Thursday, January 16, 2025
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Clinton, Morsi discuss US-Egypt relations

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Cairo: Visiting US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton held bilateral talks with newly-elected Egyptian President Mohamed Morsi. The two leaders on Saturday discussed Egypt’s transition to democracy and ways to boost bilateral relations, in addition to regional issues such as the Syrian crisis and the Middle East peace process.

“We do support the democratic transition, but we know it is for Egyptians to decide your way forward,” Clinton said at a joint press conference with Egyptian Foreign Minister Mohamed Kamel Amr, after her talks with Morsi at the presidential palace.

“Democracy is hard. It requires dialogue, compromise and real politics. We will continue to support the Egyptian people making theses decisions in the best way we can,” she said.

“We now are doing all we can to support the democratically elected government and to help make it a success in delivering results for the people of Egypt,” Clinton added.

Outside the Presidential Palace, dozens of Egyptians protested against the visit of Clinton.Some people held Egyptian national flags and banners with slogans like “Stop US funding of the Muslim Brotherhood”, “Egypt will never be Pakistan”. Riot police were deployed in front of the protesters.

Clinton arrived in Cairo Saturday for a two-day visit. She is the first top US official to visit Egypt after Morsi assumed presidency June 30. She will meet Egypt’s military council chief Hussein Tantawi Sunday.

“We certainly support the continuation of the peace agreement (between Israel and Egypt) as it has brought great benefits to Egypt. We will continue to do so, enabling the president to focus on the economic conditions in the internal political situation here in the country,” she said.

As to the Middle East peace process, Clinton said: “Our goal is to help bring about the two-state solution. We know it can only happen if there is negotiation between Israelis and the Palestinians. That can only happen if all Palestinians are committed to seeking a political resolution, renouncing violence. Reconciliation is up to the Palestinians.” (IANS)

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