collapse and civil war.<br \/>\n<P>However, the document points out that the manner of Morsi&#8217;s removal from power had serious consequences for Egypt&#8217;s democracy, for, by deposing Morsi, the Egyptian military &#8222;locked itself into a kill-or-be-killed struggle&#8221; with the MB, whereby the military is bent upon destroying the MB, and the MB, in turn, seeks to topple the current regime and even calls openly for Al-Sisi&#8217;s death. As part of its brutal crackdown on the MB, notes the document, the regime has repressed its protests with deadly force, eliminated its leadership through a massive arrest campaign, and held mass trials of its members, many of whom were handed severe sentences, including the death penalty. The document also mentions reported cases of torture and disappearances at the hands of police. It notes that the regime has shut down hundreds of NGOs affiliated with the MB, and that journalists affiliated with it have also been targeted.<br \/>\n<P>In light of this, the document concludes that &#8222;those with a high profile in the MB or who have been politically active, particularly in demonstrations, may be able to show that they are at risk of persecution, including of being held in detention, where they may be at risk of ill-treatment, trial also without due process and disproportionate punishment. Additionally, high profile supporters or those perceived to support the MB, such as journalists, may also be similarly at risk of persecution. In such cases, a grant of asylum will be appropriate&#8230; Each case will need to be considered on its facts.&#8221;<A name=\"_ednref7\"><\/A> <A href=\"http:\/\/www.memri.org\/report\/en\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/9433.htm#_edn7\">[7] <\/A><br \/>\n<P><B>Egyptian Foreign Minister In Response To Home Office Document: Groundless Assumptions With No Basis In Reality<\/B><br \/>\n<P>As mentioned, the Home Office document sparked enraged responses from Egyptian Foreign Minister Sameh Shoukry. At an August 8, 2016 press conference with his Cypriot counterpart, Shoukry rejected what is stated in the document, saying: &#8222;What the [British] Home Office published regarding the MB contains indications that are not positive and will not have a positive impact on Egypt-Britain relations&#8230; [Britain] assumes, groundlessly, that the Egyptian judiciary is targeting the MB, but this has no basis in reality.&#8221; He stressed that the prosecution of the MB members is based on the principles of justice and that no political interference is involved.<A name=\"_ednref8\"><\/A> <A href=\"http:\/\/www.memri.org\/report\/en\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/9433.htm#_edn8\">[8] <\/A><br \/>\n<P>Egyptian Parliamentary Foreign Relations Committee member MP Dalia Youssuf said: &#8222;<B>Britain&#8217;s recent actions <\/B>reveal its full support for the MB&#8230; despite the official warming of Egypt-Britain relations&#8230; The positions [Britain] has espoused recently are strange and raise significant question marks.&#8221;<A name=\"_ednref9\"><\/A> <A href=\"http:\/\/www.memri.org\/report\/en\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/9433.htm#_edn9\">[9] <\/A><br \/>\n<P><B><I>Al-Ahram<\/I><\/B><B> Criticizes Home Office Document<\/B><br \/>\n<P><B>Editorial: Britain Intends To Grant Political Asylum To MB Members Despite Their Acts Of Terrorism<\/B><br \/>\n<P>Harsh criticism of Britain was also evident in the Egyptian press. <I>Al-Ahram <\/I>argued in its August 9 editorial that Europe was applying a double standard, condemning Egypt for measures that it itself uses against terrorists, and that the West needed to respect other countries&#8217; sovereignty: &#8222;In Paris, Nice, Brussels, Berlin, and other European cities, security authorities are quick to declare a state of emergency and arrest all suspects indiscriminately, without differentiating between criminals and the innocent. But when Egypt acts to ensure the safety of its citizens against such terrorist actions, the same [European] capitals publicly condemn our moves.