What's new

Muslim Brotherhood seeks India help for polls in Egypt

Be on the winning side. As simple as that. Nothing to lose but don't go overboard.
 
i dont know wat they want from ghotala's,raja's,radia's,kalmadi's????

black dots on democracy...
still india is 90% ruled by ghandhis..

not so much optimistic regarding this..
its just opinion.
 
A tabloid level toilet dishes out a crap and every one goes bananas over it, have you guys ever tried to get an opinion of an Egyptian on the street that what do they think of indians. Seriously, they dont even trust their Arab neighbors and they want to go as far away as india for help.
 
A tabloid level toilet dishes out a crap and every one goes bananas over it, have you guys ever tried to get an opinion of an Egyptian on the street that what do they think of indians. Seriously, they dont even trust their Arab neighbors and they want to go as far away as india for help.

I know much much more about what avg Egyptian thinks about India and Indian people..! And let me assure you on this WE have a very Positive impact and impression on avg egyptian people and there goverment.... :))
 
I know much much more about what avg Egyptian thinks about India and Indian people..! And let me assure you on this WE have a very Positive impact and impression on avg egyptian people and there goverment.... :))

And what is your opinion based on, can you please tell me. How many egyptians have you ever come across and where.
 
Cairo calling


The day after the revolution is euphoric but always messy. The old order has crumbled, the dictator has been deposed, but the orderliness of the longed-for democracy is nowhere in sight. Egypt, after its glorious 18-day revolution, is in that inevitable but often unenviable state of uncertainty.

And ordinary Egyptians are impatient to get their country in order. Even as internally Egypt is setting the pace of reforms — an army-appointed panel has proposed a set of constitutional reforms that will eventually be put to a public referendum — the international community has to step up in facilitating, as Cairo seems fit, its peaceful transition to democracy.

It is in this context that it was suggested, first by US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in a telephone conversation with External Affairs Minister S.M. Krishna and subsequently in her talks with Foreign Secretary Nirupama Rao, that India assist Egypt in conducting free and fair polls.


While this is a nod to New Delhi’s experience and expertise in conducting elections, it prudently responded to Clinton that it would wait for a request from the Egyptians themselves. Now sources say Egypt’s main opposition party has welcomed such an assistance.

India should be cooperative but also cautious. It should use its democratic credentials for the political transformation of a people whose memory of free and fair elections is rather distant. India’s experience in Afghanistan, helping build its democratic institutions, training its parliament staff and election officials, should stand it in good stead too. But New Delhi should move into the politically volatile Egypt to bolster its ballots only when the call comes from a greater representation of Egyptians, who themselves are just working out the way out of a 30-year-long dictatorship, who are barely rolling out the blueprint of their future.


And when that happens, India should lend a hand to build

Egypt’s second republic.


Cairo calling
 

Users Who Are Viewing This Thread (Total: 2, Members: 0, Guests: 2)


Pakistan Defence Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom