Egypt opposition heads turn down Kerry meeting

Egypt opposition heads turn down Kerry meeting

CAIRO - Agence France-Presse
Egypt opposition heads turn down Kerry meeting

Egyptian opposition leader and Nobel Prize laureate Mohamed ElBaradei (C), former presidential candidate Egyptian Member of Parliament Hamdeen Sabbahy (L) and former Arab League secretary general Amr Mussa attend a press conference in Cairo on January 28, 2013. Egypt AFP Photo

An Egyptian opposition head said he and colleague Mohamed ElBaradei have turned down invitations to meet Secretary of State John Kerry when he visits Cairo because of US pressure.
 
Hamdeen Sabahi, a leader of the National Salvation Front (NSF), said late Thursday that he and ElBaradei objected to Washington's call for the opposition to reconsider its boycott of Egypt's parliamentary election in April.
 
Kerry is expected in Egypt over the weekend.
 
"I received an invitation and turned it down, and Dr ElBaradei received an invitation and he turned it down," Sabahi said in an interview with ONTV television channel. "We want to send a message that we reject American pressure," Sabahi added.
 
An aide of another NSF leader, former foreign minister Amr Mussa, said Mussa would also not attend a meeting with Kerry at which the opposition could be pressed to reconsider its boycott.
 
"We see that there is not way we can participate in the election, this is an NSF decision, and the unity of the NSF is our number one priority," the aide told AFP, on condition of anonymity.
 
He said Mussa would instead send a representative.
 
The opposition has sought to ratchet the pressure on Islamist President Mohamed Morsi with a combination of street protests and a boycott of the election, to be held over three months.
 
The NSF had demanded guarantees that the election will be transparent as a condition to participate.
 
It has complained of what it sees as US support for Morsi, whom some NSF members backed in last June's election against ousted leader Hosni Mubarak's last prime minister, Ahmed Shafiq.
 
But they now accuse Morsi of having betrayed the values of the uprising which overthrew Mubarak in early 2011 and having sidelined liberals and Christians since he took power.
 
US President Barack Obama last week told Morsi in a phone conversation that he welcomed his "commitment" to represent all Egyptians but encouraged him and the opposition to find common ground.