<br \/>\n<P>&#8222;Despite the severity of the situation in Egypt, Britain intends&#8230; to grant political asylum to some MB leaders living there, while ignoring their supporters&#8217; actions in Egypt &#8211; among them murder, terrorization, and destabilization of Egypt&#8217;s security and national peace&#8230; When European countries make decisions that could harm other countries, they always justify [them] by claiming that they are carrying out sovereign actions &#8211; but when other elements or countries impacted [by terrorism] take similar measures, they launch campaigns against them, on various pretexts and by various means. The West, therefore, must respect the national sovereignty of others&#8230;&#8221;<A name=\"_ednref10\"><\/A> <A href=\"http:\/\/www.memri.org\/report\/en\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/9433.htm#_edn10\">[10] <\/A><br \/>\n<P><B><I>Al-Ahram<\/I><\/B><B> Editor: Britain Is Hypocritical Towards Egypt, Legitimizes Islamists Who Were Involved In Murders<\/B><br \/>\n<P><I>Al-Ahram<\/I> editor Muhammad 'Abd Al-Hadi 'Allam, whose pieces are generally published on Fridays, also wrote in August 9 &#8211; a Tuesday &#8211; to criticize &#8222;Britain&#8217;s hypocrisy towards Egypt.&#8221; Britain, he stated, speaks of challenges shared by both Britain and Egypt, but at the same time gives political asylum to MB members: &#8222;Several developments in Britain&#8217;s Egypt policy are cause for concern&#8230; in the context of the bilateral relations of two countries that seem to have shared concerns in light of the rise of global terrorism and of the dire threat to interests in the Middle East, to which Britain is inarguably linked&#8230;<br \/>\n<P>&#8222;There is a wide base of Islamists in London and in major British cities, and they enjoy full state protection there. Some fled death sentences in Egypt after they were proven to have been involved in murders, and later became human rights warriors on British TV. This requires careful examination at this time, because [Britain&#8217;s] ambassador to Cairo claims that she is committed to Egyptian stability and security&#8230;<br \/>\n<P>&#8222;Along with conflicting statements by the British government, there has been a wave of harsh criticism in major British newspapers and magazines, most recently in the well-known <I>Economist<\/I> weekly, discussing the ruin of Egypt and scenarios that contradict the Egyptian government&#8217;s efforts to strengthen the country&#8217;s economy. It should be mentioned that the British weekly&#8217;s publication of this report coincided with the anniversary of the inauguration of the new Suez Canal&#8230; during which delegations of British businessmen and industrialists visited the site and expressed their desire to invest in its projects.<br \/>\n<P>&#8222;So which of the two should we believe? The Britain that speaks of developing ties with Egypt after the great shift of the June 30 revolution? Or the Britain that <B>cultivates<\/B> dangerous Islamists on its soil and grants them political asylum&#8230;?&#8221;<br \/>\n<P>&#8222;When will the English acknowledge that their actions are dangerous? This is a question that only the British government can answer!&#8221;<A name=\"_ednref11\"><\/A> <A href=\"http:\/\/www.memri.org\/report\/en\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/9433.htm#_edn11\">[11] <\/A><br \/>\n<P><B>Editorial: Egypt And Britain Each Respect The Choices Made By The People [Of The Other]<\/B><br \/>\n<P>In its August 26, 2016 editorial, <I>Al-Ahram<\/I> softened its tone towards Britain. The editorial said: &#8222;The relations between Egypt and Britain involve a great deal of mutual understanding and respect for each country&#8217;s standing in the regional and international arena. Each [country] respects the choices made by the people [of the other]. Cairo respects the choice of the British people to withdraw from the EU, for example, because this is an issue that affects the [British people] more than anyone else. Conversely, Britain fully understands and respects the choice of the Egyptian people to depose the regime of the terrorist [Muslim] Brotherhood&#8230;&#8221;<A name=\"_ednref12\"><\/A> <A href=\"http:\/\/www.memri.org\/report\/en\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/9433.htm#_edn12\">[12] <\/A><br \/>\n<P><B><I>The Economist<\/I><\/B><B>: It Would Be Best If Al-Sisi Announced He Would Not Run For Reelection In 2018<\/B><br \/>\n<P>On August 6, 2016, the British magazine <I>The Economist<\/I> published two articles on Egypt. One, titled &#8222;The Ruining of Egypt,&#8221; dealt with the country&#8217;s severe economic crisis, with the collapse of tourism there and the high rate of unemployment among young people. It held that the situation is largely the fault of Al-Sisi&#8217;s &#8222;incompetence&#8221; and advised the West to &#8222;treat him with a mixture of pragmatism, persuasion and pressure&#8221; and to &#8222;stop selling Egypt expensive weapons it neither needs nor can afford.