I've owned Czech VZ-24's, a variety of Turks, and a couple of Yugo M-48's. All have been good shooters, with the exception of a few Turks. I'd suggest starting with either a good condition VZ-24 or an unissued M-48's. As far as I know the Eygptian are just M-48's from a batch that was never shipped.
There are an astonishing array of military surplus Mausers out there from Siamese to Chilean and from Swedish to Israeli. Parts may or may not be the same between rifles, as each nation tends to have a series of rifles built off a particular model Mauser. The Swedes used the '96 action, no the '98. Others, like the Yugoslavians, used a slightly shorter '98 action. It's complicated. The watchword is MAUSER '98! If you see three locking lugs and a gas vent on the bolt, that's a good sign you've got a '98. These are very strong actions, but earlier Mauser weren't quite as foolproof. Thus, an Israeli Mauser in .308 on a '98 action is safer than a Mexican Mauser in .308 using an earlier action.
The Turks can be better than their reputation, but they tend to have odd and potentially dangerous modifications. I've seen Turks in 8x57JS built on older Mauser '93 receivers and bolts. It would be nutty to fire hot loaded 8x57JS, ESPECIALLY the Turkish surplus ammo, out of such a rifle. You have only two lugs and no gas escape vent. Not much better than firing hot .30'06 out of a Krag rifle! The Turk '98's should not have this problem, though they aren't know for the accuracy.
That said, while I've heard many accounts of Springfield 1903's blowing up and sending bolts back, I've never heard of any Mauser sending its bolt into the shooter's face. Stick to the '98 and (with 6.5x55) the '96 and you should be quite safe. Headspace will need to be checked and watched, of course.
Overall, the unissued M-48's are a good entry into the world of Mausers. Just be ready to clean up a LOT of my namesake.