 Munna Makrum Abed, a former senator and member of parliament in Egypt, and also still a distinguished professional lecturer at the American University in Cairo. Egypt has joined with Saudi Arabia in isolating Qatar. Why? Well, you see, Qatar has had a strange policy towards Egypt since President el-Sisi came to power. Before that, they were supporting the Mursi government, which was a catastrophe for Egypt, as you know. So this is the Muslim Brotherhood? The Muslim Brotherhood, and it was un-understandable, you know, knowing that 30 million people came out, Sisi had a popularity of 90%, and we asked him to come. I mean, this is not a military coup, as the West insists to say. It is a popular impeachment. If we speak in the American language, because we could not stand to have Egypt's identity entirely changed. We did not want to have a theocracy. We did not want to have clerics imposing on us what we have to do, when we have to pray, what we have to wear, et cetera. Qatar is a very small country, a very small population. Most of the population, of course, is non-Qatari, non-… Absolutely. Is the real fear Al-Jazeera? I think the fear is overblown. Al-Jazeera also has taken a very strange position, because before that, everybody looked at Al-Jazeera. So did I, to get the real picture, objective, and of the whole world. Now it has persistently had negative attitude towards the Egyptian government, only showing negative aspects, not even showing the casualties that we suffer every day in Sinai, whether it is among the army, the police, the civilian, nothing about that. Everything is negative. So how do you think that this situation will be resolved? Not just the Al-Jazeera problem that Egypt has with Qatar, but also the isolation in conjunction with Saudi Arabia. This is very dangerous, I think. First of all, because the GCC was one of the most successful getting together of some countries, and we saw it as a forward model to the European Union. So do you think Saudi Arabia made a mistake? No, I think that both made a mistake, because you are jeopardizing this unity, which was a model after all, whether it was for the economy or a model of regional cooperation. This is what we're talking about. There was no need for a new crisis. We have enough crisis in the Arab world today, and I don't think we can take another one. And they are today jeopardizing this whole thing. When you are asking me what should they do, they should sit at the table and discuss it and have a dialogue and get all their differences out. I'm sure they will find some way of compromising. Well, we'll let us hope so. Mona Makramalde, thank you so much. Thank you.