&#8221; The second article, titled &#8222;State of Denial,&#8221; was subtitled &#8222;Egypt has squandered billions of dollars in aid. With more on the way, is it at last ready to reform?&#8221;<A name=\"_ednref13\"><\/A> <A href=\"http:\/\/www.memri.org\/report\/en\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/9433.htm#_edn13\">[13] <\/A><br \/>\n<P><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignnone size-full wp-image-4077\" src=\"http:\/\/www2.memri.org\/polaco\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/12\/state-of-denied.jpg\" width=\"674\" height=\"287\" srcset=\"https:\/\/www2.memri.org\/polish\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/12\/state-of-denied.jpg 674w, https:\/\/www2.memri.org\/polish\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/12\/state-of-denied-300x128.jpg 300w, https:\/\/www2.memri.org\/polish\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/12\/state-of-denied-600x255.jpg 600w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 674px) 100vw, 674px\" \/><BR><br \/>\nThe two articles in <I>The Economist<\/I><br \/>\n<P><B>Egyptian Foreign Ministry Spokesman: <I>The Economist<\/I> Insulted Egypt&#8217;s President And People<\/B><br \/>\n<P>As stated, Foreign Ministry spokesman Ahmad Abu Zeid responded to these articles in a harshly critical article that was posted in Arabic and English on official ministry websites.<A name=\"_ednref14\"><\/A> <A href=\"http:\/\/www.memri.org\/report\/en\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/9433.htm#_edn14\">[14] <\/A> Under the headline &#8222;The Ruining of <I>The Economist<\/I>&#8221; &#8211; a play on the title of one of the <I>Economist&#8217;s <\/I>articles &#8211; he wrote: &#8222;I was shocked and surprised to read the latest issue of the Economist, which featured a series of articles about Egypt under the theme 'The ruining of Egypt.&#8217; As a leading magazine in economic and financial analysis, one would expect from the Economist to provide objective, informed analysis that focuses on evaluating and assessing the merits of Egypt\u2019s economic policies over the past few months. Instead, the Economist\u2019s articles eschew any semblance of objective analysis, focusing instead on spewing insults at the person of Egypt\u2019s President&#8230;<br \/>\n<P>The magazine claims that President Sisi came to power through a 'coup,&#8217; completely disregarding the will of the Egyptian people, who demonstrated in the millions for the ouster for the Muslim Brotherhood Morsi, or the millions who voted in favor of the election of President Sisi in a landslide victory. It accuses him of 'incompetence&#8217; for Egypt\u2019s economic policies, overlooking that these policies are based on the advice of a group of prominent economic experts&#8230; and on Egypt\u2019s well-established institutions. I concede that it is possible to differ, and even sharply disagree on the merits of these policies. This is all welcome when it is done in the spirit of constructive and informed criticism&#8230; Unfortunately, the Economist did not make the effort to provide any thorough analysis or even superficial reference to those policies, instead it jumped to a hurried conclusion of incompetence&#8230;<br \/>\n<P>&#8222;It is important to reiterate that the Egyptian government in the form of a highly professional cabinet is mandated to set the policies considered most appropriate for Egypt. President Sisi does not micro-manage Egypt\u2019s institutions and does not create economic policy in a vacuum; he is surrounded by institutions and consultants, an independent central bank and a cabinet of professionals that are in charge of decision-making in this area. The government remains accountable to parliament and to Egypt\u2019s people, who have the final say as to what they consider sound policy and what they believe constitutes 'incompetence.&#8217; The Economist\u2019s misinformed and trite remarks indicate complete ignorance of the nature of this economic and financial decision-making process in Egypt.