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Ishak is campaigning to gather a
million signatures in 100 days to rescind Egypt's peace treaty
with Israel.
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DAMIETTE, Egypt — The
perceived stunning win of the Lebanese
resistance group Hizbullah in the 33-day
military confrontation against the Israeli
military juggernaut, the region's most
powerful army, is seen as giving more steam to
the Egyptian opposition.
"Hizbullah's victory
in Lebanon has given new life to the spirit of
resistance against (Egyptian President Hosni)
Mubarak," said George Ishak, a leader of
the Kefaya (Enough) opposition movement,
reported Agence France-Presse (AFP).
"I ask you to applaud
the master Hassan Nasrallah," called out
67-year-old Ishak, a Coptic Christian, during
a rally in Darmiette, an industrial port in
northern Egypt.
"And to denounce the
one who called him reckless."
Around 200 men, three woman
and a few children in the dusty street
promptly gave an ovation to the Hizbullah
leader before chanting "down with Israel,
down with Mubarak."
Egypt, Jordan and Saudi
Arabia have heaped blame on Hizbullah for
triggering the conflict without consulting
with any party.
But facing outrage and
protest at home against Israel's bloody
onslaught, they later softened their stance
and even praised the heroic resistance shown
by Hizbullah against the armed-to-the-teeth
Israeli army.
Pundits believe that some
Arab rulers hoped that Hizbullah would be
defeated by Israel, fearing that a victory by
the resistance group would serve as a catalyst
for reformists to push forward with their
demands.
Thieves
The rally's host, local
communist leader Anis al-Baya, slammed the
Egyptian police.
"They came and stole
the chairs we had set up outside in
expectation of 4,000 people."
On the walls of his
headquarters were no posters of Marx, but one
of Nasrallah.
An outpouring of newspaper
columns, cartoons, blogs and public poetry
readings have showered praise on Nasrallah
while attacking Arab leaders for their
weakness.
Kefaya, which was formed in
2003, is more of a political catch-all than a
political party.
It represents a range of
reinvigorated popular movements that oppose
Mubarak, who has been president since 1981.
Kefaya has joined forces
with Marxists, Nasserites (Arab nationalists)
and the Muslim Brotherhood, now the leading
opposition force with 20 percent of
parliamentary seats.
It is very popular among
intellectuals.
Reformist powers have
gained momentum over the past two years in
some Arab countries like heavyweight Egypt.
However Egyptian police
have cracked down on pro-reform protesters in
recent months, detaining hundreds of them
during protests against Mubarak's 25-year
rule.
Britain's mass-circulation
The Independent said on April 25 that
Mubarak's regime was caught between further
repressions or opening up to more reform and
risking losing power.
Million Signatures
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Egyptian protesters carry a placard
reads "Hassan Nasrallah is the leader of the Arab nations;
while you Arab rulers, are the disgrace of the Arab nations".
(Reuters)
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Ishak is campaigning to
gather a million signatures in 100 days in
favor of rescinding Egypt's peace treaty with
Israel.
He believed that the moment
had come to link their opposition and reform
agenda with opposition to Israel.
"Egyptians are furious
with Israel for its atrocities in Lebanon,
while the regime supports it," he told
the crowd from a podium that used Hizbullah's
yellow and green flag as a background.
"Our experience with
Israel has been a disaster. It is time to
start over."
By the end of November,
Ishak wants to collect one million signatures
demanding that the Egyptian parliament annul
the 1979 peace treaty.
Egypt and Jordan are the
only two Arab countries to have signed a peace
treaty with Israel.
Egyptian Foreign Minister
Ahmed Abul Geit said last week that a break
with Israel or a freezing of the treaty would
represent "a declaration of war".