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March 16, 1984 - Image 18

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1984-03-16

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

18

Friday, March 16,, 198/4,: t

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Egypt Denies Wooing Arab
With Canceling Israeli Pact

WASHINGTON (JTA) —
President Hosni Mubarak
of Egypt denied that he
would cancel Egypt's peace
treaty with Israel as a
means of regaining mem-
bership in the Arab League.
"If this is the way to join
the Arab League, to cancel
our agreement, I tell you
frankly we do not want to
join," he said in an inter-
view from Cairo on the
CBS-TV program "Face the
Nation." While calling
President Hafez Assad of
Syria a "good man,"
Mubarak rejected the
suggestion that Assad can
force Egypt to abrogate its
peace treaty with Israel as
Syria did with Lebanon.
That country broke its May
17, 1983 agreement with Is-
rael earlier this month.
"Whatever 'we decide we
don't change," the Egyptian
President declared. "This
agreement is constitution-
ally approved in this coun-
try."
Mubarak seemed evasive
about reports that he had
told King Hassan of
Morocco last year that
Camp David was dead. He
said today that "Camp
David is the only document
which is agreed upon" by Is-
rael, the United States and
an Arab country.
At the same time,
Mubarak said that he would
not send back Egypt's am-
bassador to Israel until Is-
rael withdraws completely
from Lebanon and begins
some movement on the
Palestinian issue. He said
he did not want "cold rela-

tions" with any country, in-
cluding Israel. He noted
that he has not ejected Is-
rael's ambassador to Egypt
or closed the Israeli Em-
bassy in Cairo.

But Mubarak charged
that it was Israel, not
Egypt, which was violating
the Camp David agree-
ments. He listed as viola-
tions the "annexation" of
East Jerusalem and the
Golan Heights and the
"freeze" of the autonomy
talks unless some of them
are held in Jerusalem. He
claimed that former Pre-
mier Menahem Begin and
the late President Anwar
Sadat had an agreement
that the talks would not be
held in Jerusalem.

Mubarak said it would be
a "grave mistake" if Con-
gress linked aid to Egypt
with the return of the Egyp-
tian ambassador to Israel,
as some in Congress are
urging. Instead, he said the
U.S. "should persuade" Is-
rael to take the necessary
steps.

In that context, Mubarak
said that when he urged the
U.S. to negotiate with the
Palestine Liberation
Organization at the end of
his recent meeting with
President Ronald Reagan in
Washington, he was not
saying anything he had not
said publicly in Cairo. He
maintained that for King
Hussein of Jordan to enter
negotiations with Israel, he
needs the support of both
the U.S. and Egypt.

Patt Sees Need for Changes
in Israel-Egypt Trade Policy

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JERUSALEM (JTA) —
Minister of Commerce Gi-
deon Patt has expressed re-
gret that the Egyptian gov-
ernment refused to divorce
trade relations from its
political differences with Is-
rael.
Patt returned from an of-
ficial visit to Cairo
this week, _predicted no
early improvement in the
ties between the two coun-
tries.
Patt had attended the
opening of an international
trade fair in Cairo as the
guest of Egypt's Economics
Minister, Mustapha Said.
He had lengthy discussions
with Deputy Premier and
Foreign Minister Kamal
Hassan Ali and Minister of
State for Foreign Affairs
Butros Ghali, in addition to
his talks with Said.
The Egyptians, Patt said,
reject Israel's approach
which would separate trade
from political issues such as
the Israeli presence in
Lebanon, the Palestinian
autonomy talks, the bound-
ary dispute at Taba and
other matters that have
soured relations between
Jerusalem and Cairo. De-
clining trade between the
two countries is directly re-
lated to Egypt's unhappi-
ness over the state of politi-
cal relations, Patt said.
He blamed this "linkage

for the drop in Israeli ex-
ports to Egypt from $25 mil-
lion in 1982 to half that sum
last year. Egyptian exports
to Israel remained static at
$5 million during both
years.
According to Patt, the
Egyptians are only harming
themselves. He cited as
"economic absurdities" the-
fact that Cairo now imports
chicks from Europe at 55
cents each whereas it used
to buy them from Israel at
30.5 cents a piece. Morever,
up to 40 percent of the
European birds do not sur-
vive the trip to Egypt. The
mortality rate of chicks
bought in Israel was much
lower, he said.

Israel Rebukes
Arab Leaders
Who Met Arafat

TEL AVIV (JTA) — West
Bank Arab leaders who met
with Palestine Liberation
Organization chief Yasir
Arafat in Amman, Jordan,
last week despite an official
ban on contacts with the
PLO, have been repri-
manded by the head of the
Israeli civil administration
in the territory.
But no further action will
be taken against them, ac-
cording to Binyamin Ben-
Eliezer, _coordinator of ac-
tivities Tor the West' Bank.

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