Salaam
Another update
Egypt tries to block airing of Sisi’s ‘60 Minutes’ interview
CBS refuses to stop broadcast, in which president confirms closest ever co-operation with Israel
An interview with US television channel CBS in which Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, Egypt’s president, spoke of his country’s close co-operation with Israel in fighting Isis militants, has stirred controversy after the broadcaster said Cairo tried to stop it from being aired.
The interview on the 60 Minutes news programme was due to air on Sunday evening after CBS said it had refused Egyptian government demands to refrain from broadcasting it. In an excerpt provided by CBS, Mr Sisi is quoted as having said: “That is correct . . . we have a wide range of co-operation with the Israelis,” in response to a question asking him if co-operation with Israel was now the closest ever between the two countries.
Egypt has had a peace treaty with Israel since 1978 and the two countries have diplomatic relations, but Egyptian public opinion still regards the Jewish state as an enemy and occupier of Arab lands. Mr Sisi’s unprecedented admission could hand his critics further ammunition to attack him.
News of co-operation with Israel against Isis militants in the Sinai has been widely circulated in the past year. A New York Times story in February 2018 cited US officials saying Israel had conducted a covert air campaign including some 100 air strikes against Isis militants in the North Sinai with Cairo’s permission. Egypt denied the story at the time. Egypt has fought four wars against Israel since 1948, the last of which in 1973 was aimed at winning back sovereignty over the Sinai.
Cairo has not responded to CBS’s claim that it asked the channel to pull the episode in which Mr Sisi is interviewed by Scott Pelley, the program’s anchor and journalist.
CBS has promoted the programme as “the interview Egypt’s government doesn’t want on TV”. CBS said it was contacted by the Egyptian ambassador shortly after the interview was recorded in the US and asked to refrain from airing it, but the broadcaster has not specified what the Egyptians found objectionable.
The channel has not said why it has held the broadcasting of the interview since September, when it was recorded during a visit by Mr Sisi to New York to attend the UN General Assembly.
Other excerpts of the interview made public by CBS include a denial by Mr Sisi of assertions by Human Rights Watch that the country is holding 60,000 political prisoners. Egypt’s official line is that there are no political detainees in the country and that everyone in prison is there for breaking the law.
Mr Sisi, a former defence minister, led a popularly backed coup in 2013 against his elected Islamist predecessor. He has presided over one of the harshest crackdowns in Egypt’s modern history, targeting mainly Islamists but extending to secular critics, bloggers and journalists.
“I don’t know where they got this figure [of 60,000 prisoners],” Mr Sisi told CBS. “I said there are no political prisoners in Egypt. Whenever there is a minority trying to impose an extremist ideology we have to intervene regardless of their numbers.”
https://www.ft.com/content/320a08d0-11bc-11e9-a581-4ff78404524e
Heres the interview
https://www.cbsnews.com/video/egypt...t-later-tried-to-block-60-minutes-2019-01-06/