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Egypt cuts diplomatic ties with Damascus, backs no-fly zone

On Saturday, Egyptian President Mohamed Mursi announced Egypt was cutting all diplomatic ties with Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's government and backing a no-fly zone over Syria. Mursi also called on Hezbollah to leave Syria.

By Tom Perry,?Reuters / June 16, 2013

Egypt's President Mohamed Mursi delivers a speech at a Syria solidarity conference organised by the Muslim Brotherhood, in Cairo, on Saturday. Mursi said he had cut all diplomatic ties with Damascus on Saturday and demanded Hezbollah leave Syria, pitching the most populous Arab state more firmly against Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.

Reuters

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Egyptian President Mohamed Mursi said he had cut all diplomatic ties with?Damascus?on Saturday and backed a no-fly zone over?Syria, pitching the most populous Arab state more firmly against President?Bashar al-Assad.

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Addressing a rally called by Sunni Muslim clerics in Cairo, the Sunni Islamist head of state also warned Assad's ally, the Iranian-backed Lebanese Shi'ite militia Hezbollah, to pull back from fighting in?Syria.

"Hezbollah must leave?Syria. These are serious words," said Mursi, whose country hosted a conference of Sunni clerics this week who issued a call for holy war against?Damascus.

"There is no space or place for Hezbollah in?Syria," Mursi said.

The rally underscored the region's deepening sectarian rift. A cleric who spoke before Mursi described Shi'ites as heretics, infidels, oppressors and polytheists.

It was also a show of support for Mursi as his opponents mobilise for protests to demand early presidential elections.

Mursi waved Syrian and Egyptian flags as he entered the auditorium packed with 20,000 supporters. The crowd chanted: "From the free revolutionaries of?Egypt: We will stamp on you, Bashar!"

Mursi, a?Muslim Brotherhood?politician, steered clear of direct references to Shi'ites and Iran but in a partial allusion to?Tehran, he accused states in the region and beyond of feeding "a campaign of extermination and planned ethnic cleansing" in?Syria.

"We decided today to entirely break off relations with?Syria?and with the current Syrian regime," he said. He also urged world powers not to hesitate to enforce a no-fly zone over?Syria.

Western diplomats said on Friday that Washington was considering a limited no-fly zone over parts of?Syria, but the?White House?said later that the?United States?had no national interest in pursuing that option.

Russia, an ally of Assad and fierce opponent of outside military intervention in?Syria, said any attempt to impose a no-fly zone using F-16 fighter jets and Patriots based in?Jordan?would be illegal.

Mursi said he was organising an urgent summit of Arab and other Islamic states to discuss the situation in?Syria, where the?United States?has in recent days decided to take steps to arm the rebels.

Egypt's U.S.-funded and -trained army is among the most powerful in the?Middle East. There has been no suggestion, however, that?Egypt, a country steeped in poverty, should get involved in the fighting in?Syria.

WARNS AGAINST VIOLENCE

Mursi said: "The Egyptian people supports the struggle of the Syrian people, materially and morally, and?Egypt, its nation, leadership ... and army, will not abandon the Syrian people until it achieves its rights and dignity."

The Brotherhood has joined calls this week from Sunni Muslim religious organisations for jihad against Assad and his Shi'ite allies.

Egypt?has not taken an active role in arming the Syrian rebels, but an aide to Mursi said this week that Cairo would not stand in the way of Egyptians who wanted to fight in?Syria.

It marked Mursi's second combative foreign policy speech in less than a week. On Monday, he said?Egypt?would keep "all options open" for dealing with a dispute with?Ethiopia?over a giant dam it is building on the Nile, though he said Cairo did not want war and stressed it would work diplomatically.

Mursi's liberal and leftist opponents are mobilising for mass protests on June 30, the anniversary of Mursi coming to office, fuelling fears of possible further violence.

Mursi told his Islamist supporters at the rally that they must not be dragged into confrontations and that he would not tolerate any violence. Additional reporting by Ali Abdellati

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/v2qBH34SVo0/Egypt-cuts-diplomatic-ties-with-Damascus-backs-no-fly-zone

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