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  Last Update:  08 February 2012 17:03  GMT                                      Volume. 11363

Egypt's PM says U.S. threats to cut aid won't work
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Egyptian investigative judges Sameh Abu Zeid, right, and Ashraf el-Ashmawi, who are investigating the case of foreign funding of NGOs, talk during a press conference at the Ministry of Justice in Cairo, Egypt, Wednesday, Feb. 8, 2012. (AP photo)
Egyptian investigative judges Sameh Abu Zeid, right, and Ashraf el-Ashmawi, who are investigating the case of foreign funding of NGOs, talk during a press conference at the Ministry of Justice in Cairo, Egypt, Wednesday, Feb. 8, 2012. (AP photo)
CAIRO — Egypt's military-backed prime minister says Cairo will not halt its crackdown on foreign nonprofit groups despite what he calls threats to cut off aid from Western and Arab countries.
 
Egypt's campaign against pro-democracy and rights groups began late last year with raids by security forces on their offices. On Sunday, judges referred 19 Americans and 24 others to trial on accusations they illegally used foreign funds to foment unrest in the country.
 
The U.S. has threatened to cut some $1.5 billion in aid to Egypt over the dispute.
 
Kamal el-Ganzouri said Wednesday that Western countries “turned against us” after the crackdown began, The Associated Press reported.
 
He said Egypt “won't back down or take a different route because of some aid or other.”
 
NGOs of meddling in politics
 
Egyptian judges probing alleged illegal foreign funding of non-governmental organizations accused domestic and foreign groups on Wednesday of illegally meddling in politics, AFP reported.
 
The NGOs are operating “without license,” and their work “constitutes pure political activity and has nothing to do with civil society work,” Judge Sameh Abu Zeid told a news conference.
 
The judge said December raids on 17 NGO offices as part of a probe into illegal funding had been conducted “according to the law.”
 
“It is a very large and complicated case involving hundreds of people and organizations, Egyptian and foreign,” he said.
 
He said dozens of people had been referred to trial because there was deemed to be enough evidence.
 
Among them are 19 Americans, a fact that prompted a trio of leading U.S. senators to warn Egypt on Tuesday that the risk of a “disastrous” rupture in ties had “rarely been greater.”
 
Abu Zeid said he had rejected a request from U.S. Ambassador Anne Patterson to lift a travel ban on American NGO staff.
 
“She has no part in the investigation. A foreign ambassador cannot address us directly. We wrote to the foreign ministry and said we reject this request,” he said.
 
The groups being investigated include the US International Republican Institute (IRI), the National Democratic Institute (NDI), Freedom House and the German Konrad-Adenauer Foundation.
 
Following December's raids, several U.S. members of the NGOs were barred from leaving the country, including Sam LaHood, the son of U.S. Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood and the IRI's country director for Egypt.
 
American officials said “a handful” of the pro-democracy activists subsequently took refuge inside the US embassy in Cairo, fearing arrest.
 
Abu Zeid said “there is much evidence, including witness accounts, expert accounts and confessions. There are 67 items of evidence.”
 
“The foreign organizations are not civil society groups but branches of organizations based abroad,” said Abu Zeid.
 
He said security agencies had repeatedly refused to register the NGOs, which “have been working in Egypt for years on tourist visas.
 
“They received orders from abroad to do this and were told not to get work permits. They also violated Egyptian tax laws.”
 
He said the case involved illegal funding from the United States, Europe and also from Arab countries.
 
Investigations showed that their work “took another dimension after the January 25 revolution” that ousted president Hosni Mubarak last year, Abu Zeid said.
 
“The activities became political, related to training political parties or mobilizing people.
 
“Money was transferred to the organizations through a range of ways, including in individual accounts of employees, instead of in bank accounts in the organization’s name; or through money transfer companies,” he said.
 
The NGOs are accused of “setting up branches of international organizations in Egypt without a license from the Egyptian government” and of “receiving illegal foreign funding”.
 
Those charged face up to five years in jail, according to Ashraf Ashmawi, another judge involved in the case.
 
The move comes amid what commentators say is a campaign to silence dissent.
 
Egypt's military junta, which took power after Mubarak was toppled, has accused foreign groups of funding street protests against them.
 
On Tuesday, U.S. Republican senators John McCain and Kelly Ayotte, joined by independent Joe Lieberman, warned that U.S. congressional “support for Egypt -- including continued financial assistance -- is in jeopardy” over the case.
 
Washington provides some $1.5 billion a year in aid to Cairo -- one of the biggest aid packages offered to any nation.
 
“The current crisis with the Egyptian government has escalated to such a level that it now threatens our long-standing partnership,” they wrote in a joint statement.
 
“There are committed opponents of the United States and the U.S.-Egypt relationship within the government in Cairo who are exacerbating tensions and inflaming public opinion in order to advance a narrow political agenda,” they said.
 
“A rupture in relations would be disastrous, and the risks of such an outcome have rarely been greater,” the senators added.

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