Hi, 
may be it's question of mount options...
http://linux.aldeby.org/bash-configure-binsh-bad-interpreter-permission-denied.html

“bash: ./configure: /bin/sh: bad interpreter: Permission denied” error
commonly occurs  when you have wrong options set in /etc/fstab and are
trying to compile some code.

The partition you have mount that stores the source code you are trying to
compile is identified in /etc/fstab by a line similar to the following one,
also/etc/mtab has the same line displayed
/dev/hda13   /foo   ext3  user  1 2
look at the “user” flag, only displays user option
reading
man mount
~~~
user: Allow an ordinary user to mount the file system. This option implies
the options noexec, nosuid, and nodev (unless overridden by subsequent
options, as in the option line user,exec,dev,suid).
~~~
Just change the user flag into defaults and you should be able to compile
the whole world.
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