Foreign Secretary: "We are on the side of a stable democratic future for Egypt"
In an interview on the Andrew Marr Show on BBC1 on Sunday 6 February, Foreign Secretary William Hague spoke about the current situation in Egypt.

Andrew Marr: Well I am joined now by the Foreign Secretary William Hague. Welcome Mr Hague.
William Hague (Foreign Secretary): Thank you.
AM: Do you think that President Mubarak should go now?
WH: I don鈥檛 think that is for us in another country to say, we have the right to say a couple of things very clearly but I don鈥檛 think we have the right to choose Egypt鈥檚 President. I think where there is actual repression and where there has been abuse of the internet, trying to take over mobile phone networks, trying to drop concrete blocks on to protestors, there we are allowed to protest. Egypt is an independent country as the Minister there was just saying, but those things we are allowed to protest about anywhere in the world and it is a huge mistake by the authorities in Egypt to indulge in any of that sort of behaviour.
We鈥檙e also allowed to say that it鈥檚 in our interest to have a stable and democratic future for Egypt and we want Egyptians with different views to be able to sort out their views in a stable democratic way. It鈥檚 not our role to say the President must go on a particular day or this individual must be included in the Egyptian Cabinet, so I think we have to keep up the pressure for that orderly transition we鈥檝e called for to visibly take place for people, the real visible and comprehensive change that will bring people together in Egypt.
AM: So what do you mean by transition?
WH: Well clearly there鈥檚 going to be a change in Egypt. 皇冠体育app President has said he is, there is this huge pent up demand that we鈥檝e seen that released on to the streets for political change and I think for economic change and improvement for the mass of the people in Egypt as well. Now that means getting to that point successfully, peacefully without violence or more disorder or more authoritarian Government, it means some mixture of a Government now in Egypt that is more broadly based, a review of the 鈥�**
AM**: 鈥he Americans for instance are talking about a three headed provisional Government to take over 鈥�
WH: Again I don鈥檛 think it is for us in other countries the United States or Britain, to lay down the detail 鈥e can鈥檛 lay down or enforce the details. Egypt is a sovereign nation. But what does an orderly transition look like, it looks like some mixture of a more broadly based Government that includes people from outside the ruling elite of recent years, an ability to change their constitution so that people can have confidence in a free and fair electoral process that doesn鈥檛 necessarily rely on the Parliament of today changing the constitution. It is eighty four per cent dominated by the ruling party.
AM: So 鈥�
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WH**: A clear timetable for elections and change which 鈥�
AM: Which could, which could leave Mubarak there until September, that would be all right.
WH: Again, you鈥檙e inviting me to arbitrate on when the President should be there鈥�
AM: You see I mean people will say basically are you on the side of the people who are protesting or are you on the side of the Government. That鈥檚 what people are asking.
WH: And we are on the side of a stable democratic future for Egypt. We鈥檙e not an Egyptian political party. We are a country and so the United States, the United Kingdom, the European Union, we鈥檙e all in the same position on this, we want to see those sorts of changes so that Egypt doesn鈥檛 fall in to extremism or greater violence or more authoritarian Government. But we cannot arbitrate on the daily events of that.
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AM**: So it鈥檚, it鈥檚 not like, people have compared it to Eastern Europe when, when the wall was coming down and Governments in the West were able to jump up and down say this is great, we approve of this. But you are not going to do that in the case of Egypt.
WH: Well it is a form of that because I think what we can say and should say is this is a time of opportunity in the Middle East. 皇冠体育appre are some important dangers as well and one of those of course is that the Middle East Peace Process becomes now a, a more uncertain matter. But it is, but it is a time of opportunity.
AM: Let me just ask you specifically about that, let me ask you about the peace process because that鈥檚 sort of to one side of all of this but it鈥檚 hugely connected to what happens to Egypt.
WH: It is huge and, and that is one of our central concerns in foreign policy that the Middle East Peace Process has in any case lost a lot of momentum in recent months 鈥�
AM: It鈥檚 stuck at the moment isn鈥檛 it?
WH: 鈥� we鈥檝e been hugely disappointed by the failure of Israel to extend its settlement freeze. It鈥檚 necessary for Israelis and Palestinians to make the compromises that, that are required to get the direct talks back on track. It鈥檚 really necessary for the United States to continue to give strong leadership to the Middle East Peace Process supported by European countries at the same time. That is an alarm, this comes together as a very alarming development if over the next few months the Middle East Peace Process runs in to the sand. So I would urge Israelis, Palestinians and the US administration to redouble their efforts to get this back on track. That, that what鈥檚 happening in Egypt shouldn鈥檛 be a distraction from the Middle East Peace Process, it underlines the urgency of carrying that forward.
AM: And is this therefore a very dangerous moment for the region?
