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Putin gives Arms and Nuke to Egypt = HUAT!

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http://rt.com/news/231055-putin-sisi-egypt-talks/

Russia to help Egypt build ‘a whole new nuclear power industry’ – Putin
Published time: February 10, 2015 18:23
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February 10, 2015. Russian President Vladimir Putin and Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi make a joint statement following the Russian-Egyptian talks in Cairo. (RIA Novosti/Michael Klimentyev)

February 10, 2015. Russian President Vladimir Putin and Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi make a joint statement following the Russian-Egyptian talks in Cairo. (RIA Novosti/Michael Klimentyev)

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Economy, Egypt, Energy, Investment, Military, Nuclear, Politics, Russia, Terrorism

Russia will contribute to building “a whole new nuclear power industry” in Egypt, President Vladimir Putin has announced as the two countries have signed a number of agreements after a meeting in Cairo.

The leaders of Russia and Egypt have signed “a memorandum of understanding to build the first nuclear plant in [the northern city of] El-Dabaa,” Egyptian President Abdel Fatah al Sisi has told reporters at a news conference at Cairo’s Al Qubba presidential palace.

Russia would contribute not only to the construction of a nuclear power plant, but also staff and scientific research, President Putin said.

"We discussed today the possibility of cooperation in nuclear power engineering," Putin said. "If final decisions are made, they will relate not only to the construction of a nuclear power plant but also to the creation of a whole new nuclear power industry in Egypt."

If successful, the project could cover the Egypt’s necessity for electric energy, Sisi said.

"Russia has a significant experience that it could share with Cairo, and for that Egypt would be very thankful,” he said. “Also, [a nuclear plant] will cover the Egypt’s necessity for electricity.”

More than sixth of the energy produced in egypt is produced by russian company lukoil

— Paula Slier (@PaulaSlier_RT) February 10, 2015

Under the new agreement, Russia’s nuclear agency Rosatom will build two reactors based on “Russian technology,” Rosatom chief Sergey Kirienko said.

Moscow and Cairo have agreed a contract for a total of four units of 1200 MW each.

The new generation plant, Kirienko said, will comply with "post-Fukushima" safety standards.

“We understand the task given by the Egyptian president: to act as quickly as possible. We are ready,” he said.

The first negotiations on the project’s implementation are scheduled as early as next Monday, when “a large group of technical experts” will arrive in Moscow.

“We will negotiate technical and commercial issues,” Kirienko said.

Besides nuclear cooperation, the Egyptian leader and Russia have discussed a broad range of international issues, including joint economic and military-technical collaboration.

The two countries have agreed on establishing a free trade zone with the Russian-led Eurasian Economic Union (EEU) and a Russia industrial zone in the Suez Canal area.

READ MORE: Egypt to join Russia-led Eurasian free trade zone

Also, Russia and Egypt will make efforts to promote a number of investment projects in various sectors, including the transportation, manufacturing and chemical industries. According to Putin, there are already 400 Russian companies operating in Egypt and the two sides have agreed to expand opportunities for small- and medium-sized businesses in Egypt.

Both presidents noted the importance of the tourist industry and expressed their willingness to develop cooperation in this sphere, as a record number of Russian tourists visited Egypt last year.

The two heads of state also discussed possibilities for the Middle East peace process.

“We have agreed to step up our efforts in combating terrorism,” Putin said.

A Palestinian protester throws stones at Israeli border policemen during clashes following a protest against the near-by Jewish settlement of Qadomem, in the West Bank village of Kofr Qadom near Nablus February 6, 2015. (Reuters)

"We have agreed on the need to maximize efforts to restore the negotiation process between Israelis and Palestinians on a two-state basis, with East Jerusalem as the capital of the State of Palestine," Egyptian President Sisi said, adding that the two sides expressed the need to preserve the territorial integrity of Libya and Iraq, as well as the urgency for various political forces to reach a consensus. He also noted that the fight against terrorism had to be conducted in all directions, including in the ideological and socio-economic sphere.
 

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Very Significant military support gesture, Putin gave official gift of AK-47 to El-SISI, this means military supplies and support.

Putin won't give a shit to LHL!



http://video.sina.com.cn/news/#1-1-137254478-1

现场:普京时隔十年首访埃及 赠总统AK47

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2015/02/10/putin-sisi-ak47_n_6653478.html

Putin Gives Egyptian President El-Sisi The Gift Of An AK-47
The Huffington Post | By Nick Robins-Early

Posted: 02/10/2015 1:26 pm EST Updated: 02/10/2015 1:59 pm EST

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Russian President Vladimir Putin is visiting Egypt this week, and like any good guest he didn't come empty-handed. After arriving in Cairo airport on Monday, the Russian leader cracked open a metallic case to produce an AK-47 assault rifle, which he presented to Egypt's beaming President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi.

On Twitter, observers were quick to comment on the exchange between the Putin and el-Sisi:

Putin also gave el-Sisi a Kalashnikov last night. El-Sisi looks like he's meeting his newborn child. pic.twitter.com/VI5M8XoFUF

— Gregg Carlstrom (@glcarlstrom) February 10, 2015

Putin's present is perhaps a nod to the multibillion-dollar arms deal that Russia and Egypt are reportedly seeking to ink, or the Soviet history of military aid to the country, but the possible symbolism has lent the gift special significance.

Criticized for serious human rights violations, el-Sisi's government has become know for crackdowns in which security forces have used live ammunition to shoot and kill protesters and activists.

