An Egyptian protester
shouts slogans as he holds a shoe on a portrait of US Secretary of State
Hillary Clinton outside the US embassy in Cairo on July 14, 2012 to
protest against her visit to the country (AFP Photo / Mohhamed Hassam)
Hillary Clinton has been welcomed in Egypt by locals greeting her motorcade with tomatoes, shoes and water bottles. Rallying protesters showed awareness with US domestic policy history, chanting “Monica, Monica”.
The two-day visit by the US secretary of state to Egypt ended in scandal when the convoy she was driving in from the newly-opened American consulate in the Mediterranean port of Alexandria was attacked by local citizens chanting anti-American slogans.
The protesting crowds hailed the motorcade with vegetables and other objects, reportedly hitting one of the Egyptian officials in the convoy in the face. The American armored motorcade suffered only superficial damage while Hillary Clinton’s car remained intact.
There have been reports of the protesters chanting "Leave, Clinton” and "Monica, Monica," presumably referring to the scandal with the secretary’s husband, former US President Bill Clinton’s extra-marital affair with White House intern Monica Lewinsky.
The protesters were holding banners in Arabic and English, accusing the US of interfering into Egypt’s internal affairs.
Egyptian demonstrators protest against the visit of US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton outside the presidential palace in Cairo on July 14, 2012. (AFP Photo/Khaled Desouki)
Egyptians chant slogans against the visit of US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in front of the doors of the presidential palace after her meeting with Egypt's President Mohamed Mursi (Reuters / Amr Dalsh)
Vladimir Kremlev for RT
“I want to tell the Americans who are supporting democracy that we don't have any democracy in Egypt,” one demonstrator, Ahmed Abdel Alim, told AP. “Egyptians of all sects – Muslims, Christians and minorities – do not have any rights in this country.”
During her visit to Egypt, the US Secretary of State also met with Field Marshal Mohamed Hussein Tantawi, the head of the military council of Egypt that currently holds power in the country.
Clinton urged the Egyptian military to transfer power in full to the newly-elected president, who was sworn in two weeks ago.
Still, just hours after the meeting with Clinton, the head of the Egyptian military took a hard line on Morsi's Muslim Brotherhood on Sunday, stating he is against Islamist fundamentalists dominating the country’s political landscape.
AFP Photo / Brendan Smialovsky
People hold a poster of Field Marshal Tantawi, the commander-in-chief of the Egyptian Armed Forces, as they protest the visit of US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton outside the Four Season Hotel (AFP Photo / Brendan Smialowski)
Reuters / Amr Dalsh
AFP Photo / Brendan Smialovsky