ويكيليكس يفجر مفاجاءة سوزان مبارك كانت مسحيحية وكنت ذو نفوذ كبير | مدونة شبكة العالم

ويكيليكس يفجر مفاجاءة سوزان مبارك كانت مسحيحية وكنت ذو نفوذ كبير






Parts of the document by the Chief of Mission at the U.S. Embassy in Cairo, Ambassador, "Gordon Gray", dated May 18, 2005 number (05CAIRO3807)


- Suzanne Mubarak said that had "played a prominent role within the governmental and non-governmental organizations" which focuses on issues of education and literacy  


فى مفاجأة من العيار الثقيل أكد موقع ويكيليكس wikileaks أن سوزان ثابت إبراهيم زوجة الرئيس السابق محمد حسنى مبارك مسيحية الديانة

أجزاء من الوثيقة التى كتبها رئيس البعثة فى السفارة الأمريكية بالقاهرة السفير جوردون جراى بتاريخ 18 مايو 2005 برقم 05CAIRO3807

-قال إن سوزان مبارك لديها دور بارز داخل المنظمات الحكومية وغير الحكومية التى تركز على قضايا التعليم ومحو الأمية
-وأكد أن سوزان ثابت إبراهيم
قرينة الرئيس السابق حسنى مبارك مسيحية الديانة

-ووصفها بأنها نشيطة وشهيرة وأنها مضيفة كريمة

-وقال أن سوزان تتمتع بـنفوذ كبير فى السياسة الداخلية 

- The firm that Susan Ibrahim
Wife of former President Hosni Mubarak "Christian religion"

- As "an active and popular" and "generous host"


- And said that Susan has considerable influence in domestic politics

نص الوثيقة كما جاء في موقع ويكيليكس (الوثيقة الأمريكية التى جاءت بتاريخ 18 مايو 2005 برقم   


05CAIRO3807
    Viewing cable 05CAIRO3807, THE FIRST LADY'S VISIT TO EGYPT
    UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 04 CAIRO 003807

    SIPDIS

    SENSITIVE

    E.O. 12958: N/A
    TAGS: OVIP OTRA PREL EG
    SUBJECT: THE FIRST LADY'S VISIT TO EGYPT

    Sensitive but unclassified. Please protect accordingly.

    ¶1. (SBU) Embassy Cairo warmly welcomes the visit of First
    Lady Laura Bush to Egypt. This visit is an opportunity for
    the U.S. to emphasize for the Egyptian public and its
    leadership our concern over the essential societal issues of
    education and literacy. Egypt's first lady, Suzanne Mubarak,
    who has a well-earned prominent role in governmental and
    non-governmental organizations focused in these areas, will
    join Mrs. Bush for much of her program. The program will
    also include an opportunity to meet with some of Egypt's
    prominent women activists.

    -------------------
    Schedule highlights
    -------------------

    ¶2. (SBU) The First Lady's schedule will include events in
    both Cairo and Alexandria. Key components of the Cairo stop
    include a joint TV taping with Mrs. Mubarak of Egypt's
    Arabic-******** version of Sesame Street (Alam Sim-sim),
    interviews with U.S. morning show hosts against the backdrop
    of the Sphinx and the Great Pyramids of Giza, a lunch hosted
    by Mrs. Mubarak for leading women on establishment NGOs, a
    visit to a "one room girls' school" designed to bring girls
    who have been denied educational opportunity back to school,
    an Embassy community "meet and greet," and an Embassy-hosted
    event with leading reform-oriented women. The First Lady's
    visit to Cairo, home to almost 20 million of Egypt's 72
    million inhabitants, will receive wide coverage and provide
    her with a snapshot of educational and women's issues facing
    Egyptian society.

    ¶3. (SBU) The First Lady's second day will focus on
    Alexandria, Egypt's "second city" with its rich Mediterranean
    history. The First Lady will visit a secondary school and
    the Alexandria Library before departing Egypt.

    ---------------
    Suzanne Mubarak
    ---------------

    ¶3. (SBU) Suzanne Mubarak is an active and very public first
    lady. She will be a gracious hostess. Her many public
    appearances in support of charitable causes, including
    frequent overseas trips for international conferences, get
    prominent play in the Egyptian media and she wields
    considerable clout in domestic politics. This is
    particularly true when it comes to promoting education and
    literacy, issues also supported by President Mubarak.

