ALERT Massive protests in Cairo-tear gas being used!

MamaDel

Membership Revoked
Fair Use:http://www.cnn.com/2011/WORLD/africa/01/25/egypt.protests/index.html?hpt=T1&iref=BN1

Cairo, Egypt (CNN) -- Thousands of protesters spilled into the streets of Cairo on Tuesday, an unprecedented display of anti-government rage inspired in part by the tumult in the nearby North African nation of Tunisia.

Throngs in the sprawling city marched from the huge Tahrir Square in Cairo toward the parliament building, according to CNN reporters on the scene.

Demonstrators threw rocks at police and police hurled back rocks. Tear-gas canisters were shot at demonstrators and the protesters threw them back.

Protest organizers said they hope to capture the regional momentum for political change set by Tunisians, who 10 days ago forced the collapse of Zine El Abidine Ben Ali's 23-year rule.

The grievances were foreshadowed after several Egyptians set themselves or attempted to set themselves on fire earlier this month, mirroring the self-immolation of a Tunisian man whose action spurred the uprising there.

The Tunisian uprising was the most successful revolt in the region since 1979, but it is anybody's guess whether uprisings will spread to other Arabic-speaking lands.



Juan Cole, a Middle East historian at the University of Michigan, says Tunisia is different from other nations in the Arab world. Tunisia, he said, is the "most secular country in the Arab world." Its traditions have favored women's rights, and its Islamist influence is negligible.

The United States and other governments are monitoring the demonstrations in Cairo and elsewhere closely. U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton urged all people to "exercise restraint" and supported "the fundamental right of expression and assembly for all people."

"But our assessment is that the Egyptian government is stable and is looking for ways to respond to the legitimate needs and interests of the Egyptian people," she said.

To highlight the role of police corruption, the protest organizers in Egypt picked January 25 -- Police Day and a national holiday -- to hold protests.

The protests started off small, but they grew as people came to the center of the city from bridges over the Nile River.

Police were restrained and at times were seemingly outnumbered by the protesters, who sang the national anthem and inched forward to express their ire toward the government. Witnesses said large groups of plain-clothes police were heading to Tahrir Square.

Protesters had been expressing their anger over the rising cost of living, failed economic policies and corruption, but all of those concerns were distilled into one overriding demand -- the resignation of President Hosni Mubarak, in power for three decades.

The outpouring, with as many as 10,000 people, included young and old, Christians and Muslims, students, workers, and business people.

"We breathe corruption in the air," said one demonstrator, who along with others believed their children have no future.

One man said Egypt is not Tunisia, it's Romania under Nicolae Ceausescu, a reference to the late and much-reviled communist leader.

The "Front to Defend Egypt Protesters," an alliance of lawyers who helped organize the events, said about 200 demonstrators were in the southern city of Aswan, 2,000 in the eastern city of Ismailiya, and about 3,000 in the northern city of Mahallah.


The Egyptian government did not issue permits for Tuesday's planned protests.

In an interview released Tuesday with state-run al-Ahram newspaper, Interior Minister Habib Adly warned that "the security agencies are able to stop any attempt to attend" the demonstrations and called the efforts of the "youth staging street protests ineffective."

By early Tuesday morning, more than 90,000 people throughout the country had pledged to participate in the Facebook event "We Are All Khaled Said," named after an Alexandria activist who was allegedly beaten to death by police.

The Facebook group demands raising the minimum wage, sacking the interior minister, creating two-term presidential term limits and scrapping existing emergency laws that the group says "resulted in police control" over the people and the nation.

Amnesty International released a statement Monday "urging the Egyptian authorities not to crack down" on the planned nationwide demonstration.

The banned Muslim Brotherhood, the biggest organized opposition to Mubarak's regime, had stated it would not have an official presence at Tuesday's protests, but some of its members "have reportedly been summoned and threatened with arrest and detention" if they attend and protest, Amnesty International said.

It was not clear whether opposition leader and Nobel Peace laureate Mohamed ElBaradei would attend the planned demonstrations. However, he posted statements supporting the effort on his Twitter account.

He also issued a video statement released Monday on YouTube addressing policemen.

"I sympathize with you because sometimes you are asked to do things that you do not want to do," ElBaradei said.

"One day, I hope that you will regain your role as the protectors of the people; rather than protectors of ... fraud elections. I am sure that every one of you deep inside is looking forward to the day that his role will again be with the people and a part of them, rather than against them," he said.

Public sentiment against state security forces has grown recently with alleged videos of police brutality shown on the internet. A recent report from Human Rights Watch said the problem is "epidemic" and "in most cases, officials torture detainees to obtain information and coerce confessions, occasionally leading to death in custody."

Some other human rights groups, such as the Arabic Network for Human Rights, have drawn a comparison between Egypt and Tunisia under Ben Ali, in terms of the level of government corruption and police brutality.

