So worried about the antiquities in Egypt. Remember the Buddhas in afghanistan.
Egypt appoints member of terror group that once massacred tourists to run tourism region
http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/worldviews/wp/2013/06/18/egypt-appoints-member-of-terror-group-that-once-massacred-tourists-to-run-tourism-region/

Gamaa Islamiya swore off violence and denounced al-Qaeda a decade ago. But they are still listed by the U.S. State Department as a terrorist group, which cites a number of other terrorist attacks before the group’s 1999 about-face and says that part of the group never renounced violence. Khayat joined Gamaa before it renounced violence and he was serving as one of its leaders, according to Reuters, when the 1997 attack took place, albeit in a different province.
Tourism has dropped in Egypt since the January 2011 revolution, costing the country an estimated $2.5 billion at a time when it needs every penny. So many of Egypt’s problems are worsened by the country’s economic struggle that you might think Morsi would seize any opportunity he could to boost tourism income. Although Khayat has said he welcomes “all forms of tourism” – a subtle pledge, perhaps, that yes Westerners are still allowed in Luxor – his appointment seems unlikely to bolster tourist confidence in the region.
Morsi has been criticized for his outreach to Gamaa Islamiya, which suffered under President Hosni Mubarak’s rule. Morsi, perhaps hoping to co-opt the group’s support, to combat Islamist complaints that he has not yet implemented sharia law or maybe just out of sympathy, has shown Gamaa Islamiya some of his favor. He pardoned a group member jailed for plotting to assassinate Mubarak, for example, and called for the United States to release its spiritual leader, the “blind sheikh” Omar Abdel Rahman, who is prison for plotting to blow up the World Trade Center in 1993.
Gamaa Islamiya has bolstered its support in rural areas of Nile river valley by providing security and other basic services where police can’t or won’t. Still, many Egyptians have rejected the group, expressing fear about its agenda. In Luxor, demonstrators protested Khayat’s appointment with signs reading “No to the terrorist governor.” So the group is far from universally beloved in Egypt, which makes Morsi’s appointment all the more puzzling.

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