Egypt Raids Iranian TV Bureau, Seizes Gear In Dispute Over Sadat Film
By VOA News
24 July 2008
Egyptian police have raided the Cairo office of an Iranian television network involved in a dispute over a controversial film about Anwar Sadat, the Egyptian president assassinated nearly 30 years ago.
Egyptian security officials said Thursday that police entered the office of Iran’s state-owned Al-Alam television and confiscated its equipment earlier this week because it lacked a proper broadcasting license. Al-Alam’s Cairo bureau chief is quoted as saying the the raid was related to a false charge that the network had a role in producing the Sadat film, called “Assassination of a Pharaoh.”
The documentary portrays in a positive light the assassin who killed Mr. Sadat in 1979, and Arab critics say it brands the former Egyptian leader a traitor for signing a peace accord with Israel one year earlier.
Iran and Egypt have not had full diplomatic relations since Iran’s Islamic revolution toppled the monarchy in Tehran. The deposed shah of Iran, Mohammed Reza Pahlavi, lived in the United States at first, but then moved to Cairo, where he died in 1980.
Egypt was the first Arab state to open diplomatic relations with Israel. Iran’s former leader, the late Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, cut all ties with Egypt after he took power in 1979, and vowed that Iran would never restore relations unless Cairo broke off all links with Israel.




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Are we having problems with the persians?
Egypt needs to choose a side.
July 25th, 2008 at 6:09 amhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gKdAVYKYZfo
I had forgotten about this, good advice from a different time.
July 25th, 2008 at 8:03 amLOL. A little Shia-Sunni argument perhaps? Nothing new about that old 1400 year-old rift.
July 25th, 2008 at 9:24 am