Adly, the Egyptian interior minister, dismissed any such comparisons, calling it "propaganda" that had been dismissed by politicians as "intellectual immaturity."

But one woman, identified only as Nahla, who planned to attend the Tuesday protests, disagrees. She wrote in an online post, "I hope the [Tunisia-style] revolution will be taught in history. And that Egyptians will learn in school later about the January 25th revolution."
 

MamaDel

Membership Revoked
Ripple protests could topple U.S. allies

Fair Use:http://www.cnn.com/2011/WORLD/africa/01/24/winds.change/index.html?hpt=T1

Alexandria, Egypt (CNN) -- Tunisia has brought a blast of reality to Mideast politics. Aging autocrats have been put on notice they can no longer count on docile citizens.

But is an era of unrest approaching? Will the winds of change sweep east along the Maghreb and bring down regimes from North Africa to the Levant and even the Arabian Peninsula?

Beyond doubt, those winds are blowing. Across the region they are being driven by the same social and economic factors, including high unemployment, a booming birth rate, and exploding food prices.

According to the International Monetary Fund, if chronic unemployment and the social tensions that accompany it are to be avoided the Middle East needs to create another 18 million jobs in the next 10 years. From where they stand today that's a very tall order indeed.

Amre Moussa, the Arab League secretary-general and former Egyptian foreign minister, warned regional leaders last week: "It is on everybody's mind that the Arab spirit is broken. The Arab spirit is down by poverty, unemployment and the general decline in the real indicators of development."

Regional parties like the moderate Islamists in the Muslim Brotherhood, scent opportunity.

"The same disease is in all Arab countries, we have different degrees only but the same origin of the disease, it is the same dictatorship, lack of democracy, lack of freedom restrictions on civil society," Esam el-Erian, spokesman for Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood said.

In Egypt as in other countries in the region the Muslim Brotherhood faces constant government harassment.

Hosni Mubarak, the 82-year-old Egyptian president, fears their populist power. He allows them and other opponents of his regime a very limited political voice, enough he hopes to defuse anger at the monopoly of power he has exercised over 30 years in power.

It is a balancing act that is now in peril, according to his critics. Ayman Nour, an opposition leader jailed by Mubarak and only released following U.S. pressure, believes Tunisia's revolt has shortened Mubarak's days in power.

He said: "How change happened in Tunisia was the last resort after all peaceful methods were no longer an option. This is what happened in Tunisia and this is what could happen in Egypt. It is the only solution to a situation that never changes."

There is a presidential election scheduled in Egypt in September this year. The situation is primed, Nour says, everything is ready, all it needs is something to ignite popular passions.

El-Erian of the Muslim Brotherhood talks in more revolutionary terms. "Without solving the main problems we can only delay the revolution, delay the intifada" or uprising he says.

But for all the rhetoric -- and despite several incidents -- the government in Egypt remains very much in control.

In Tunisia the revolt was triggered by anger at the suicide of Mohamed Bouazizi, a young vegetable market trader who torched himself over his dire economic plight.

In the week following the flight of Tunisia's President Zein al-Abidine Ben Ali to sanctuary in Saudi Arabia, more than half a dozen Egyptians set fire to themselves like Bouazizi.

None triggered wider protests, never mind opened the floodgates to the very real reservoir of anti-regime anger.

But Ibrahim Houdaiby, a savvy young analyst from a family with a long political pedigree, says it is too early to draw conclusions. "There is a lot of anger, and there is a lot of frustration, and if this frustration is not yet tangible and did not yet manifest itself in violent and big forms it is possible that it might happen and it is in nobody's interest that it does."

At a funeral near Egypt's second city Alexandria, where the Egyptian police have an unenviable reputation for brutality, I got a strong sense of just how far away that spark for revolt may be.

The gathering was tiny, just family and close friends. Twenty-five-year old Ahmed Hashem Sayed was the only one of the recent self-immolation cases to die of his burns.

As his slender shroud-wrapped body was being laid to rest only yards away on the other side of the high walls surrounding the tiny cemetery plot crowds going about their daily routines thronged the streets, none but a couple of curious kids joined the mourners.

Sayed's neighbor said his death had nothing to do with Tunisia and everything to do with his own poverty.

Later, on the muddy street of the slum where he lived with his family, his father told me his son was out of work more than he was in it. He didn't want to talk to us, didn't want to attract international attention, didn't want to make a martyr or national hero out of his son.

Houdaiby is sure Sayed was aware of Tunisian burn victim Bouazizi, who like Sayed was young and set himself on fire in economic despair, and although he may not have emulated him, he may well have been influenced by his actions.

The big regional lesson of Tunisia, according to Houdaiby, is that people have learnt they can bring about change themselves.