<br \/>\n<P>&#8222;Moving on with the same line of argument, the Economist ludicrously claims that Egypt\u2019s economy is sustained only through cash injections from the Gulf and military aid from the US. This could not be farther from the truth. It seems the Economists failed to notice the decline of US aid to Egypt in recent years! Neither are we counting on help from anyone. While being mindful of the economic difficulties lying ahead in Egypt, and the structural challenges that the country is wrestling with, however, any deep and credible economic analysis would recall that the country has passed through an acute crisis since January 2011, which has and is still inflicting a high financial cost. Creating a new economic model is never easy and takes time. It is also crucial to highlight that the Government has come up with a comprehensive plan to tackle head on its macroeconomic imbalances, put the economy back on track&#8230;<br \/>\n<P>&#8222;There is a long list of accomplishments and success stories, across several economic sectors over the course of the last two years that no one can deny, yet the Economist fails to recognize them&#8230;<br \/>\n<P>&#8222;It is obvious that the Economist has chosen to take sides with those bent on undermining Egypt. We hope that in the interest of maintaining its credibility, reputation and professionalism, the Economist will be less reductionist and biased in the future. It is extremely important for our partners as well, to be cognizant of the fact that Egyptians do not need to be patronized or insulted for their choices.&#8221;<br \/>\n<P><B>Egyptian MPs: <I>The Economist<\/I> Articles &#8211; A Declaration Of War On Egypt<\/B><br \/>\n<P>Egyptian MPs harshly criticized the <I>Economist&#8217;<\/I>s articles as well. MP Emad Gad told the daily <I>Al-Masri Al-Yawm<\/I>: &#8222;<I>The Economist<\/I>&#8217;s report comes as part of a Western political campaign meant to harm Egypt, and we cannot view it separately from the [downing] of the Russian airliner [in Sinai], the granting of political asylum to MB [members] in Britain, and the tremendous disregard of Turkish President Erdogan&#8217;s dictatorial measures against his opponents&#8230; While Egypt is in a severe economic crisis, [this crisis] is nowhere near the level of devastation and destruction described by <I>The Economist<\/I>.&#8221;<A name=\"_ednref15\"><\/A> <A href=\"http:\/\/www.memri.org\/report\/en\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/9433.htm#_edn15\">[15] <\/A><br \/>\n<P>MP Mahmoud Yahya called the articles &#8222;a declaration of war on Egypt and an attempt to harm it, as part of a systematic plan and with timing that raises doubts regarding the reasons driving these major newspapers to condemn and criticize Egypt.&#8221;<A name=\"_ednref16\"><\/A> <A href=\"http:\/\/www.memri.org\/report\/en\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/9433.htm#_edn16\">[16] <\/A><br \/>\n<P><B><I>Al-Masri Al-Yawm<\/I><\/B><B> Owner: Despite Its Credibility, <I>Economist<\/I> Is Disregarding Egypt&#8217;s Unique Circumstances<\/B><br \/>\n<P>Criticism of <I>The Economist<\/I> appeared also in the Egyptian press. The owner of the Egyptian daily <I>Al-Masri Al-Yawm<\/I>, who writes under the pen name Newton, argued that despite <I>The Economist<\/I>&#8217;s prestige and credentials, the headlines and descriptions that it used for Egypt and its economy were exaggerated and disregarded Egypt&#8217;s situation following its revolutions. He wrote:<br \/>\n<P>&#8222;<I>The Economist<\/I> is a respectable publication and is the first weekly I always read. It features in-depth analyses and is basically the world&#8217;s most important economic weekly&#8230; It has a Middle East department, an African department, an Asian department, and an American and European department. This magazine has made a number of predictions that turned out to be accurate. In 2010, it predicted that there would be a major shift of all Western allies in Arab countries. One of its covers featured Mubarak&#8217;s face superimposed on the Sphinx as it sank into the sand. In 2011, it published a photo of young [Egyptians] protesting, with the headline 'Egypt Uprising.&#8217; In 2012, it featured a cover image of smoke rising from the pyramids, with the title 'Egypt in Danger.