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- <text id=93TT1426>
- <title>
- Apr. 12, 1993: Trouble on the Nile
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Apr. 12, 1993 The Info Highway
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- EGYPT, Page 37
- Trouble on the Nile
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Hosni Mubarak blames Iran for the wave of violence sweeping
- his country
- </p>
- <p>By BRUCE W. NELAN
- </p>
- <p> People walk the streets of Cairo these days peering over
- their shoulders. Tourists wonder if a bomb might be hidden in
- this bus or that corner cafe. Egyptians never know when they
- might be caught in a gun battle between radical Muslims and the
- police. "I don't worry about myself," says a native Cairene,
- "but I do worry about what could happen to my family." The peace
- of the capital is threatened by Islamic rebels seeking to
- ignite a civil war.
- </p>
- <p> In the grimy streets of Cairo's Imbaba neighborhood,
- Islamic fundamentalists have taken charge, running protection
- rackets and intimidating the police. Gun battles have disrupted
- the southern city of Asyut as heavily armed police raid the
- havens of militants. Terrorists have set off bombs in the cities
- along the Nile, where tourists, foreign residents and Egyptian
- Christians are usually the targets. The violence ignited by
- extremists and police retaliation has killed 116 people in the
- past year, 29 in the past month. In a brutal campaign to put
- down the militants, the government has rounded up thousands of
- suspects and ordered almost 100 held for military trial. If they
- are found guilty of complicity in terrorism, they could be
- hanged.
- </p>
- <p> Could Egypt be going the way of Iran? That question will
- be on the mind of both Bill Clinton and Egyptian President
- Hosni Mubarak when the two men meet in Washington this week.
- Though fundamentalists are at odds with all the secular Arab
- governments of North Africa, the Middle East and the Persian
- Gulf, Mubarak is a special target. His country has not only made
- a separate peace with the archenemy, Israel, but has also joined
- the Western alliance in the Gulf War and continues to work
- closely with the U.S.
- </p>
- <p> Radicals of Egypt's Islamic Group would like to do to
- Mubarak what their fanatic brothers did to the Shah of Iran:
- topple him and install a purely Islamic government. They even
- have their own Ayatullah equivalent: Sheik Omar Abdel-Rahman,
- the blind Egyptian cleric who calls passionately for Mubarak's
- overthrow from mosques in the U.S., including the one in New
- Jersey where some of the suspects in the bombing of the World
- Trade Center worshipped.
- </p>
- <p> In spite of the rising violence, Mubarak confidently
- asserts that he does not consider the Islamists a serious threat
- to his government. "The situation is not that unstable," he
- told TIME's Cairo bureau chief Dean Fischer last week. Radical
- Muslims who oppose peace between Arabs and Israelis, Mubarak is
- convinced, are working to bring down his government. He is
- certain they are directed from Iran. "There is no doubt," he
- said. "The Iranians have said that if they could change the
- Egyptian regime, they would control the whole area." He says
- fundamentalists recruited from several Arab countries are being
- trained in Sudan, which has an Islamic government almost as
- unyielding as Iran's. "The Sudanese deny it, but there are
- training camps there."
- </p>
- <p> Western experts do not dispute the President's claims
- entirely. But Egypt would face a fundamentalist threat even if
- Iran and Sudan did not exist. Homegrown poverty, overpopulation,
- poor housing and rampant corruption would almost certainly stir
- radicalism and unrest without any agitation from outside.
- </p>
- <p> Mubarak believes that tough law enforcement is the only
- effective response. "The police are taking the initiative," he
- says, though he rejects accusations that they are using
- excessive force and firepower. Critics charge that the tough
- antiterrorism laws and shoot-first police tactics are only
- undermining democracy and feeding resentment.
- </p>
- <p> Mubarak dismisses the potency of Sheik Omar's preachings
- from the U.S. "He thinks he is another Ayatullah Khomeini,"
- says Mubarak, "but there is a great difference between them.
- The followers of this so-called sheik are less than a tenth of
- 1% [of Egyptians]."
- </p>
- <p> The link between domestic discord and regional strife is
- clear to Mubarak. As a key broker in the Arab-Israeli peace
- process, he is eager to see the talks resume on April 20. He
- conferred with Syrian President Hafez Assad and Palestine
- Liberation Organization Chairman Yasser Arafat before taking off
- for Washington. He got Arafat's proxy for an attempt to resolve
- the impasse over 400 Palestinian fundamentalists Israel deported
- to Lebanon last year, the issue that has stalled negotiations
- for months. From Assad, Mubarak obtained a commitment to the
- "full peace" Israel seeks in exchange for returning the occupied
- Golan Heights to Syria. "I don't want this chance for stability
- in this part of the world to pass," he said. If it does, "it
- would be very dangerous for those who want to cooperate with the
- Americans."
- </p>
- <p> Mubarak is well aware of the difficulties in persuading
- his people that things will improve. If the religious
- fundamentalists can convince enough Egyptians that they will
- fare better under them than under the current government, then
- the future is certain to hold more violence and strife than
- Mubarak--or Washington--could have imagined a few months
- ago.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-