    ¶4. (SBU) Mrs. Mubarak's primary areas of interest focus on
    girls' education, women's rights, literacy, social welfare,
    and health care. She is the head of the Egyptian Red
    Crescent Society (similar to the American Red Cross), the
    National Council for Women, and the National Council on
    Childhood and Motherhood (NCCM), among myriad other titles.
    As the President's wife, she takes on high-profile causes.
    Recently, she took a lead role in getting the large, upper
    class suburb of Heliopolis (where she and President Mubarak
    live) spruced up for the neighborhood's 100th anniversary
    celebrations.

    ¶5. (SBU) With a particular emphasis on women's and
    children's issues, Mrs. Mubarak has attended the 1995 Women's
    conference in Beijing, headed the Egyptian delegation to a
    special UN session on Women in 2000, joined prominently in
    the 2001 Arab Women's summit, participated in the 1990 World
    Summit on Children, and has sponsored many literacy and
    education related programs in Egypt. She also has actively
    supported peace initiatives, to include humanitarian efforts
    in support of the Palestinians, including sponsoring caravans
    of basic food supplies during the height of the intifada.

    ¶6. (SBU) Mrs. Mubarak is Christian, while her husband is
    Muslim. She has two children: the single Gamal (in his early
    40's) who is the head of the ruling National Democratic
    Party's Policies Committee and an older son, Alaa who focuses
    on business interests. Married (to former UNICEF official
    Heidi Rasekh), Alaa has not been involved in politics. His
    two sons are President Mubarak's only grandchildren.

    -----------
    Cairo sites
    -----------

    ¶7. (SBU) In Cairo, the First Lady will be greeted by
    Suzanne Mubarak at President Mubarak's official palace for a
    short courtesy call before proceeding to a joint taping of
    Egypt's Arabic ******** TV version of Sesame Street, "Alam
    Simsim." The program, which was launched with USAID support
    in 1997, is extremely popular in Egypt and is rebroadcast
    around the Arab world. One of the program's principle aims
    is to promote literacy. Mrs. Mubarak appeared on the program
    in 2003, reading a book to one of the muppet-like characters.


    ¶8. (SBU) After appearing on U.S. TV shows, Mrs. Bush will
    be hosted at the historic Mena House Hotel adjacent to the
    Pyramids. Egyptian Guests at the lunch will include female
    representatives of the boards of various non-Governmental
    organizations that Mrs. Mubarak has taken a leading role in
    promoting. After lunch Mrs. Mubarak will accompany The First
    Lady to the Abu Sir Girls' School. This school, established
    by the NCCM, is part of a country-wide effort to provide
    girls in rural areas the opportunity to attend school. The
    schools use modern curriculum, versus the standard
    memorization used in many Egyptian schools and bring girls of
    different ages together in one classroom with the goal of
    reintegrating them into public secondary schools at age 14.

    ¶9. (SBU) The First Lady will also participate in an Embassy
    community meet-and-greet and an Embassy-hosted event for
    leading women involved in reform in Egypt. These women,
    representing a wide cross-section of society are involved in
    projects ranging from political reform to education.


    ----------------
    Alexandria sites
    ----------------

    ¶10. (SBU) In Alexandria the primary stop will be at the
    Library, known as the "Bibliotheca Alexandrina." The
    library's inspiration is the ancient library built by Ptolemy
    I in ancient Alexandria around 295 BC, which epitomized the
    intellectual splendor of the classical world. In the words
    of Mrs. Mubarak, the Bibliotheca "seeks nothing less than to
    recapture the spirit of the ancient library of Alexandria,
    center of knowledge and of ecumenism of the ancient world."
    Opened in 2002, after a 28-year effort, and at cost of USD
    220 million--mostly donated by foreign governments--the
    building is an architectural and engineering marvel. It
    includes museums and galleries, research facilities and
    auditoria, as well as the largest reading room in the world,
    the size of New York's Grand Central Station. Director
    Ismail Serageldin, a former World Bank Vice President, has
    used the Library to host reform conferences including two on
    reform in the Arab world and seeks to foster its image as a
    "clearing house of progressive ideas." He has an ambitious
    agenda of projects but funding remains a key issue: although
    the library's ****ves are designed to hold eight million
    volumes, they currently have only 350,000.

    ¶11. (SBU) The First Lady will also visit a secondary school
    which is part of the Egyptian Government's efforts to give
    local communities more power over education. This pilot
    school, part of a USAID-funded project, supports modern
    teaching methods and greater input from parents and community
    leaders into the education process, has the potential to
    serve as a model throughout the Arab World.

