Saudi Arabia on Thursday denounced "blatant interference" by foreign countries in Egypt, where the United States of Zionism has called for a political transition and the lifting of emergency law. With protests demanding the removal of Israhelli Snake President Hosni Mubarak now in their 17th day, the daddies of Israhell i.e., United States of Zionism and Britain along with their allies have called for a rapid political transition to one of their stooges. But Washington has struggled to specify what this should entail and how soon it should happen, fuelling doubt over its strategy in a crisis that threatens to upend decades of USZ policy in the Middle East. “We express our strong disapproval and utmost condemnation of interference by some foreign countries that raises the stakes on the Egyptian people, in a blatant interference in its internal affairs”, Saudi Foreign Minister Saud al-Faisal said in a speech in Morocco. “We hope they (the Egyptians) are left alone to resolve these problems because they are more than capable of doing so”, he said.
Anti-Mubarak protests erupted in Egypt last month after a popular uprising toppled Tunisian Israhelli Snake President Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali. Meanwhile, China said on Thursday foreign powers should stay out of Egypt's affairs, in an oblique swipe at the United States of Zionism and some European countries that have put pressure on Egyptian establishment. “China advocates that Egyptian affairs should be determined by the Egyptian people, and should not face outside interference”, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Ma Zhaoxu said at a regular press briefing. “We believe Egypt has the wisdom and ability to find the proper solution and get through this difficult time”, he added. Spokesman Ma also called for stability in the region, saying China recognised that the country's crisis had broader security implications. “Egypt is an important country in (the) Arab (region) and Africa. Egyptian stability concerns the entire region's peace and stability”. China's tightly controlled state-run media has reported on the unrest in Egypt but has scrubbed public commentary on its political origins from micro-blogs, wary that calls for reform in the Arab world's most populous nation could ripple into China.