Why is Saudi supporting Egyptian army's massacre of people?

Logic says that “khadim” of harmain would be against an army that is hated by many for being secular. But instead that khadim actually goes against those willing to make Egypt more Islamic. Not only that, Saudis side with army even after the massacre of thousands of people.

I don’t understand why is that?!

http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/middle-east/2013/08/16/Saudi-King-Abdullah-declares-support-of-Egypt-against-terrorism.html

Saudi King Abdullah declares support for Egypt against terrorism

Friday, 16 August 2013

**Saudi Arabia’s King Abdullah bin Abdul Aziz **announced on Friday that **the kingdom supports Egypt in its fight “against terrorism.”
**King Abdullah said Egypt’s stability is being targeted by “haters,” warning that anyone interfering in Egypt’s internal affairs is “igniting sedition.” King Abdullah added that Egypt is able to cross to safety.The Egyptian presidency hailed King Abdullah’s support, saying Egypt will “never” forget his “historic stance.

Both Jordan and the UAE also praised King Abdullah’s support for the Egyptian government.Saleh al-Qallab, a Jordanian political analyst, told Al Arabiya that Saudi Arabia will not leave the Egyptian military alone. “The situation in Egypt is very critical and Saudi Arabia has put itself on the right side of history,” he said.
Qallab added that King Abdullah had to “take a historical step and side with the correct form of Islam.”

Other analysts see that the King’s speech is ‘directed against the blatant Western support of the Muslim Brotherhood’, adding that the World’s powers should leave Egyptians to solve their own affairs.

Violence between Muslim Brotherhood supporters and Egypt’s security forces renewed on Friday with tens of people reported killed nationwide.

Re: Why is Saudi supporting Egyptian army's massacre of people?

Day before yesterday Army went into a mosque to kill these 'terrorists'. Heartening to see khadim e harmain sharifain endorsing such a religious move by army.

Shameful

Re: Why is Saudi supporting Egyptian army's massacre of people?

That was my point on another thread, the US gives a billion dollars in aid to the Egyptian army and gets accussed of*meddling*in their affairs whereas the gulf states give twelve billion dollars in aid to the military coup leaders and nobody hardly raises their voice.

Re: Why is Saudi supporting Egyptian army’s massacre of people?

I really can’t stand these Saudis (Royal Family), they are worse than the US to me, coz they are an Islamic nation, but they are the ones who are meddling in everything, throwing around their stupid money all over the place to wreak havoc in other Muslim nations…

Here is some clips..first one is a woman who called in to George Galloway’s show :

next one is George Galloway giving a pc of his mind to a Saudi

I love the second one…

Time the Muslim world woke up and recognised who the real snake is!

Re: Why is Saudi supporting Egyptian army's massacre of people?

It is supporting to crush a movement which resulted in downfall of a very old tyranny/dictatorship. They want rest of "Islamic" dictatorship nations to know that these "springs" will result in likes of Syria, Egypt i.e. the dictators won't let go of their powers that easily. They want to crush hopes of rest of nations of having a voice, of a revolution.

Re: Why is Saudi supporting Egyptian army’s massacre of people?

Did the Saudi regime not fund the slaughter of Iraq in Gulf War 1 they paid over $135 billion for it to the US.

Gulf War’s Cost to Arabs Estimated at $620 Billion - NYTimes.com

Did the Saudi regime give refuge and facilities for the American forces to attack Iraq and other nations from its soil on many occasions?

Did the Saudi not support Hosni Mubarak regime up to the last minute just like the United states, you even had Joe biden claiming hosni mubarak not a dictator?

The saudi regime is partner of the United States and will be its chief supporter in anything and everything this is the role of a client state.

And people still believe this saudi is islamic state defender of the faith, nice joke.

Re: Why is Saudi supporting Egyptian army's massacre of people?

Allaah Egyptian muslims ki hifazat kre
Dunya k samne asl chehre benaqab ab ho rey hain , jb keh ye bht pehle se hi clear thy !

Re: Why is Saudi supporting Egyptian army's massacre of people?

Answer1
They will support killing of any one as the policy is to protect the monarchy.

Answer2
May be (Inshallah)their end is near.

Re: Why is Saudi supporting Egyptian army's massacre of people?

Saudi and Israel are exactly same......... the left and right nuts of amreeka.

Re: Why is Saudi supporting Egyptian army's massacre of people?