"What happened in Tunisia will of course impact the way people think. They know if they want things to change, at one point they will be able to change things"

But he adds Mubarak's regime has also learnt lessons, offering to subsidize bread and other essentials, albeit Houdaiby suspects, only until the current crisis seems over.

No doubt though, he says, the government's vehement denials ironically show how troubled it is by the Tunisian revolt.

"When you have the minister of foreign affairs saying that Tunisia could not be compared with Egypt and the situation is completely different and it is ridiculous that people are making any sort of comparison that says that they are worried."

And if they are worried in Egypt, with its large, tough state security forces, then other regional leaders may well be troubled too, warns El-Erian, spokesman for Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood. "If Egypt tumbles then watch the region follow, if change comes in Egypt, not in Tunisia, it will be domino sequences."

Indeed in the long run the United States may be the big loser. Many of the regimes on the defensive, like Mubarak's, are long-standing US allies.

And that says El-Erian -- who calculates that in a democratic Egypt the Muslim Brotherhood would have a large say -- could have serious implications for the United States.

"We are reflecting the opinion of the people and opinion and sentiments here are against the politics and policies of the United States in the region," he said.

It may sound like a bold statement, but on the streets of Tunisia, Jordan, Lebanon and Egypt to name but a few, U.S. credibility has taken a hammering over the past decade.

Wars in Iraq and Afghanistan have only served to fuel popular anger with the U.S. over the regional autocrats they support.

The implication is if the winds of change do blow down one or two of the region's rulers the political voices emerging may well bring a new dynamic to such intractable problems as Palestinian-Israeli conflict.

That alone could reset the region in a way unimaginable today.
 

MDINMT

Veteran Member
http://www.businessinsider.com/governments-food-price-inflation-2011-1#

Food inflation is now a reality for much of the world. It contributed to the overthrow of the Tunisian government, has led to riots across the Middle East and North Africa, driven up costs in China and India, and may only be getting started.

Whether you blame a bad crop or bad monetary policy, food inflation is here.

Nomura produced a research report detailing the countries that would be crushed in a food crisis. One, Tunisia, has already seen its government overthrown.

Their description of a food crisis is a prolonged price spike. They calculate the states that have the most to lose by a formula including:

* Nominal GDP per capita in USD at market exchange rates.
* The share of food in total household consumption.
* Net food exports as a percentage of GDP.

We've got the top 25 countries in danger here and the list, including a major financial center, may surprise you.
Click here for the countries >

Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/governments-food-price-inflation-2011-1##ixzz1C4UUZEFi
 

almost ready

Inactive
Egypt's gov has blocked twitter but a couple of workarounds have been issued. Looks like the Army is attacking protestors in Alexandria, but in the capital seems pretty peaceful. 50,000 people are spending the night in the square and restaurants are giving free food. Call for food, water and blankets for them.

What a day. A real feather in the Oboe's cap. Will he sing his praises and praise allah at the State of the Union address tonight? Or sing the Chinese song of protest with his buddies from Chicago in the Communist party? Just hard to decide. What to wear, Michelle, Iranian Green or Chinese red?
 

almost ready

Inactive
Tweet says 10's of thousands attempting to storm parliament. Already saw folks tearing down giant poster of Mubarak.

Photo from earlier today

scaled.php
 

almost ready

Inactive
Tweets say that cell phones are blocked now in Cairo as Police are fighting protesters. Well, back to work. The tone of the reports coming out of Egypt are just breathtaking. Big push.

We'll see how it plays out. The military, as always, is the key.

Much later. Until then, you can use this to follow and if you wish, report:

http://tweetgrid.com/grid?l=1&q1=Lebanon&q2=Egypt
 

mzkitty

I give up.
The people were coordinating via Facebook, last I read.

Twitter reported to be blocked by Egyptian government amid protests - mashable

Part of an ongoing story
via user8:04PM GMTJan 25, 2011
spotted by editor spotted by editor
vianews.yahoo.com


Egyptian security officer dies in a protest at central Cairo square - Reuters citing state TV
Part of an ongoing story
via user7:59PM GMTJan 25, 2011
spotted by editor spotted by editor
 

imaginative

keep your eye on the ball
Did you know that there are riots (primarily to due food supplies & shortages) right now in Latvia, Greece, France, Ireland, Bulgaria, Lithuania, Egypt, Yemen, Algeria, Tunisia & Lebanon?

The Pres of the World Bank said last week that we are 1 bad harvest away from chaos. He may have been optimistic.

Collapsing currencies and food shortages- it doesn't look good. I read the other day that China's food inflation index rose 62% last year.
 

SarahLynn

Veteran Member
Tweet says 10's of thousands attempting to storm parliament. Already saw folks tearing down giant poster of Mubarak.

