Kerry arrives in Egypt, Washington releases ‘aid’ worth $572 million
BY Agencies23 Jun 2014 10:17 PM GMT
Agencies23 Jun 2014 10:17 PM GMT
US Secretary of State John Kerry arrived in Egypt on Sunday on a surprise trip to ‘push for democracy’ in the politically tumultuous country as Washington quietly released USD 572 million in aid.
Kerry, the highest-ranking US official to visit since President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi came to power, was to press the former army chief during his lightning trip to instal greater political freedoms and discuss security challenges.
Since Islamist president Mohamed Morsi was toppled by Sisi in July 2013, a government crackdown on his supporters has left more than 1,400 people dead in street clashes and at least 15,000 jailed.
US officials warned Washington still has deep concerns about the government’s ‘polarising tactics’, even though there was a ‘recognition that Egypt has been going through a very difficult transition’.
Kerry’s visit comes a day after an Egyptian court confirmed death sentences for 183 Islamists, including Muslim Brotherhood chief Mohamed Badie, after a speedy mass trial that sparked an international outcry. ‘The Secretary will discuss a variety of issues covering our bilateral relationship as well as regional issues, including Iraq, Syria, Libya, Israeli-Palestinian relations and the extremist and terror threats we all face,’ said State Department spokesperson Jen Psaki.
Kerry’s latest diplomatic mission, that will also see him visit Amman, Brussels and Paris, is expected
to focus on uniting Iraq’s fractious leaders and repelling insurgents whose lightning offensive has displaced hundreds of thousands, alarmed the world and put Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki under growing pressure. The US officials also revealed that a tranche of about USD 572 million in aid, which had been frozen since October, was released to the Cairo government about 10 days ago after finally winning a green light from Congress. It will mainly go to pay existing defence contracts.
Kerry, the highest-ranking US official to visit since President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi came to power, was to press the former army chief during his lightning trip to instal greater political freedoms and discuss security challenges.
Since Islamist president Mohamed Morsi was toppled by Sisi in July 2013, a government crackdown on his supporters has left more than 1,400 people dead in street clashes and at least 15,000 jailed.
US officials warned Washington still has deep concerns about the government’s ‘polarising tactics’, even though there was a ‘recognition that Egypt has been going through a very difficult transition’.
Kerry’s visit comes a day after an Egyptian court confirmed death sentences for 183 Islamists, including Muslim Brotherhood chief Mohamed Badie, after a speedy mass trial that sparked an international outcry. ‘The Secretary will discuss a variety of issues covering our bilateral relationship as well as regional issues, including Iraq, Syria, Libya, Israeli-Palestinian relations and the extremist and terror threats we all face,’ said State Department spokesperson Jen Psaki.
Kerry’s latest diplomatic mission, that will also see him visit Amman, Brussels and Paris, is expected
to focus on uniting Iraq’s fractious leaders and repelling insurgents whose lightning offensive has displaced hundreds of thousands, alarmed the world and put Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki under growing pressure. The US officials also revealed that a tranche of about USD 572 million in aid, which had been frozen since October, was released to the Cairo government about 10 days ago after finally winning a green light from Congress. It will mainly go to pay existing defence contracts.
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