Cairo - Egyptian politicians on Thursday unleashed a volley
of criticism against newly appointed Israeli Foreign Minister Avigdor
Lieberman for his statements on Egypt and the Israeli-Palestinian
peace process.
In an official statement sent to reporters earlier on Thursday,
the Egyptian Foreign Ministry called Lieberman's rejection of the
Annapolis peace process on Wednesday 'the first setback for efforts
toward peace' under the new Israeli government.
Addressing Israeli diplomats for the first time as foreign
minister on Wednesday, Lieberman said the Annapolis process had 'no
validity whatsoever.'
The 40 countries that attended the 2007 conference at the US Naval
Academy in Annapolis agreed on the importance of establishing an
independent Palestinian state alongside Israel and called for
immediate negotiations on a final agreement, including on such issues
as the status of Jerusalem, borders and refugees.
Lieberman said Israel would abide by the 2003 'Road Map,' which
called for the Palestinians to rein in militants before negotiations
began on a final-status agreement.
'He's a crazy man, stubborn and rigid,' said Ayman Nour, the
former leader of the liberal opposition Ghad Party, who said he had
met Lieberman on the sidelines of the 1991 peace conference in
Madrid.
'But it's good that Likud are back,' Nour told the German Press
Agency dpa. 'Labour appears more friendly and peaceful on the
outside, but all the agreements we've struck have been with Likud.'
In an interview with the host of al-Mehwar television's '48 Hours'
talk-show, Egyptian Foreign Minister Ahmed Aboul-Gheit said he would
not shake Lieberman's hand until he retracted such previous
statements as threatening to blow up the High Dam at Aswan and saying
that Egyptian President Hosny Mubarak could 'go to hell' if he didn't
visit Israel.
'As long as Lieberman's positions stay the same, if we see each
other by chance at a meeting, I will keep my hands in my pockets,'
Aboul-Gheit said in an interview taped on Thursday morning for
broadcast that night, according to a transcript obtained by the
German Press Agency dpa.
'The Egyptian foreign minister must uphold the dignity of Egypt,'
Aboul-Gheit said. 'Whoever insults the dignity of Egypt must face the
consequences and accept responsibility for his words.'
'I have met with more than one Israeli foreign minister, and I
have welcomed them in Egypt. But never before have any of them said
anything like what (Lieberman) said against Egypt,' Aboul-Gheit
continued.
'Lieberman showed his true colours when he threatened to attack
the High Dam,' Essam al-Arian, a senior member the Muslim
Brotherhood, Egypt's largest opposition party, told dpa. 'This is the
era of Zionist arrogance, power and dominance that does not face
resistance from the Arabs.'
'Egypt objects to Lieberman because of his statements about
Mubarak,' said Emad Gad, who studies Israeli politics at Cairo's
government-funded al-Ahram Centre for Strategic and Political
Studies.
'But (Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin) Netanyahu has given Egypt
assurances that Lieberman has changed and become a responsible
person,' Gad told dpa.
'Egypt will not boycott the Israeli government, but it will not
invite Lieberman to Cairo,' he predicted.
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