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455Le président Hosni Moubarak a accueilli pour une interview télévisée dans son palais présidentiel Christiane Amanpour, anciennement de CNN et présentement de ABC, et toujours une de ses journalistes internationales préférées. La politique de Moubarak est simple et revient à la formule “moi ou le chaos” (“si je m’en vais maintenant, c’est le chaos”), tout en ne dissimulant pas l’amertume et le désenchantement d’une façon générale (“Je suis fatigué, j’en ai assez, je veux m’en aller”) et vis-à-vis de ses “amis” (Obama “ne comprend pas la culture égyptienne”). Moubarak n’annonce rien de nouveau mais affiche une grande fatigue psychologique et la perception amère de l’incompréhension des autres pour son rôle.
Le Guardian du 4 février 2011 publie un rapport commenté de cette interview.
«Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak refused yesterday to bow to pressure at home and abroad to stand down immediately, claiming that, though he was fed up and would like to go, he feared chaos if he did so. […] “I am fed up. After 62 years in public service, I have had enough. I want to go,” Mubarak said in an interview with ABC’s Christiane Amanpour. “If I resign today, there will be chaos.” […]
»In spite of the widespread violence since Tuesday, Mubarak's comments to ABC suggest that he was not planning an imminent departure from office or Egypt. “I would never run away,” he said. “I will die on this soil.” […]
»When Mubarak was asked if he felt betrayed by the US after having been a longtime ally, Amanpour said he had waved his hands, rejecting the notion. Obama was a very good man, he said. But he had told Obama, in a phone call on Tuesday, that the US leader did not appreciate the consequences of leaving office straight away. “You don't understand the Egyptian culture and what would happen if I step down now,” Mubarak said.»
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