Photo from earlier today

scaled.php

This bears close watching on several counts. I wouldn't be at all surprised that the Islamic Brotherhood and other fanatical groups are just waiting to use this as an excuse to finally depose Mubarak. Then Egypt will come out in the open with hostility to Israel. Jordan is already weighing its options in light of Iran being the new hegemon in the ME. The noose is fast closing around Israel. The world's response will be a yawn. God forgive and help us.
 

SarahLynn

Veteran Member
Regional parties like the moderate Islamists in the Muslim Brotherhood, scent opportunity.

"The same disease is in all Arab countries, we have different degrees only but the same origin of the disease, it is the same dictatorship, lack of democracy, lack of freedom restrictions on civil society," Esam el-Erian, spokesman for Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood said.
-from CNN

That's hilarious, CNN thinks the Islamic Brotherhood are "moderates."

Of course they want democracy. They'll make SURE the "vote" is for radical Islamists like themselves, as they did in Judea and Samaria.
 

mzkitty

I give up.
Operation Egypt reports from reuters of 2 martyrs now : Suliman Saber Ali is the 2nd to fall dead from police bullets, he was killed with Mustafa Reda when police in Suez opened fire on crowd

http://www.facebook.com/pages/Operation-Egypt/185645434794129

Yup. There is also a vid at the link.

Egypt Riots Update: First Casualties Reported As Police Use Live Ammo Against Protesters


Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/25/2011 14:07 -0500
Update: Alshaheed reports that Egyptian police in Suez has opened fire live ammunition killing Mustafa Reda Mahmoud Abdelfattah, 20 years old

The last time a scene like this happened in Greece, Waddell and Reed sold some futures. This time around, nobody even cares. In the meantime, riot police has now escalated to firing tear gas at protesters, as the riots have metastasized to Alexandria, the Nile Delta, and the cities of Mansura, Tanta, Aswan and Assiut (not without Hillary Clinton voicing her opinion, who has called the Egyptian government stable). But the most notable update is that according to reports, Jamal Mubarak has left Cairo to London while Husni Mubarak is fending off tiger sharks at the Sharm el Shekh. Unclear how much Egyptian gold either may have absconded with.

http://www.zerohedge.com/article/eg...-protestors-ruling-family-rumored-leave-cairo
 

mzkitty

I give up.
Egyptian protesters denounce Mubarak; 3 killed
AP

Day of anger in Egypt Play Video Reuters – Day of anger in Egypt

* Anti-government protests in Egypt Slideshow:Anti-government protests in Egypt

Demonstrators deface a poster of Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak in Alexandria Egypt, Tuesday Jan. 25, 2011. Thousands of protesters marched in Al AP – Demonstrators deface a poster of Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak in Alexandria Egypt, Tuesday Jan. …
By MAGGIE MICHAEL, Associated Press Maggie Michael, Associated Press – 7 mins ago

CAIRO – Thousands of anti-government protesters, some hurling rocks and climbing atop an armored police truck, clashed with riot police Tuesday in the center of Cairo in a Tunisia-inspired demonstration to demand the end of Hosni Mubarak's nearly 30 years in power. Three people were killed in confrontations around the country.

After a day of violence, thousands of demonstrators stood their ground in downtown Cairo's vast Tahrir Square, steps away from parliament and other government buildings. They promised to camp out overnight, setting the stage for an even more dramatic confrontation.

Throughout the day, police blasted crowds with water cannons and set upon them with batons and acrid clouds of tear gas in an attempt to clear demonstrators crying out "Down with Mubarak" and demanding an end to Egypt's grinding poverty, corruption, unemployment and police abuses.

Tuesday's demonstration, the largest Egypt has seen for years, began peacefully, with police showing unusual restraint in what appeared to be a calculated strategy by the government to avoid further sullying the image of a security apparatus widely criticized as corrupt and violent.

With discontent growing over economic woes, and the toppling of Tunisia's president still resonating in the region, Egypt's government — which normally responds with swift retribution to any dissent — needed to tread carefully.

But as crowds filled Tahrir Square — waving Egyptian and Tunisian flags and adopting the same protest chants that rang out in the streets of Tunis — security personnel changed tactics and the protest turned violent. Around 10,000 protesters packed the square, the Interior Ministry said. The ruling party estimated the number of protesters nationwide at 30,000.

The sight of officers beating demonstrators had particular resonance because Tuesday was also a national holiday honoring the much-feared police.

A policeman was hit in the head with a rock during the protest in Cairo and died later in the hospital, an Interior Ministry official said.

In another demonstration in the city of Suez, two protesters were killed, he said. One of them had respiratory problems and died as a result of tear gas inhalation; the other was killed by a rock.

The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to release information to journalists.

There were some high-profile figures in the crowd in Cairo, including Alaa al-Aswany, author of the best-selling "Yacoubian Building," which portrays corrupt politicians, police brutality and terrorism in Egypt.