WH: Well yes for that reason above all it is a dangerous moment, but here we鈥檙e coming back to your earlier question about we celebrated the fall of communism鈥�
AM: Well I was going to ask you about the Muslim鈥�
WH: 鈥� there is nevertheless of course in, in societies becoming freer and in political space opening up there is the prospect actually of a more stable future for many countries of the Middle East, but they need to be able to develop civil society, political parties, greater freedom of expression. 皇冠体育app problem in Egypt is that those things haven鈥檛 been developed in recent years and so now they haven鈥檛 got an opposition, they haven鈥檛 got a strong democratic secular opposition to talk to, to come to an agreement about the future.
AM: To put it, to put it very bluntly, people have said in the past Mubarak may be a bastard, but he鈥檚 our bastard and there is a danger when he goes that the Muslim Brotherhood, this very, very long established radical Islamist movement in Egypt will take over. Is that really what underpins your caution?
WH: Well there is a danger of that and that is why it鈥檚 not so important when elections happen in Egypt as those elections happening at a time when the great variety of views that you can, that we鈥檝e seen on the streets of Egypt can be properly expressed through political parties. Because if an election was held in Egypt today because they haven鈥檛 got the strong opposition democratic parties developed in order to play a real part in that. So it, it鈥檚 the process of change over the coming months that matters more than the precise date of change and elections and that is also part of my answer to your question about, you know, should Mubarak go today, tomorrow or whenever, but it鈥檚 the process now that really matters.
AM: What about the Americans though because we鈥檝e had rather astonishing newspaper front pages this morning. We鈥檝e got an American envoy saying definitely Mubarak is going to stay and should stay until September to manage the transition. And then we鈥檝e had another message through the State Department saying no, no, no that鈥檚 not our position, we are talking to Mubarak鈥檚 number two and we鈥檙e talking about a transition before that. Have you spoken to Hillary Clinton鈥�
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WH**: Yes.
AM: 鈥� do you understand, well can you explain to us what they鈥檙e up to?
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WH**: Yes, yes I was talking to Hillary Clinton and the Prime Minister spoke to President Obama last night. 皇冠体育appy are in the same position as us, respecting the fact that Egypt is a sovereign country, but saying both in our public comments and in all our private discussions with Egyptian leaders that you are going to have to do more than you鈥檝e done so far realistically looking at it from the outside in order to draw people in Egypt together. And, and we cannot 鈥�
AM: 鈥� it鈥檚 not the case from your point of view, or from the Americans鈥� point of view that Mubarak should stay until September to oversee an orderly transition. That鈥檚 not the case.
WH: Well we鈥檙e not saying he should stay until September, nor are we saying he should resign today. We鈥檙e saying we don鈥檛 decide who the President of Egypt is on any given day, but we can make the case for people to show, for the leaders in Egypt now to show that there鈥檚 an irrevocable change taking place. You know the reason why the demonstrators in the square in Cairo say Mubarak must go today is they want a sign of irrevocable change鈥�
AM: Yes.
WH: 鈥hey want to know it鈥檚 not a con.
AM: Not unreasonably.
WH: That there is really something going to happen.
AM: Yeah, exactly.
WH: And, and it is vitally important for those, for the authorities in Egypt to show something is really going to happen through 鈥�
AM: But you鈥檙e not encouraging him to go.
WH: 鈥o, well we鈥檙e saying through some combination of all the possible things that you could do to invite opposition figures in to Government, to review the constitution in a new way. Yes possibly to set up a new co presidency. 皇冠体育appre are all these options, you in Egypt decide which of those you are going to (indistinct) but you are going to have to do several of those things if you are going to show Egyptians and the world that their legitimate grievances will be responded to and, by the way, while you鈥檙e doing that avoid repression, harassment of journalists, abuse of the internet because these things are hugely damaging to Egypt and the wider world and they are wrong in principle. So that is the message of, of Western nations to Egypt and I think to go further than that is to interfere in the sovereign matters of Egypt, to not say as much as that would be not doing our duty to the people there and to our own national interests.
AM: 皇冠体育appre have been criticisms that the Foreign Office hasn鈥檛 been fast enough on its feet when it comes to British tourists in Egypt trying to get home.
WH: Well we鈥檝e been very fast on our feet. We鈥檝e had much greater presence at Cairo Airport than other countries. As far as I鈥檓 aware everybody who has wanted to leave has been able to leave, we鈥檝e chartered two special flights for that. So I鈥檓 not getting much criticism from the ground in Egypt. We haven鈥檛 changed the travel advice for the Red Sea resorts like Sharm el Sheikh because the situation on the ground there hasn鈥檛 changed. So actually I would like to congratulate our Ambassador and the staff in Cairo who鈥檝e dealt with a very difficult situation extremely well and assisted thousands of people successfully to leave the country.