&#8217; [But] in 2016, it featured the headline 'The Ruining of Egypt&#8217; along with a graph showing Egypt&#8217;s economy tanking&#8230;<br \/>\n<P>&#8222;[This] provocative headline&#8230; went far overboard&#8230; The conclusions reached by the weekly [in this report] ignore certain data: The [weekly] forgot that we had ousted a fascist religious regime poised to destroy everything on Egyptian soil and to set us back centuries; it forgot that we are dealing with a situation worse than occupation in Sinai, because the enemy there has no identity and no permanent bases; it forgot that we were [once] aided by the International Monetary Fund [IMF]; it forgot Al-Sisi&#8217;s statements that the government would enact severe reforms&#8230; it forgot that we acknowledge that there is a problem and are making efforts to solve it with local and international experts; it forgot that we know that our situation is difficult and have therefore turned to the best doctor, famous for his bitter medicine &#8211; the IMF. We will absolutely not shy away from the prescription written for us, because we know that time is not on our side, and that we no longer have the privilege of choice&#8230;<br \/>\n<P>&#8222;<I>The Economist<\/I> has its credibility, but it seems to know little about the Egyptians&#8217; patience and endurance. We are no worse at this than the West, which dealt with the reality imposed on it during World War II, when each citizen received one egg and no more than three sugar cubes weekly &#8211; to the point where the British became accustomed to drinking their tea unsweetened. We can take austerity measures, like Europe did when it was in a far worse situation than we are now&#8230;&#8221;<A name=\"_ednref17\"><\/A> <A href=\"http:\/\/www.memri.org\/report\/en\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/9433.htm#_edn17\">[17] <\/A><br \/>\n<P><B>Editor Of Egyptian Daily: Britain Is Part Of Anti-Egypt &#8222;Triangle of Evil&#8221;<\/B><br \/>\n<P>Dandarawi Al-Harawi, the acting editor of the independent Egyptian daily <I>Al-Yawm Al-Sabi&#8217;<\/I>, claimed in an article that the U.S. and Europe &#8222;oppose Al-Sisi staying in power and steering Egypt to a safe haven,&#8221; and that is why &#8222;<I>The Economist<\/I> is suddenly talking about 'the ruining of Egypt.'&#8221; He added that the magazine articles were part of a single &#8222;symphony&#8221; that is being played by American and British papers and by public figures in Egypt who support the MB, a symphony that has &#8222;a single harmonious theme&#8221;: the demand that Al-Sisi not run for reelection. He wrote further: &#8222;The Triangle of Evil, whose base is the U.S. and whose sides are Britain and Israel, is troubled by the strength of the Egyptian army that is regaining its vitality and climbing up the ladder of the world&#8217;s most powerful armies in terms of its training and armament capabilities. [They are also troubled by] Egypt&#8217;s independent decision-making and its discarding of blind obedience, especially in terms of varying the army&#8217;s weapons and [Egypt&#8217;s] turning to the East, when in the past [it looked] only to the U.S. and the West. These are the main things that angered the Triangle of Evil&#8230;&#8221;<A name=\"_ednref18\"><\/A> <A href=\"http:\/\/www.memri.org\/report\/en\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/9433.htm#_edn18\">[18] <\/A><br \/>\n<P><B>Human Rights Activists: <I>Economist<\/I> Reports Aren&#8217;t A Plot Against Egypt; We Must Respect It<\/B><br \/>\n<P>Conversely, Egyptian human rights activists as well as columnists for independent publications argued that <I>The Economist<\/I>&#8217;s reports contained truths and that the weekly should not be attacked for highlighting Egypt&#8217;s dire situation.<br \/>\n<P>Nasser Amin, of the National Council for Human Rights, said that the weekly&#8217;s reports cannot be called a plot, because it is a highly respected publication.<A name=\"_ednref19\"><\/A> <A href=\"http:\/\/www.memri.org\/report\/en\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/9433.htm#_edn19\">[19] <\/A> Another council member, Hafez Abu Sa&#8217;ada, added, &#8222;The issue of human rights [in Egypt] requires fundamental changes, as it is the only way to shift the West&#8217;s negative attitudes towards Egypt.