شوف ياعم إنت وهو إللي بتقولوا إن مرسي هو سبب أزمة البنزين والكهربا في مصر لأنه كان بيهربهم لحماس !! ... ، المقال التالي من صحيفة نيويورك تايمز إللي عملت لقاءات مع نجيب ساويرس وتهاني الجبالي ... إقرا ومتع عينيك وشوف ( هما بنفسهم ) قالوا إيه عن سبب أزمة البنزين والكهربا !! ..... عاوزين دليل إيه تاني اكتر من كده ؟!! إعترفوا علي نفسهم !!! والإعتراف سيد الأدله ! ، ورغم كده أنا متأكد إن فيه ( بهايم ) هاتطلع تقولك برضه مرسي هو السبب !!!!!!!!!! .... ، العينة ديه بقى من البهايم أنا عاوزها تطلع تعبر عن نفسها وتقوول رأيها بكل وضوح في كومنتات عشان أنا ( بكل صراحة برضه ! ) هاعملهم البلوك المتيين عشان مش طالبه بهايم أكتر من كده .. الواحد زهق خلاص !!! وآدي ياعم الجزء من المقال إللي إعترفوا فيه ..... ترجموا وعيشوا حياتكم ... ورابط المقال كاملاً من المصدر في الآخر عشان لو مش مصدقيني !! Mr. Sawiris, one of Egypt’s richest men and a titan of the old establishment, said Wednesday that he had supported an upstart group called “tamarrod,” Arabic for “rebellion,” that led a petition drive seeking Mr. Morsi’s ouster. He donated use of the nationwide offices and infrastructure of the political party he built, the Free Egyptians. He provided publicity through a popular television network he founded and his major interest in Egypt’s largest private newspaper. He even commissioned the production of a popular music video that played heavily on the network. “Tamarrod did not even know it was me!” he said. “I am not ashamed of it.” He said he had publicly predicted that ousting Mr. Morsi would bolster Egypt’s sputtering economy because it would bring in billions of dollars in aid from oil-rich monarchies afraid that the Islamist movement might spread to their shores. By Wednesday, a total of $12 billion had flowed in from Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Kuwait. “That will take us for 12 months with no problem,” Mr. Sawiris said. Ms. Gebali, the former judge, said in a telephone interview on Wednesday that she and other legal experts helped tamarrod create its strategy to appeal directly to the military to oust Mr. Morsi and pass the interim presidency to the chief of the constitutional court. “We saw that there was movement and popular creativity, so we wanted to see if it would have an effect and a constitutional basis,” Ms. Gebali said. Mr. Farash, the trade ministry spokesman under Mr. Morsi, attributed the fuel shortages to black marketers linked to Mr. Mubarak, who diverted shipments of state-subsidized fuel to sell for a profit abroad. Corrupt officials torpedoed Mr. Morsi’s introduction of a smart card system to track fuel shipments by refusing to use the devices, he said.
Posted on: Mon, 15 Jul 2013 10:07:12 +0000