A keen observer of Egyptian society, al-Aswany saw the demonstration as an important opening for the government's opponents.

"They broke the barrier of fear," he said. "The writers of the regime were saying Egypt is not Tunisia and Egyptians are less educated that Tunisians. But here is the thing: these young people proved they can take their rights forcefully."

In Egypt, discontent with life in the autocratic police state has simmered under the surface for years. It is the example of Tunisia, though, that appeared to be enough to push many young Egyptians into the streets for the first time.

"This is the first time I am protesting, but we have been a cowardly nation. We have to finally say no," said 24-year-old Ismail Syed, a hotel worker who struggles to live on a salary of $50 a month.

Demonstrators attacked a water cannon truck, opening the driver's door and ordering the man out of the vehicle. Some hurled rocks and dragged metal barricades. Officers beat back protesters with batons as they tried to break cordons to join the main group of demonstrators downtown.

Protesters emerged stumbling from white clouds of tear gas, coughing and covering their faces with scarves.

Some had blood streaming down their faces. One man fainted. Police dragged some away and beat a journalist, smashing her glasses and seizing her camera.

Crowds also marched to the headquarters of Mubarak's National Democratic Party, shouting, "Here are the thieves."

After remaining silent throughout the day, Egypt's government on Tuesday night called for an end to the protests. The Interior Ministry, which controls the security forces, said authorities wanted to allow the protesters the chance to express their opinions and accused the crowds of "insisting on provocation."

"Some threw rocks at police ... and others carried out acts of rioting and damage to state institutions," it said.

In Washington, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said Egypt's government, a key U.S. ally in the Middle East, is stable despite the outpouring. Clinton said Egyptians have the right to protest, but urged all parties to avoid violence.

At one point Tuesday, the protesters seemed to gain the upper hand, forcing a line of riot police to flee under a barrage of rocks. One demonstrator climbed into a fire engine and drove it away.

"I want my 3-year-old child to grow up with dignity and to find a job just like the president," said 50-year-old Eid Attallah, who works as a driver.

He said he had heard about the planned protests from friends but didn't expect them to be so big.

Many expressed similar surprise.

"We are fed up; this is just enough," said Sayid Abdelfatah, a 38-year-old civil servant who marched with an Egyptian flag. "Tunisia's revolution inspired me but I really never thought we would find such people ready to do the same here."

During a lull in the clashes, lines of protesters bowed in unison to perform the sunset prayer as police stood aside.

Demonstration organizers issued demands for Mubarak and his government to resign, for parliament to be dissolved and for a national unity government to be formed.

To the north, in the Mediterranean port city of Alexandria, thousands of protesters also marched in what was dubbed a "Day of Rage" against Mubarak and lack of political freedoms under his rule.

Like the Tunisian protests, the calls for the rallies in Egypt went out on Facebook and Twitter, with 90,000 people logging their support on the site. Organizers used the site to give minute-by-minute instructions on where demonstrators should go in an attempt to outmaneuver the police.

By late afternoon, access to Twitter appeared to have been blocked.

In another parallel with Tunisia, the protests drew energy in large part from the death of one person: a young Egyptian man named Khaled Said whose family and witnesses say was beaten to death by a pair of policemen in Alexandria last year.

His case has become a rallying point for Egypt's opposition. Two policemen are on trial in connection with his death.

Tunisia's protests were also sparked by the death of one man: a poor Tunisian vegetable vendor who set himself on fire to protest corruption.

Last week, several people in Egypt — and elsewhere in the Middle East and North Africa — set themselves on fire in apparent attempts to copy his actions.

Nearly half of Egypt's 80 million people live under or just above the poverty line set by the United Nations at $2 a day. Poor quality education, health care and high unemployment have left large numbers of Egyptians deprived of basic needs.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20110125/ap_on_re_mi_ea/ml_egypt_protest
 

Marthanoir

TB Fanatic
Did you know that there are riots (primarily to due food supplies & shortages) right now in Latvia, Greece, France, Ireland, Bulgaria, Lithuania, Egypt, Yemen, Algeria, Tunisia & Lebanon?
The Pres of the World Bank said last week that we are 1 bad harvest away from chaos. He may have been optimistic.
Collapsing currencies and food shortages- it doesn't look good. I read the other day that China's food inflation index rose 62% last year.