&#8221; He also said, &#8222;<I>The Economist<\/I> report took a clear political stand, and we must respect it and respond appropriately by disproving its claims&#8230; [and] by taking practical steps to combat corruption and support [individual] liberties&#8230;&#8221;<A name=\"_ednref20\"><\/A> <A href=\"http:\/\/www.memri.org\/report\/en\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/9433.htm#_edn20\">[20] <\/A><br \/>\n<P>Emad Al-Din Hussein, editor-in-chief of the independent daily <I>Al-Shurouq<\/I>, wrote: &#8222;Supporters of the Egyptian government and President Al-Sisi err when they treat <I>The Economist<\/I> as an unimportant tabloid. It is a serious, respected, and conservative publication that is trusted by most European and Western decision-makers, as well as by all economists around the world. It is not known for impulsivity or for acting in an unmeasured manner, and [its reports] should not be summed up as 'a plot.'&#8221;<A name=\"_ednref21\"><\/A> <A href=\"http:\/\/www.memri.org\/report\/en\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/9433.htm#_edn21\">[21] <\/A><br \/>\n<P>Egyptian intellectual Mamoun Fandy also addressed the matter, writing in his column in the London daily <I>Al-Sharq Al-Awsat<\/I>: &#8222;<I>The Economist <\/I>is not the only [publication] to harshly criticize events in Egypt in the past two weeks. It was preceded by The Grey Lady &#8211; the American <I>New York Times<\/I>.<A name=\"_ednref22\"><\/A> <A href=\"http:\/\/www.memri.org\/report\/en\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/9433.htm#_edn22\">[22] <\/A> I know that in our bureaucracy there are some among the ambassadors and media figures who speak of an organized campaign and a plot against Egypt. This could be partially true but is not entirely true&#8230; The description provided by <I>The Economist<\/I>, although it is limited in its knowledge of Egypt as a country and a society, is close to reality, and recognizing real problems is the first step towards [any] solution&#8230;&#8221;<A name=\"_ednref23\"><\/A> <A href=\"http:\/\/www.memri.org\/report\/en\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/9433.htm#_edn23\">[23] <\/A><br \/>\n<P><br \/>\n<P><I>* C. Meital is a research fellow at MEMRI.<\/I><br \/>\n<P><br \/>\n<P><br \/>\n<P><I>Endnotes:<\/I><br \/>\n<P><br \/>\n<P><A name=\"_edn1\"><\/A> <A href=\"http:\/\/www.memri.org\/report\/en\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/9433.htm#_ednref1\">[1] <\/A> &#8222;Country Information and Guidance Egypt: Muslim Brotherhood,&#8221; Gov.uk, August 2016. According to reports in the Egyptian press, a Home Office spokesman clarified that this Home Office policy applies only to MB members already present in the UK, and stressed that the country was not obligated to grant asylum to anyone currently outside its borders (<I>Al-Yawm Al-Sabi&#8217;<\/I>, Egypt, August 8, 2016). The reports quoted him as saying that asylum requests would be considered individually, according to the UK&#8217;s international obligations, and the UK would not grant asylum to persons who have committed grave crimes or pose a threat to its society and national security (<I>Al-Masri Al-Yawm,<\/I> Egypt, August 7, 8, 2016). <A name=\"_edn2\"><BR><br \/>\n<\/A> <A href=\"http:\/\/www.memri.org\/report\/en\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/9433.htm#_ednref2\">[2] <\/A> <I>Al-Watan <\/I>(Egypt), August 9, 2016. <A name=\"_edn3\"><BR><br \/>\n<\/A> <A href=\"http:\/\/www.memri.org\/report\/en\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/9433.htm#_ednref3\">[3] <\/A> See <I>The Economist<\/I> (UK), August 6, 2016. <A name=\"_edn4\"><BR><br \/>\n<\/A> <A href=\"http:\/\/www.memri.org\/report\/en\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/9433.htm#_ednref4\">[4] <\/A> Theguardian.com, wsj.com, November 5, 2015.<A name=\"_edn5\"><BR><br \/>\n<\/A> <A href=\"http:\/\/www.memri.org\/report\/en\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/9433.htm#_ednref5\">[5] <\/A> For example, Egyptian Culture Minister Hilmi Al-Namnam accused the British government and media of waging psychological warfare against Egypt (<I>Al-Masri Al-Yawm<\/I>, Egypt, November 10, 2015), and <I>Al-Ahram<\/I> deputy-editor Hussein Al-Zinati said there was a British plot against Egypt (<I>Al-Ahram<\/I>, Egypt, November 9, 2016). For an article stating that America and Britain were reluctant to fight terror, see <I>Al-Ahram<\/I>, Egypt, November 11, 2016. <A name=\"_edn6\"><BR><br \/>\n<\/A> <A href=\"http:\/\/www.memri.org\/report\/en\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/9433.htm#_ednref6\">[6] <\/A> A previous version of this document, which was very similar in its conclusions, was published in October 2014.