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Sunday 19 September 2010

Look and see who is trying to lecture us about not having a Jewish State

"First, we have here a ruler of Egypt for 26 years. That's right, since 1981 who is trying to lecture us, the Jewish people about their right to have own Jewish state. His country has been ruled under Egypt's Emergency Law for the entire time. He considers the country in a permanent state of emergency and has expanded his powers as a result. They arrest and detain citizens for what ever trumped up reason they choose.
There is no question that Mubarak is indeed a tyrannt, just like Algeria's  president, who was elected after a poll in which he was the sole candidate!!!!! The forces of change must come from within. There are many Arab countries with dictators at the helm who were supported by the west in the past and there will be many more in the future but their destruction is the responsibility of those oppressed. In time Mubarak or his son will be overthrown. The situation in Egypt today is not much different than Iran was in the 1970s, when the Shah got sick the puppet state of Iran fell and the Radical Islamic government took over. Once Mubarak gets gravely ill or dies, the puppet state of Egypt will fall." Renaud Sarda
CAIRO, Sept. 19 (UPI) -- Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak says Israel's demand to be recognized as a Jewish state is unnecessary.

"I say to Israeli citizens, including Jews, Muslims and others, that there is no such thing as a state in which all the citizens are Jews," Mubarak told Israel's Channel One network.
"In Egypt, we have Muslims, Christians and Jews and there is no problem. When they wanted to establish a Muslim state in Kosovo, the world came out against it because it did not want a Muslim state in central Europe," he said in the interview broadcast Saturday night.
The Egyptian leader cautioned Israel against renewing construction in West Bank settlements once the building freeze expires Sept. 26, saying such a move could torpedo current peace efforts and plunge the region into violence.
A continued settlement freeze and serious negotiations could lead to a framework peace agreement within a few months, the Egyptian leader said.
"This issue requires tough decisions to be made by courageous leaders and I think that Prime Minister (Binyamin) Netanyahu can make tough decisions," Mubarak said.

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