Since the overthrow of Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood government by the army in 2013, mass jailing and death sentences of Brotherhood supporters, as well as the arrest of journalists, have been commonplace in Egypt. The most notorious event was the August 2013 Rabaa massacre, in which security forces used brutal force to clear out a protest camp, killing an estimated 817 people.

In a heated interview with Germany's Der Spiegel, published on Monday, el-Sisi defended his security measures and brushed aside mentions of the Rabaa massacre, saying of the crackdown: "Had the army not intervened, hundreds of thousands, if not millions, would have died."

Putin generously gives el-Sisi world's cheapest and least accurate assault rifle. pic.twitter.com/GjwQk5ECbd

— Omar Robert Hamilton (@ORHamilton) February 10, 2015

As relations between the U.S. and Egypt have cooled in recent months, Cairo has turn towards Moscow, and Putin and el-Sisi are reportedly on good terms.

Putin is in the Egyptian capital on a two-day jaunt before he attends the contentious peace talks set for Wednesday in Ukraine, a country with arguably enough Russian weapons in it already.
More:
Wladimir Putin Putin Sisi Putin Egypt Russia Egypt Russia Egypt Sisi Putin Sisi ak47 Putin Sisi Gift Putin Sisi ak47 Gift WorldPost Middle East
 

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http://www.nydailynews.com/news/wor...egyptian-president-el-sissi-article-1.2109462


Vladimir Putin gives AK-47 to Egyptian President Adel-Fattah el-Sissi upon arrival in Cairo
The Russian leader gave the assault rifle, invented by Mikhail Kalashnikov, as a present Monday as he began a symbolic two-day trip to Egypt. Officials welcomed Putin with open arms, running a glowing profile of him in a state-run newspaper under the headline, 'A hero of our times.'
BY Sasha Goldstein
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
Published: Tuesday, February 10, 2015, 9:41 AM
Updated: Tuesday, February 10, 2015, 10:19 AM

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AP PROVIDES ACCESS TO THIS PUBLICLY DISTRIBUTED HANDOUT PHOTO FROM THE EGYPTIAN PRESIDENCY TO BE USED FOR EDITORIAL PURPOSES ONLY Uncredited/AP Egyptian President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi (left) is given an assault rifle by Russian President Vladimir Putin upon his arrival at the Cairo International Airport in Egypt on Monday.

Vladimir Putin has guns to give away.

The Russian leader gifted Egyptian President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi with a Russian-made AK-47 rifle as the stoic leader landed in Cairo for his first visit to the country in more than a decade.

El-Sissi looked on and smiled as Putin opened the cushioned gun case and hefted the assault weapon during his two-day visit to the Middle Eastern nation.

The two countries last year signed a deal for some $3.5 billion worth of weapons, including air-defense systems, artillery and smaller arms, Bloomberg News reported.
MOHAMED EL-SHAHED/AFP/Getty Images A banner displaying the portrait of Russian President Vladimir Putin and a welcome message is seen erected on Cairo's landmark Qasr al-Nil bridge on Monday.

The AK-47 — Automatic Kalashnikov — is symbolic to Russia as the easy-to-use, low-cost weapon was made standard issue in the Soviet Army in 1949. The sturdy weapon’s Russian inventor, Mikhail Kalashnikov, died in 2013 at age 94.

Putin’s largely symbolic visit is meant to strengthen trade and military agreements between the two nations. The Egyptian capital prepared for his visit by lining the streets with flags bearing photos of a smirking Putin. And the state-run Egyptian newspaper, Al Ahram, ran a profile of the Russian strongman posing shirtless and holding various below the headline, “A hero of our times.”

The two leaders planned to pal around at the Cairo Opera House, where the symphony planned to play snippets of Tchaikovsky’s “Swan Lake.”
3TP RIA NOVOSTI/REUTERS Egypt's Egyptian President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi (front right) talks to Russia's President Vladimir Putin (front left) during a welcoming ceremony at Cairo International Airport.

The countries were close in the 1950s and ‘60s under the rule of Gamal Abdel-Nasser, who spurned the U.S. in favor of the Soviets.

“For Egypt, the exceptionally warm reception for Putin is purposeful theatrics, meant as a message to the U.S. and the West that Egypt maintains a sense of independence, has options and is not beholden,” Michael Hanna, a senior fellow at the Century Foundation, told The Associated Press.

Putin faces troubles at home, where the crisis in Ukraine has reached a fever pitch resulting in a truce summit Wednesday in Belarus. The Russian leader has been condemned by much of the world for sending troops and supporting separatists in autonomous Ukraine, a former Soviet republic.
POOL PHOTO Mikhail Klementyev/AP Egyptian President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi shakes hands with visiting Russian President Vladimir Putin during their meeting in Cairo on Tuesday.

Egypt, and specifically el-Sissi, has faced mounting pressure from the United States, which provides $1.3 billion annually to the country in military aid. El-Sissi has cracked down on dissent in the nation, where the Arab Spring raged in 2011, after he came to power in 2013.

“This isn’t about trade and economy, no — that doesn’t require a Russian president going to Egypt,” Georgy Mirsky, a professor at Moscow’s Higher School of Economics, told the AP of Putin’s visit. “For Putin, it’s a way to show his people that Russia is not a pariah in the world, that it’s not isolated. … And this is one small step. Egypt knows that it can’t live without the West, because it needs investment, and it needs money and all kinds of economic aid. Russia is by no means in a position to help Egypt on those fronts, it is in a very bad way itself, and things will certainly get worse before they get better.”

With News Wire Services

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