<A name=\"_edn7\"><BR><br \/>\n<\/A> <A href=\"http:\/\/www.memri.org\/report\/en\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/9433.htm#_ednref7\">[7] <\/A> It should be noted that this is not the only major document on the MB issued by the British authorities in the past year. On December 17, 2015, the British government published the main findings of a review it commissioned into the MB and in particular its activities in Britain (see gov.uk, &#8222;Muslim Brotherhood Review: Main Findings,&#8221; December 17, 2015) The review found that literature circulated by MB-affiliated groups in Britain continues to convey that &#8222;Western society is inherently hostile to Muslim faith and interests and that Muslims must respond by maintaining their distance and autonomy.&#8221; It also found that, &#8222;in common with the Muslim Brotherhood elsewhere, Muslim Brotherhood-related organizations and individuals in the UK have openly supported the activities of Hamas,&#8221; including attacks on civilians. It concluded that &#8222;aspects of Muslim Brotherhood ideology and tactics, in this country and overseas, are contrary to our values and have been contrary to our national interests and our national security.&#8221; However, it noted that &#8222;the Muslim Brotherhood has not been linked to terrorist related activity in and against the UK.&#8221; Reporting on the findings of the review (parts of which were classified), then-British prime minister David Cameron said that membership or association with the MB was a &#8222;possible indicator of extremism&#8221; but that the movement would not be banned in the UK (bbc.com, December 17, 2015). <BR><br \/>\nThe review was commissioned in April 2014 and was expected to be released in March 2015 alongside the government&#8217;s extremism strategy, but failed to be published. There was speculation that the publication was delayed because Middle Eastern allies of Britain were expected to be displeased with the conclusion (telegraph.co.uk, December 17, 2015). Three of Britain&#8217;s closest Arab allies, Egypt, Saudi Arabia and the UAE, have all complained that London is a base for the MB (Theguardian.com, December 17, 2015). According to a report in <I>The Guardian<\/I>, in 2012 the UAE even threatened to block billion-pound arms deals with the UK, stop inward investment and cut intelligence cooperation if David Cameron did not act against the movement (theguardian.com, November 6, 2015).<A name=\"_edn8\"><BR><br \/>\n<\/A> <A href=\"http:\/\/www.memri.org\/report\/en\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/9433.htm#_ednref8\">[8] <\/A> <I>Al-Watan, Al-Yawm Al-Sabi&#8217;<\/I> (Egypt), August 9, 2016. <A name=\"_edn9\"><BR><br \/>\n<\/A> <A href=\"http:\/\/www.memri.org\/report\/en\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/9433.htm#_ednref9\">[9] <\/A> <I>Al-Masri Al-Yawm<\/I> (Egypt), August 10, 2016.<A name=\"_edn10\"><BR><br \/>\n<\/A> <A href=\"http:\/\/www.memri.org\/report\/en\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/9433.htm#_ednref10\">[10] <\/A> <I>Al-Ahram<\/I> (Egypt), August 9, 2016.<A name=\"_edn11\"><BR><br \/>\n<\/A> <A href=\"http:\/\/www.memri.org\/report\/en\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/9433.htm#_ednref11\">[11] <\/A> <I>Al-Ahram<\/I> (Egypt), August 9, 2016.<A name=\"_edn12\"><BR><br \/>\n<\/A> <A href=\"http:\/\/www.memri.org\/report\/en\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/9433.htm#_ednref12\">[12] <\/A> <I>Al-Ahram<\/I> (Egypt), August 26, 2016.<A name=\"_edn13\"><BR><br \/>\n<\/A> <A href=\"http:\/\/www.memri.org\/report\/en\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/9433.htm#_ednref13\">[13] <\/A> <I>The Economist<\/I> (UK), August 6, 2016.<A name=\"_edn14\"><BR><br \/>\n<\/A> <A href=\"http:\/\/www.memri.org\/report\/en\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/9433.htm#_ednref14\">[14] <\/A> The Arabic version was posted August 8 to the ministry&#8217;s Facebook page (facebook.com\/MFAEgyp), whereas the English version was posted the same day to the ministry&#8217;s blog (Mfaegypt.org).<A name=\"_edn15\"><BR><br \/>\n<\/A> <A href=\"http:\/\/www.memri.org\/report\/en\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/9433.htm#_ednref15\">[15] <\/A> <I>Al-Masri Al-Yawm<\/I> (Egypt), August 10, 2016.