What I find funny is that people here are condemning Saudi Arabia for siding with Egyptian military in killing Islamists in Egypt, but the same people will never condemn Saudia Arabia for exporting terrorism in the name of Islam to Pakistan. Either Saudis are good or bad? Which one is it?

Btw, Saudis are backing cannibals in Syria, too.

Re: Why is Saudi supporting Egyptian army’s massacre of people?

OMG you blieve in yahodi newspaper? Its must be a propaganda.

Re: Why is Saudi supporting Egyptian army's massacre of people?

you believe in god? after ready your consistent secular rants I'm stunned

Re: Why is Saudi supporting Egyptian army's massacre of people?

These people do not hesitate in talking the side of haq.

Saudis(monarchy) are bad in my opinion but they at times take side of haq to get soem benefit. Syrian mujahideen(may ALLAH give them speedy victory over the cannibals nussairees). They/amaratis and Iran are involved in fuelling secterian war in pakistan/Iraq/Syria and else where in the world.

kabhi kabhi yahoodi bhi sahi baat kar daita hain, kionkay wo shah hain shah kay wafdar nahi hay :)

Re: Why is Saudi supporting Egyptian army's massacre of people?

What I believe in or not is not relevant to this discussion. And what are you studded about? I was merely asking a question.

Re: Why is Saudi supporting Egyptian army's massacre of people?

Yeah, siding with haq & killing 40k Pakistanis by Islamists funded with Saudi petrodollars. That is totally halal, but if Saudis are supporting Egyptian military against Islamists in Egypt thats totally not haq.

Amaratis and Iran? What evidence do you have?

Re: Why is Saudi supporting Egyptian army's massacre of people?

I can't wait for the day when the monster unleashed by Saudis in rest of the Muslim world comes back & devours them.

Re: Why is Saudi supporting Egyptian army's massacre of people?

That is another topic and has been discussed. Who are you blaming to by saying killing 40k pakistanis by saudi petrodollars?

Asan si baat hay indiscriminate killing of civilians done by any one kaffir/muslim/alqaeda/pak army/TTP is bad and has to be condemned.

One of the reasons to destabilise baluchistan is due to gawadar port which will impact bander abbas,chahbahar and uae ports and the involvment of post shah iran in fuelling and igniting secterian violance (which in reaction created sunni violent organisations) is known to all - may be those whose knowledge end with english news papers dont know about it.
*
Janay na janay gul khan na janay jug tau sara janay hay*

Re: Why is Saudi supporting Egyptian army's massacre of people?

Meer ki rooh taRap gai hogi

Re: Why is Saudi supporting Egyptian army’s massacre of people?

http://www.nytimes.com/2013/08/19/world/middleeast/morsi-supporters-vow-to-defy-egypts-military.html?_r=0

CAIRO — The Egyptian government acknowledged that its security forces had killed 36 Islamists in its custody on Sunday, as the country’s military leaders and Islamists vowed to keep up their fight over Egypt’s future.

The deaths were the fourth mass killing of civilians since the military took control on July 3, but the first time so many had died while in government custody.

The news of the deaths came on a day when there appeared to be a pause in the street battles that had claimed more than 1,000 lives since Wednesday, most of them Islamists and their supporters gunned down by security forces. The Islamists took measures on Sunday to avoid further confrontations, including canceling several protests over the military’s ouster of a democratically elected Islamist-led government.

While confirming the killings of the detainees on Sunday, the Ministry of the Interior said the deaths were the consequence of an escape attempt by Islamist prisoners. But officials of the main Islamist movement, the Muslim Brotherhood, described the deaths as “assassinations,” and said that the victims, which it said numbered 52, had been shot and tear-gassed through the windows of a locked prison van.

The killings were the latest indication that Egypt is careering into uncharted territory, with neither side willing to back down, Egyptians increasingly split over the way forward and no obvious political solution in sight. The government is considering banning the Brotherhood, which might force the group underground but would not unravel it from the fabric of society it has been part of for eight decades.

Foreign governments also remain divided over the increasingly bloody showdown. United States officials said they had taken preliminary steps to withhold financial aid to the Egyptian government, though not crucial military aid, and the European Union announced Sunday that it would “urgently review” its relations with the country, saying the interim government bore the responsibility for bringing the violence to an end.

But the Egyptian military retains the support of the oil-rich states of the Persian Gulf, especially Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, which have pledged billions in aid to the new government.

Although it appeared that security forces were more restrained on Sunday — with no immediate reports of killings in the streets — Maj. Gen. Abdul-Fattah el-Sisi, the country’s military leader, spoke out on national television in defiant and uncompromising tones, condemning the Islamists again as “terrorists,” but promising to restore democracy to the country.