What riots in Ireland are these?? Do you have a link, the only chaos i've seen is in the Dail, on the streets its all pretty civil, there was a mayday mini riot about 3 or 4 years ago in Dublin but it didn't last long, there was a protest march last month with a few snowballs thrown at the Gardai if that counts, oh and about 5 people tried to block the gates to Leinster House,
As for food supplies & shortages, no problems on that front either we're a exporter of food stuffs, if the .gov had concentrated on that instead of trying compete with India for tech jobs then we might not be in the shite state we're in......
 

imaginative

keep your eye on the ball
Weren't there riots/protests there- at least a few weeks ago- over austerity measures and their European bailout? IIRC- That was just a couple of weeks ago wasn't it?
 

mzkitty

I give up.
Weren't there riots/protests there- at least a few weeks ago- over austerity measures and their European bailout? IIRC- That was just a couple of weeks ago wasn't it?

You could be right, but I wasn't paying attention if they did.

Anyway:

Protesters surround Parliament building in Cairo during the night - theawl
Part of an ongoing story
via user2:26AM GMTJan 26, 2011
spotted by editor spotted by editor
viawww.theawl.com

------------

Long article so here's part, and there are two what look like new videos at the link:

Tuesday, January 25th, 2011
The Egyptian Revolution
24
Tonight in Cairo, the Parliament is Surrounded
by Gordon Reynolds on January 25th, 2011

Tonight, protesters have surrounded the parliament building in downtown Cairo. There have been two deaths of protestors in Suez; one policeman has died in Cairo, hit by a rock. The protestors in Tahrir Square have been tear-gassed, and Twitter has been blocked within the borders of Egypt.

But this morning, as the sun burned a smoky haze off the face of this city, the streets were open and clear as I rode downtown at 8 a.m.

There had been tweets that protests would be staged in Tahrir Square and in the downtown neighborhood of Mohandeseen. These tweets were received by Egyptian authorities monitoring the hashtag #jan25, and they deployed a massive security presence to deter any demonstrations. Officers stood in groups of 6 to 8, on nearly every street corner. They blockaded the entrance to the parliament building. The teams stood quietly with folded arms watching the empty streets as the sun rose over the Nile.

Around the block, I exited my taxi and sat down at a nearby hotel for coffee, waiting as the hours passed. I saw six trucks of police pass on the highway, heading south to Mohandeseen. I jumped into a taxi and followed them.

But here as well, only a small army of police guarded the downtown commercial district. Not a demonstrator was in sight, and sensing this protest had ended before it would begin, I went home.

When I arrived, the Twitter hash #jan25 lit up. Someone said that earlier tweets had been deliberately planted as decoys to mislead authorities. Now, in dozens of real locations throughout the city, protesters had begun to mobilize.

I ran out the door and took the subway back to Tahrir Square.

When I arrived, the protest had begun. In the street a group of close to 200 Egyptians, mostly men, were standing, chanting and waving flags. Blocking both sides of the street were lines of police in riot gear. Immediately surrounding them, outnumbering the protesters, were older Egyptian men and young women.

continued....

http://www.theawl.com/2011/01/tonight-in-cairo-the-parliament-is-surrounded
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/26/world/middleeast/26egypt.html?src=me

3 Reported Dead as Egyptians Protest to End Mubarak’s Rule
By KAREEM FAHIM and MONA EL-NAGGAR

CAIRO — Thousands of people demanding an end to the nearly 30-year rule of President Hosni Mubarak filled the streets of several Egyptian cities on Tuesday, in an unusually large and sometimes violent burst of civil unrest that appeared to threaten the stability of a crucial Arab ally of the United States.

The protests, at least partly inspired by the toppling of the authoritarian government in Tunisia, began small but grew all day, with protesters occupying one of Cairo’s central squares. Security forces, which normally prevent major public displays of dissent, initially struggled to suppress the demonstrations, allowing them to swell.

But early Wednesday morning, firing rubber bullets, tear gas and concussion grenades, the police finally drove groups of demonstrators from the square, as the sit-in was transformed into a spreading battle involving thousands of people and little restraint. Plainclothes officers beat several demonstrators, and protesters flipped over a police car and set it on fire.

Protests also flared in Alexandria, Suez, Mansura and Beni Suef. There were reports of three deaths and many injuries around the country.

Photographers in Alexandria caught people tearing up a large portrait of Mr. Mubarak. A video posted on the Internet of demonstrations in Mahalla el-Kubra showed the same, while a crowd snapped cellphone photos and cheered. The acts — rare, and bold here — underscored the anger coursing through the protests and the challenge they might pose to the aging and ailing Egyptian leader.

Several observers said the protests represented the largest display of popular dissatisfaction with the government in recent memory, perhaps since 1977, when people across Egypt violently protested the elimination of subsidies for food and other basic goods.

It was not clear whether the size and intensity of the demonstrations — which seemed to shock even the protesters — would or could be sustained.

The government quickly placed blame for the protests on the country’s largest opposition movement, the Muslim Brotherhood, which is tolerated but officially banned. In a statement, the Interior Ministry said the protests were the work of “instigators” led by the Muslim Brotherhood, while the Islamic movement declared that it had little to do with them.

