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How seething Egypt surprised the world and sealed Shalit deal

October 19, 2011 10:49
Demonstrators protesting last month in Tahrir Square - where the revolution began - against the military government's retention of emergency laws

By

Anshel Pfeffer,

Anshel Pfeffer

1 min read

On October 9, in the most violent demonstrations in Egypt since the revolution, the Christian Coptic minority took to the streets to protest.

Twenty-four civilians and soldiers were killed on that day. But throughout the rioting and the bloody reprisals by the military, Major General Murad Muwafi, director of Egypt's feared Mukhabarat intelligence service remained closeted away.

He was busy dealing separately with two delegations, one Israeli and one Palestinian, and putting the final touches to the prisoner swap.

Ever since President Hosni Mubarak was forced from office eight months ago, Israel's ties with Egypt have appeared to deteriorate in a one-way, downward spiral. Last month, when Egyptian civilians stormed Israel's embassy in Cairo, trapping six security guards inside, Defence Minister Ehud Barak could not reach his counterpart, Field Marshal Mohamed Tantawi, on the phone. Only American intervention saved the Israeli guards.

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