    ---------------------------------
    Civil society issues facing Egypt
    ---------------------------------

    ¶12. (SBU) Egypt claims a proud history of developing
    democratic institutions, such as an elected parliament
    (People's Assembly and Shura Council, although two-thirds of
    the latter's membership are appointed) and an independent
    judiciary. Yet, the public is becoming significantly more
    vocal about demands for more open governance. Recent street
    protests are departing from the traditional focus on disdain
    for U.S. policies in Israel or Iraq and rather energetically
    pointing to the need for domestic political reform.
    President Mubarak's decision to amend the constitution to
    allow for competitive presidential elections, which has been
    endorsed by the parliament and is on the agenda for a May 25
    referendum, has met with a mix of praise and calls for more
    meaningful reform. The decision opens a new door in a nation
    which has never directly elected its leader. Opposition
    figures, however, point to "high hurdles" governing the
    process of registering candidates.

    ¶13. (SBU) The Egyptian government, in trying to strike a
    balance between demands for political reform and ensuring
    stability, has stated that it will not permit public
    demonstrations to turn violent; many would argue that the
    government is already too restrictive in regulating
    demonstrations. The government's perceived constraints on
    opening the political process too quickly include concerns
    that religiously oriented groups, particularly the powerful
    Muslim Brotherhood (outlawed but partially tolerated), might
    take advantage of that process for their own purposes. The
    tension between public desire for more openness and the need
    for stability will continue to feature in the political
    dialogue in Cairo.

    ¶14. (SBU) Some specific benchmarks that the U.S. would
    welcome are revocation of the emergency law which has been in
    effect for decades, participation of international monitors
    in the upcoming elections (to help bestow international
    legitimacy on the process), expanded religious freedom for
    all faiths, and greater latitude for NGO's to actively foster
    civil society and promote broader participation in governance.

    -----------------------------
    Economic and regional con****
    -----------------------------

    ¶15. (SBU) In spite of increased public interest in domestic
    politics this spring, the primary concern of most Egyptians
    continues to be their economic well being. Egypt's new Prime
    Minister, who assumed office last July and is visiting the
    U.S. May 14-20, has embarked on a series of economic reform
    measures that are designed to boost Egypt's prospects for a
    prosperous future. Ongoing reforms include changes in
    customs regulations and the corporate tax code, each require
    a concerted effort to fully implement here in Egypt.
    Business people hope that the long term benefits of these
    reforms will put Egypt on a stronger economic footing; Egypt
    is also hopeful that negotiations for a free trade agreement
    with the U.S. are on the near horizon. While working to
    improve the broad economic parameters which drive prosperity,
    the Egyptian government is also reluctant to reduce subsidies
    on basic commodities for its vast population; the people have
    come to expect a certain "boost" from the government and many
    will continue to judge the success of the regime on
    short-term pocketbook issues.

    ¶16. (SBU) The Palestinian issue is the major regional
    political issue influencing Egyptian thinking. Since
    President Sadat's courageous decision to visit Jerusalem in
    1977, Egypt has been more engaged with both sides of the
    Israeli-Palestinian conflict than any other regional player.
    President Mubarak and his cabinet maintain an active dialogue
    with Israeli counterparts and look for practical ways to
    bring security to the Palestinian territories. In the public
    political psyche, the Palestinian issue is as much a domestic
    concern as a foreign policy issue - perceived grievances of
    the Palestinian population resonate deeply in Egypt and the
    Arab world.

    --------------------
    Educational concerns
    --------------------

    ¶17. (SBU) Education is an area in which Egypt faces the
    daunting task of preparing over 600,000 young people annually
    to enter the workforce. The sheer numbers of school children
    nearly overwhelm an education system that many Egyptians
    agree needs extensive modernization. Large portions of the
    national curriculum, despite recent efforts at modernization,
    remain woefully out of date and the public education system
    is plagued by drastic resource shortfalls, a serious capacity
    deficit in its teaching corps, overcrowded and dilapidated
    facilities, and pervasive corruption. Experts agree that
    this system leaves Egyptian graduates ill equipped to compete
    in the global marketplace. USAID's mission in Egypt contains
    a substantial program to address Egypt's educational needs.
    The First Lady will be visiting two schools assisted by USAID
    in a "pilot schools" program that aims to introduce an
    entirely new model for public education in Egypt.

    ¶18. (SBU) Egypt has a tradition of strong women in
    leadership positions that dates back to Pharonic times. The
    First Lady will be meeting with many of Egypt's most
    influential women, many of whom may suggest that Egypt's
    treatment of women is on par with more developed countries.
    However, international studies continue to ******** the
    serious challenges confronting Egyptian women, including
    credible estimates which put female illiteracy as high as 60
    percent. Improvements in the delivery of quality education
    goes hand in hand with the development of a more robust role
    for women in Egypt's future.

