CAIRO,
September 21 (News Agencies) - Egypt's media slammed the U.S.
ambassador in Cairo on Saturday after he apparently called for the
press to vet commentary on the September 11 attacks, news agencies
reported.
The
spat, highlighting anti-U.S. feeling in the region, erupted when
ambassador David Welch attacked a rash of recent press commentary
which questioned whether Osama bin Laden’s al Qaeda group, including
an Egyptian, was behind the attacks, said news agencies.
"This
can harm Egypt's media in the eyes of the world. I hope newspaper
editors take that into account when they review articles before
publication," Welch wrote in the main state-owned daily al-Ahram
on Friday.
"A
responsible media must publish the truth not lies, and people should
know the difference," he added in the article printed in Arabic,
news agencies reported.
A
statement issued on Saturday by newspaper columnists, writers and
cartoonists from state-owned and opposition papers said Welch should
"go back to his country," accusing the U.S. media as
"only seeing the region through Israeli eyes."
"He
talks as if he's addressing slaves or citizens of some banana
republic...Whether he was the ambassador of America or Micronesia,
it's odd that he should tell Egyptian journalists how to think and
write," it said.
"He
made an unprecedented call for imposing new restrictions on articles
and columns in the Egyptian press," the statement said.
Egypt
has supported the United States in its "war on terrorism"
after the September 11 attacks on U.S. cities, which killed over 3,000
people. But anti-U.S. feeling is high over U.S. support for Israel in
its attempt to crush a Palestinian uprising, U.S. plans to attack
Iraq, perceived mistreatment of Arabs and Muslims in the United States
since September 11 and criticism of the Arab world in the U.S. media,
reported news agencies.