<A name=\"_edn16\"><BR><br \/>\n<\/A> <A href=\"http:\/\/www.memri.org\/report\/en\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/9433.htm#_ednref16\">[16] <\/A> <I>Al-Masri Al-Yawm<\/I> (Egypt), August 10, 2016.<A name=\"_edn17\"><BR><br \/>\n<\/A> <A href=\"http:\/\/www.memri.org\/report\/en\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/9433.htm#_ednref17\">[17] <\/A> <I>Al-Masri Al-Yawm<\/I> (Egypt), August 6, 2016.<A name=\"_edn18\"><BR><br \/>\n<\/A> <A href=\"http:\/\/www.memri.org\/report\/en\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/9433.htm#_ednref18\">[18] <\/A> <I>Al-Yawm Al-Sabi&#8217;<\/I> (Egypt), August 27, 2016.<A name=\"_edn19\"><BR><br \/>\n<\/A> <A href=\"http:\/\/www.memri.org\/report\/en\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/9433.htm#_ednref19\">[19] <\/A> <I>Al-Masri Al-Yawm<\/I> (Egypt), August 10, 2016.<A name=\"_edn20\"><BR><br \/>\n<\/A> <A href=\"http:\/\/www.memri.org\/report\/en\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/9433.htm#_ednref20\">[20] <\/A> <I>Al-Masri Al-Yawm<\/I> (Egypt), August 10, 2016.<A name=\"_edn21\"><BR><br \/>\n<\/A> <A href=\"http:\/\/www.memri.org\/report\/en\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/9433.htm#_ednref21\">[21] <\/A> <I>Al-Shurouq<\/I> (Egypt), August 9, 2016.<A name=\"_edn22\"><BR><br \/>\n<\/A> <A href=\"http:\/\/www.memri.org\/report\/en\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/9433.htm#_ednref22\">[22] <\/A> Likely referring to an August 2 article in <I>The New York Times<\/I> titled &#8222;A Gloomy Egypt Sees Its International Influence Wither Away.&#8221;<A name=\"_edn23\"><BR><br \/>\n<\/A> <A href=\"http:\/\/www.memri.org\/report\/en\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/0\/9433.htm#_ednref23\">[23] <\/A> <I>Al-Sharq Al-Awsat<\/I> (London), August 8, 2016.<br \/>\n<P><br \/>\n<P><B>Visit the MEMRI site in Polish: <\/B><A href=\"http:\/\/www2.memri.org\/polish\/\"><B>http:\/\/www2.memri.org\/polish\/<\/B><\/A><br \/>\n<P><B>If you wish to reply, please send your email to <\/B><A href=\"javascript:void(0)\"><B>memri@memrieurope.org<\/B><\/A> <B>. <\/B><br \/>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Autor: C. Meital* Wprowadzenie Media egipskie ostro krytykowa\u0142y ostatnio Wielk\u0105 Brytani\u0119 i jej media za ich stanowisko wobec obecnych w\u0142adz w Egipcie. Twierdzono, \u017ce przedstawiciele i media Wielkiej Brytanii atakuj\u0105 w\u0142adze Al-Sisiego, okazuj\u0105c r\u00f3wnocze\u015bnie sympati\u0119 i udzielaj\u0105c platformy opozycjonistom egipskim z Bractwa Muzu\u0142ma\u0144skiego (BM). Gniew medi\u00f3w egipskich wywo\u0142a\u0142 dokument z wskaz\u00f3wkami og\u0142oszony przez brytyjskie Home [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":4077,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[833,835,837,863],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-3925","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-badania-i-analizy","category-archiwum","category-kraje","category-egipt"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www2.memri.org\/polish\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/3925","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www2.memri.org\/polish\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www2.memri.org\/polish\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www2.memri.org\/polish\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www2.memri.org\/polish\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=3925"}],"version-history":[{"count":1,"href":"https:\/\/www2.memri.org\/polish\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/3925\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":4078,"href":"https:\/\/www2.memri.org\/polish\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/3925\/revisions\/4078"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www2.memri.org\/polish\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/4077"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www2.memri.org\/polish\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=3925"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www2.memri.org\/polish\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=3925"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www2.memri.org\/polish\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=3925"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}