    -------------------
    Impact of the visit
    -------------------

    ¶19. (SBU) The First Lady's visit to Egypt will reinforce
    U.S. support for the critical issues of education and
    literacy, will underline our commitment to the region, and
    will present a positive image of U.S. involvement in the Arab
    World. Mrs. Mubarak is looking forward to hosting the visit,
    and the Egyptian Press will devote considerable coverage to
    the two-day visit.


    Visit Embassy Cairo's Classified ***site:
    http://www.state.sgov.gov/p/nea/cairo

    You can also access this site through the
    State Department's Classified SIPRNET ***site.

    GRAY


    فيما قالت وثيقة أخرى بتاريخ 26 مايو 2005 برقم (05CAIRO3953)

    قالت ان سوزان مبارك عقدت أجتماع سرى يوم 23 مايو 2005 مع زوجة الرئيس الأمريكى لورا بوش
    وليلى كمال الدين صلاح، زوجة وزير الخارجية الأسبق أحمد أبوالغيط فى قصر "الاتحادية"

    وفى هذا الأثناء قامت سوزان ولورا وصور معن جزءاً جديداً من برنامج "عالم سمسم" بصحبة دمية كرتونية اسمها "خوخة" بهدف الحديث عن أهمية القراءة

    <b>
    نص الوثيقة الثانية بتاريخ 26 مايو 2005 برقم (05CAIRO3953) كما جاء في موقع ويكيليكس:

        Viewing cable 05CAIRO3953, THE FIRST LADY'S VISIT TO EGYPT, MAY 23-24
        UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 02 CAIRO 003953

        SIPDIS

        WHITE HOUSE FOR THE FIRST LADY'S CHIEF OF STAFF (ANITA
        MCBRIDE)
        NEA FOR PDAS CHENEY
        NSC STAFF FOR POUNDS

        E.O. 12958: N/A
        TAGS: OVIP OTRA PREL EG
        SUBJECT: THE FIRST LADY'S VISIT TO EGYPT, MAY 23-24


        -------
        Summary
        -------

        ¶1. First Lady Laura Bush's May 23-24 visit to Egypt was a
        public diplomacy triumph and contributed significantly to USG
        efforts to promote education, reform, and the role of women.
        In Cairo, her visit included meetings with Egyptian First
        Lady Suzanne Mubarak and prominent female representatives of
        Egyptian civil society. She toured a girls school and filmed
        a segment on promoting literacy on Alam Simsim, the Egyptian
        version of Sesame Street. She highlighted Egypt's cultural
        heritage by taping the American morning shows in front of the
        Pyramids and by touring an archeological site. In
        Alexandria, Mrs. Bush visited a school and the Bibliotheca
        Alexandrina. Press coverage of the visit was generally
        positive. End summary.

        -------------------------
        Meeting with Mrs. Mubarak
        -------------------------

        ¶2. After being greeted on arrival on May 23 by Mrs. Leila
        Kamal Eldin Salah, wife of Egyptian Foreign Minister Ahmed
        Aboul Gheit, Mrs. Bush proceeded to the Ittihadiyyah Palace
        for a brief private meeting with Mrs. Mubarak. The two First
        Ladies were then joined by Mrs. Salah, the First Lady's Chief
        of Staff Anita McBride, NEA PDAS Liz Cheney, and Mrs. Connie
        Gray (wife of the Charge) for a meeting.

        -------------------
        Alam Simsim Filming
        -------------------

        ¶3. After meeting at the palace, Mrs. Bush and Mrs. Mubarak
        visited the set of Alam Simsim, the Egyptian version of
        Sesame Street. Established with USAID funding in 1997, Alam
        Simsim focuses on the promotion of literacy and girls'
        education. The two First Ladies filmed a segment with
        Khokha, the three-year-old female muppet, on the importance
        of reading. The segment will be seen by Alam Simsim's
        viewership of eighty-five percent of Egyptian preschoolers
        and fifty-four percent of their mothers. (The current season
        has ended, but the Ministry of Information may seek another
        opportunity to air the segment soon with the two First
        Ladies).

        -------------------------------
        Morning Shows and Women's Lunch
        -------------------------------

        ¶4. With the Sphinx and two of the Pyramids as a backdrop,
        Mrs. Bush participated in three American network morning
        shows and an interview with CNN. At the nearby Mena House
        hotel, Mrs. Mubarak hosted Mrs. Bush for a lunch with
        prominent Egyptian women. Attendees included the wives of
        ministers, leading academics, and senior representatives from
        the National Council of Women and the National Council for
        Childhood and Motherhood.

