Tuesday, August 28, 2012

Sinai tribe hands its weapons to army - not clear if Egyptian Army active now in Sinai‏

The Barahma tribe in Sinai handed a significant number of weapons and 
ammunition over to the Armed Forces on Monday, said the Interior Ministry.
 
The move is a response to Defense Minister Abdel Fatah al-Sisi’s initiative 
to control unlicensed weapons in Sinai, and is intended to as an example to 
other tribes in the region to take similar steps in order to secure the 
stability and security of the peninsula.
 
The Interior Ministry said on 10 August that the authorities have seized 
over 20,000 weapons in Sinai over the past months, in addition to a high 
number of heavy arms and ammunition.
 
Sinai activist Saeed Ateiq told Al-Masry Al-Youm last May that the number of 
weapons in Sinai multiplied by 50 percent after the revolution because of 
the nation-wide security vacuum, but he noted that the presence of weapons 
in Sinai goes back to before the 25 January.
 
In fact, weapons have always been present in Sinai, said local activist 
Mosaad Abu Fagr, who added, “The Bedouins use arms to protect their land and 
families, and do not raise them except in the face of their enemies.”
 
The army won’t give up an inch of Sinai no matter the cost, said Chief of 
Staff Sidqy Sobhy. The police and the Armed Forces will not allow criminal 
havens to persist in Sinai, said Sobhy, adding that the security operations 
the army is currently conducting are not against innocent people.
 
"The doctrine of the Armed Forces is not to control thoughts with arms, but 
to hold up arms against those raise them in the faces of innocent citizens," 
Sobhy stated during a meeting with tribal leaders in South Sinai.
 
Sobhy relayed the apology of the defense minister for not attending the 
meeting. "The people of Sinai are an honor to us, and their blood has mixed 
with the blood of the armed forces in defending Sinai. We promise to 
maintain the Bedouin integration by including the people of Sinai in state 
plans for achieving development, while protecting local traditions," he 
said.
 
Meanwhile, conflicting reports have appeared regarding Operation Eagle, 
which the army launched after the 5 August attack near the Rafah border 
crossing to Irael that left 16 Egyptian security officials dead.
 
The German news agency DPA quoted witnesses as saying that as of now, Sinai 
is quiet — particularly the eastern area, where the cities of Rafah and 
Sheikh Zuwayed are located — and there have been no raids or operations 
latel.
 
However, a security source told the DPA that the current quiet in Sinai is 
only a brief break as the army awaits the results of a meeting between Sisi, 
Sobhy and security and tribal leaders held in South Sinai on Monday.
 
State-run Al-Ahram newspaper quoted a military source as saying that 
Operation Eagle had not been suspended, denying rumors that the operation 
had been halted when extremist from Rafah and Sheikh Zuwayed agreed to halt 
the violence in exchange.
 
Edited translation from Al-Masry Al-Youm 
 
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IMRA - Independent Media Review and Analysis
Website: www.imra.org.il

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