The reality that emerged from interviews with protesters — many of whom said they were independents — was more complicated and reflected one of the Egyptian government’s deepest fears: that the opposition to Mr. Mubarak’s rule now spreads across ideological lines and includes ordinary people angered by corruption and economic hardship as well as secular and Islamist opponents. That broad base of support could make it harder for the government to co-opt or crush those demanding change.

“The big grand ideological narratives were not seen today,” said Amr Hamzawy, research director of the Carnegie Middle East Center. “This was not about ‘Islam is the solution’ or anything else.”

Security officials said a soldier in Cairo, along with two protesters in Suez, were killed in circumstances that were not immediately clear. Scores of demonstrators and more than a dozen soldiers were injured in the Cairo clashes, which lasted hours and included bouts of rock-throwing by both protesters and the police.

There were mixed signals about how the authorities planned to handle the unrest. In contrast with other recent political demonstrations in Cairo, thousands of security officers seemed content at times to contain rather than engage the protesters — especially when it became clear that the demonstrators would not retreat from Tahrir Square. In a statement, the Interior Ministry said its policy had been “securing and not confronting these gatherings.”

But there were signs of other containment tactics: Several times Tuesday afternoon, cellphone networks appeared to be blocked or otherwise unavailable for people calling from Tahrir — or Liberation — Square. Many people had trouble getting access to Twitter, the social networking tool that helped spread news of the protests. Twitter confirmed that its site had been blocked in Egypt, Reuters reported. For much of the day, state television made no mention of the demonstrations.

By early Wednesday morning, the police appeared determined to clear protesters from the streets, leading to more clashes.

On a bridge, drivers stopped their cars and some joined the protesters, chanting, “The people want the downfall of the regime.” Below the bridge, owners of the feluccas that cruise the Nile with tourists unmoored their boats and set sail.

In the days leading up to the protests, more than 90,000 people signed up on a Facebook page for the “Day of Revolution,” organized by a coalition of opposition and pro-democracy groups to be held on Police Day, a national holiday. The organizers framed the protest as a stand against torture, poverty, corruption and unemployment. The Muslim Brotherhood said it would not officially participate, though some of its members were among the protesters in Cairo.

But many people said they did not belong to any particular group and were attending their first demonstration. They included Ramy Rafat, 25, who said he lived in El-Marg, an impoverished neighborhood in north Cairo. Mr. Rafat, who has a master’s degree in petroleum geology and is unemployed, said he learned about the protest on a Facebook site for Khaled Said, 28, who was fatally beaten by police officers last year.

“There are a lot of things wrong with this country,” Mr. Rafat said. “The president has been here for 30 years. Why?”

Aya Sayed Khalil, 23, brought her sister, her mother and her father to the protest. “I told them the revolution was coming,” she said. Asked about their political affiliation, Ms. Khalil’s mother, Mona, said, “We’re just Egyptians.”

The marchers came from all social classes and included young men recording tense moments on cellphone cameras, and middle-age women carrying flags of the Wafd party, one of Egypt’s opposition groups. A doctor, Wesam Abdulaziz, 29, said she had traveled two hours to join the protest. She had been to one demonstration before, concerning the treatment of Mr. Said.

“I came to change the government,” she said. “I came to change the entire regime.”

What began as a small demonstration outside Cairo’s Supreme Court building around noon Tuesday quickly swelled. Hundreds marched through winding streets while security officers shadowed them in a moving cordon. Scuffles broke out as the officers tried to halt the march by linking arms and forming lines.

“Freedom, freedom, freedom,” the protesters chanted. “Where are the Egyptian people?”

By midafternoon, groups of people had converged in Tahrir Square, where they met security forces in full riot gear and a water cannon truck. Several people said the clashes began in earnest after protesters jumped on the truck and tried to take control of the water cannon.

In front of the Mugamma, a towering administrative building in the square, young men threw rocks at the police as older demonstrators tried to stop them. Several young men were carried away from the clashes, clutching bloodied tissues to their heads.

As night fell, the crowd grew larger. An older man with a bullhorn appealed to his more Internet-aware counterparts, asking them to spread the word about the demonstrations to railway workers and dockworkers. Many people said they planned to sleep in the square.

After midnight, the security forces, using concussion grenades and tear gas, renewed their attempts to disperse the protesters.

Since Jan. 14, when President Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali of Tunisia fled his country during a popular revolt, autocrats throughout the region have fretted about responses by their own restive populations who shared many of the grievances that toppled Mr. Ben Ali: rampant corruption, injustice, high unemployment and the simple lack of dignity accorded them by the state.

It was unclear whether the day of demonstrations would lead to any broader social unrest. “I think it is the beginning of the process,” said Mustapha Kamel al-Sayyid, a political science professor at the American University in Cairo.