The government has been pursuing a relentless campaign to paint the Islamists as a threat, and has increasingly lashed out at journalists who do not echo that line, especially the foreign news media.

Acknowledging but rejecting the widespread international criticism of the security force’s actions, the general said that “citizens invited the armed forces to deal with terrorism, which was a message to the world and the foreign media, who denied millions of Egyptians their free will and their true desire to change.”

The Muslim Brotherhood had announced that it would stage nine protest marches in and around Cairo on Sunday as part of its “week of departure” campaign that began Friday to protest the military’s deposing of the country’s first democratically elected president, Mohamed Morsi.

All but three of the marches were canceled, and even those that continued were rerouted to avoid snipers who were waiting ahead, along with bands of government supporters, the police and the military, some in tanks. The authorities, too, appeared to avoid aggressively enforcing martial law provisions, including a 7 p.m. curfew, that would have led to clashes with the protesters.

Protesters who gathered at the Al Rayyan mosque in the Maadi area of Cairo had aimed to march from there to the Constitutional Court, Egypt’s supreme court, whose chief justice, Adli Mansour, has been appointed interim president by the country’s military rulers.

Marching in the 100-degree late afternoon heat, the protesters were fatalistic about the threats they faced. Mohammad Abdel Tawab, who said his brother was killed Friday at Ramses Square, had heard the reports of pro-government snipers and gangs ahead. “They will kill us, I know, everybody knows, but it doesn’t matter,” he said.

A woman, Samira, dressed in an abaya with only her eyes visible, marched holding her 1-year-old daughter, Sama. “Whatever will happen to us, will happen,” she said. “God has written it already.”

Protest leaders, however, were more cautious, and repeatedly rerouted the march at the last moment to avoid confrontations, turning down narrow lanes where residents in upper stories sprayed them with water — it was not always clear whether the gesture was in support or in contempt.

In the last mile, the leader of the march, Mohammad Salwan, ordered everyone to get on the metro train for the final approach to the court, and then the protesters dissipated instead of trying to breach barricades set up by pro-military factions.

“We know there are snipers along the route, and we want to avoid losing any more lives,” he said.

Similarly, a protest in Giza was called off after it was threatened by military supporters, and the only other one to be held was in a strongly pro-Brotherhood area, Helwan, in south Cairo. Another march, to the presidential palace in Heliopolis, was also canceled.

“The leadership decided things were getting out of control and they couldn’t afford more casualties,” said a Brotherhood member who writes for one of the group’s publications and who spoke on the condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak for the organization.

Even on Saturday, which had seemed relatively quiet, 79 people were killed in violence around Egypt, according to the government press agency, MENA, in an announcement on Sunday. It provided few details.

Brotherhood leaders in particular have paid a heavy price, with the children of many top officials among the dead. They include Asmaa el-Beltagy, the daughter of a senior Brotherhood leader, Mohamed el-Beltagy, killed at Rabaa Square on Wednesday; Ammar Badie, 38, son of Brotherhood spiritual leader Mohamed Badie, shot during clashes on Friday in Ramses Square; Habiba Abd el-Aziz, 26, the daughter of Ahmed Abd el-Aziz, the media consultant to ousted President Morsi, killed at Rabaa from a bullet wound to the head on Wednesday; and the grandson of the movement’s founder.

There were scant details on the prison killings on Sunday, and no explanation for why the victims were inside a prison van and had reportedly taken a prison official hostage.

The Ministry of the Interior issued conflicting and confusing accounts of what had happened, at one point claiming the prisoners had taken a guard hostage, then saying militants had attacked the prison van to free the prisoners, who were killed in the process, and then saying tear gas being used to suppress the escape had caused the prisoners to suffocate. Later, the ministry claimed the deaths had happened in the prison, not in the van.

The violence came a day after a blistering speech in support of the Muslim Brotherhood by Turkey’s prime minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who likened Egypt’s military leader, General Sisi, to President Bashar al-Assad of Syria.

“There are currently two paths in Egypt: those who follow the pharaoh, and those who follow Moses,” he said. Speaking before the European Union’s announcement of a review of relations, he also criticized other countries’ position regarding the military government.

“The Organization of the Islamic Conference and the European Union have no face left to look at in the mirror,” he said.

Re: Why is Saudi supporting Egyptian army's massacre of people?

Actually calling some one only gul was bad taste here in my opinion.So let meer feel uncomfortable for a while.