        ---------------------
        Visit to Girls School
        ---------------------

        ¶5. Next, Mrs. Bush and Mrs. Mubarak visited the Abu Sir Girl
        Friendly School in a rural area of the Giza Governorate to
        highlight the importance of providing educational
        opportunities to Egyptian girls previously kept out of school
        for social or economic reasons. The Abu Sir School is a
        model for offering the opportunity for the girls to catch-up
        and eventually re-integrate into regular schools. This
        unique school avoids rote learning and instead focuses on
        encouraging creative thinking. As Mrs. Bush later remarked
        to Embassy staff and to Rod Eichler, the Managing Director of
        Apache Corporation, which funded the construction of the
        school, the Abu Sir School could be a model for
        re-introducing education to girls in Afghanistan.

        ---------------
        Excavation Tour
        ---------------

        ¶6. Mrs. Bush ended her day with a tour of a newly discovered
        excavation site with Dr. Zahi Hawass, Secretary General of
        the Egyptian Supreme Council of Antiquities. Statues found
        in the excavation lead archeologists to believe that the site
        has never been plundered by tomb raiders. Mrs. Bush held a
        brief press availability at the site.

        ---------------------
        Civil Society Meeting
        ---------------------

        ¶7. The next morning (May 24), Mrs. Bush held a meet and
        greet with Embassy staff to thank them and their families for
        their government service. Mrs. Bush met with prominent women
        activists, and her formal comments recognized the assembled
        women for their contributions to Egyptian society. Mrs. Bush
        then departed Cairo for Alexandria.

        ----------------
        Al-Seyouf School
        ----------------
        ¶8. Mrs. Bush's first stop in Alexandria was at the Al-Seyouf
        school complex, a model participant in the Alexandria
        Governorate's school reform program and a recipient of USAID
        educational reform funding. During the visit, she
        participated in an English ******** teaching demonstration,
        reviewed library research projects, and listened to
        instrumental and choral music performances. The stop helped
        to publicize USG commitment to educational reform in a
        setting especially appropriate to the First Lady's background
        as a teacher and librarian.

        -----------------------
        Bibliotheca Alexandrina
        -----------------------

        ¶9. Mrs. Bush then proceeded to the Bibliotheca Alexandrina,
        a massive complex including a library, academic research
        facilities, a conference center, and a variety of
        technologically-advanced cultural heritage preservation
        projects - i.e., the GOE's attempt at resurrecting the
        ancient library of Alexandria. Her guided tour included the
        library stacks, an IT-enhanced project encouraging children
        to read, the antiquities and manu******s collections, and an
        interactive, nine-screen historical and cultural video
        demonstration on Egypt. The visit also included a stop at a
        display commemorating the 2004 signing of the Alexandria
        Declaration, a ******** calling for political and economic
        reform across the Arab world, and the First Lady's viewing of
        Islamic religious manu******s and an electronic, interactive
        Qur'an.

        ---------------
        Press Reactions
        ---------------

        ¶10. On the evening of May 23, Nile TV reported on Mrs.
        Bush's visit to Alam Simsim and to the Abu Sir Girl Friendly
        School, emphasizing the First Lady's commitment to education
        for young girls and literacy. The following day, Mrs. Bush's
        visits to Alam Simsim and Abu Sir School were replayed on
        Egyptian TV (ETV), along with her visit to the Pyramids and
        her comments at the site. ETV reported on May 25 the First
        Lady's meeting with Egyptian women leaders at the U.S.
        Embassy, as well as her visits to a school in Alexandria and
        the Bibliotheca.

        ¶11. In its May 24 edition, Al-Ahram published a photo above
        the fold of Mrs. Bush and Mrs. Mubarak seated together under
        the headline: "Suzanne Mubarak Receives Laura Bush. The Two
        Attend Taping of Children's Program." The English-********
        Egyptian Gazette published a photo of the two First Ladies at
        Alam Simsim, seated at a table reading with the muppet
        character Khokha. Photos of the two First Ladies at the
        Bibliotheca Alexandrina ran on May 25 with brief articles
        emphasizing the importance of women's role in society.
        Additional photos on May 25 in pro-government dailies
        Al-Ahram and Al-Akhbar showed Mrs. Bush visiting Al-Seyouf
        School and the Bibliotheca.


        Visit Embassy Cairo's Classified ***site:
        http://www.state.sgov.gov/p/nea/cairo

        You can also access this site through the
        State Department's Classified SIPRNET ***site.

        GRAY