Iran and Egypt as distant as before.

by rahul | September 16, 2008 at 07:35 am
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Iran's film on President Anwar Sadat: the 'Assassination of a Pharaoh'

Iran's film on President Anwar Sadat: the 'Assassination of a Pharaoh'

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 A number of recent developments and signs prompted speculation that a restoration of diplomatic relations between Tehran and Cairo was imminent. However, "Egypt appears adamant in its refusal to re-establish diplomatic relations -- frozen for almost 30 years".  Some have argued that the reason behind such distance is the US and Israel. However, many international and religious stands have proved Cairo´s own thinking on the Persian issue. "Egypt has not had official relations with Iran since the latter cut diplomatic ties immediately following the Camp David deal. Unofficial relations remained hostile through most of the 1980s, when Egypt supported Saddam Hussein's Iraq against revolutionary Iran in a drawn-out war of attrition". Now, a film called Execution of a Pharaoh is the cause of the distancing between the two countries. In the film, Egyptian President Anwar Sadat is portrayed as a traitor.  Even though the fim was originally produced by satellite news channel Al-Jazeera, it was wrongly attributed to Iran government. "The government, following U.S. policy directives, is always looking for excuses not to re-establish relations with Iran," Magdi Hussein, secretary-general of Egypt's frozen Islamist-leaning Labour Party told IPS. "Even though Tehran bore no responsibility for the film, the government exaggerated the issue in order to whip up hostility against the Iranians."In addition, The fim also activated and showed the Muslim dispute between Sunni and Persian Shia.

Africa: More Than the Film Stands Between Iran And Egypt.16 September 2008, Posted to the web 16 September 2008 by Adam Morrow and Khaled Moussa al-Omrani. Despite several goodwill gestures from Iran, Egypt appears adamant in its refusal to re-establish diplomatic relations -- frozen for almost 30 years -- with the Persian-speaking Islamic republic. According to opposition figures, Cairo's insistence on keeping Iran at arm's length comes largely as a result of U.S. prompting.  "In line with U.S. directives, Egypt continues to seize upon superficial reasons to justify its refusal to normalise relations with Tehran," Hamdi Hassan, MP from Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood opposition movement told IPS. Predictions of looming Egypt-Iran rapprochement were dashed with the appearance in July of an Iranian documentary film that portrayed late Egyptian president Anwar Sadat as a "traitor" for signing the 1979 Camp David peace agreement with Israel. The film titled 'Execution of a Pharaoh' praised Khaled al-Islambouli, who assassinated Sadat two years later, as "a martyr."  The documentary met with unusually strong reaction from Egyptian officialdom. Foreign Minister Ahmed Aboul-Gheit rushed to condemn the film "in the strongest possible terms." He said "it is unfortunate that an Islamic society such as Iran would attack this great national leader (Sadat)." Egypt has not had official relations with Iran since the latter cut diplomatic ties immediately following the Camp David deal. Unofficial relations remained hostile through most of the 1980s, when Egypt supported Saddam Hussein's Iraq against revolutionary Iran in a drawn-out war of attrition. In the years since, Egypt's closeness to the U.S. -- which has made no secret of its desire to isolate, if not attack, Iran -- has kept relations between Egypt and Iran frosty. Nevertheless, a number of recent developments had prompted speculation that a restoration of diplomatic ties was imminent.  Last year, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmedinejad explicitly stated his country's readiness to re-establish official bilateral relations. "If the Egyptian government was willing, we would open our embassy in Cairo the same day," Ahmedinejad said. Egypt never formally responded to the proposal, but Ahmedinejad's offer was followed by several visits to the Egyptian capital by top-level Iranian officials. In January, a conference of the Organisation of Islamic Countries in Cairo was attended by Iranian Parliamentary Speaker Gholam Ali Adel. The visit was the first to Egypt by a senior Iranian parliamentary official since the 1970s.  In light of such high-level contact, many were surprised by Egypt's vehement reaction to the documentary film. Iranian officials tried to distance themselves from the film, pointing out that it was never broadcast on state television. An Iranian diplomat told local media that the documentary had been "produced by independent bodies" and "did not represent the official position of the Islamic republic."  Nevertheless, Egyptian officials have continued to register their displeasure....In early August, it emerged that the contentious film did not, in fact, have any connection to the Iranian government. As it turned out, Execution of a Pharaoh was originally produced by satellite news channel Al-Jazeera, and was later dubbed into Persian by an independent Iranian religious institution that took the liberty of inserting the word "traitor" before Sadat's name.  Despite Iran's apparent vindication, the Egyptian government refrained from issuing any formal apologies or retractions for its hasty recriminations.  But in another apparent gesture of goodwill, Iran extended a formal invitation last month to open a branch of the Al-Azhar University in the Iranian capital with the aim of "reinforcing Egypt-Iran relations and promoting understanding between the Sunni and Shia denominations of Islam."..."Even though the film was not associated with the (Iranian) state, the foreign minister's aggressive response gave the green light to activate the dispute between Sunni and Shia," political analyst Mohammed Abdel-Hadi wrote in the Aug. 27 edition of independent daily Al-Masri Al-Youm. "It promoted the idea that official rapprochement between Egypt and Iran remains an impossibility." The government, following U.S. policy directives, is always looking for excuses not to re-establish relations with Iran," Magdi Hussein, secretary-general of Egypt's frozen Islamist-leaning Labour Party told IPS. "Even though Tehran bore no responsibility for the film, the government exaggerated the issue in order to whip up hostility against the Iranians."

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