“Some of the demonstrators are still in Tahrir and said they will not leave until their demands are met by the government,” he said. “Their demands will not be met by the government, but they will not give up.”


Liam Stack and Dawlat Magdy contributed reporting.
 

mzkitty

I give up.
From Carl's article. Refreshing:

“The big grand ideological narratives were not seen today,” said Amr Hamzawy, research director of the Carnegie Middle East Center. “This was not about ‘Islam is the solution’ or anything else.”
 

Marthanoir

TB Fanatic
Weren't there riots/protests there- at least a few weeks ago- over austerity measures and their European bailout? IIRC- That was just a couple of weeks ago wasn't it?

nope, there was a scuffle outside the dail by a small group ie 5 or 6 people, the Gards didn't even draw there batons, there was a friendly march in Nov by the Unions, they took their kids along, they were laughing and joking with the Gardai,
you must be thinking of the UK which had massive riots & protests over the student fees hike as part of the austerity measures,
 
Yes, there were tanks...uh, armored vehicles, with soldiers standing in hatches firing into the crowd...and young men throwing rocks at the vehicles.

As one video showed older teens/young men throwing rocks at the police, I couldn't help but wonder how the same scene would go down in a gang-infested neighborhood here in the States.
 

momof23goats

Deceased
Yes, there were tanks...uh, armored vehicles, with soldiers standing in hatches firing into the crowd...and young men throwing rocks at the vehicles.

As one video showed older teens/young men throwing rocks at the police, I couldn't help but wonder how the same scene would go down in a gang-infested neighborhood here in the States.

your right, street gangs are about as well armed as the cops. not going to be prett.
this is about as bad as it can get. he sent his son and his family to canada today. this is not going to end well.
 

mzkitty

I give up.
Fourth Egyptian dies in hospital as a result of Tues. protests calling for end to Mubarak's 30-year rule - medical source via Reuters

Part of an ongoing story
via user9:56AM GMTJan 26, 2011
spotted by editor spotted by editor

---------

Egypt's stock market tumbles over 4 percent a day after massive anti-government protests engulf capital and other cities - AP

Part of an ongoing story
via user9:30AM GMTJan 26, 2011
spotted by editor spotted by editor
 

mzkitty

I give up.
msnbc.com staff and news service reports
updated 30 minutes ago 2011-01-26T10:20:27


CAIRO — Up to 200 protesters were detained following demonstrations demanding an end to Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak's authoritarian rule , officials said.

The officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk to the media, said more people are likely to be detained as authorities review police video footage of the nationwide protests.

Four people were killed in nationwide demonstrations Tuesday inspired by the Tunisian uprising, which also demanded a solution to Egypt's grinding poverty and were likely to fuel growing dissent in a presidential election year.

Meanwhile, the country's stock market tumbled by more than four percent on Wednesday and the Egyptian pound fell to a six-year low against the dollar.

Police fired teargas and water cannons early Wednesday to disperse protesters who had occupied the capital's central Tahrir square. By dawn, streets had returned to normal with traffic flowing across the city.

Some protesters demonstrators, who are angry at poverty and repression have been inspired by this month's downfall of President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali of Tunisia, said they would try to regroup during the day on Wednesday. Security forces said protesters would not be permitted to reassemble.

More here:

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/41267995/ns/world_news-mideastn_africa/
 

mzkitty

I give up.


Cairo sources: Mubarak's son Gemal flees to London with family
DEBKAfile Special Report January 26, 2011, 11:55 AM (GMT+02:00)
Tags: Egypt Gemal Mubarak Mubarak riots
Cairo is unprepared for so much anger

Egyptian and Arabic internet sites were reporting Wednesday, Jan. 26 that Hosni Mubarak's son and chosen successor as Egyptian president secretly took himself and family out of the country Tuesday by way of the military airfield in West Cairo at the peak of anti-government riots in Egyptian cities.

Twitter also carried an unconfirmed report that Suzanne Mubarak, Egypt's first lady, was identified by airport workers on arrival at Heathrow airport, London. No source was cited.

If confirmed, Gemal Mubarak's defection would attest to deep cracks in the 82-year old president's regime, the reverse of the prevailing view in the West and Israel that the regime is in no danger of being overthrown by the protest movement sweeping the country. US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said Tuesday she believed the government was stable. Yet Wednesday, the Egyptian pound fell sharply against the US dollar and the stock market tumbled more than 4 percent.

Twitter's service was blocked in Egypt early Wednesday. But this did not stop opposition leaders calling for the demonstrations to continue. They were heartened by their success Tuesday in getting tens or even hundreds of thousands out on the streets to demand the president's resignation and even more by Gemal's reported desertion.

With tension running high in Cairo, most observers report to debkafile their sense that in the last two years, the Mubarak regime had lost its momentum. Grave domestic problems and economic hardships were neglected or addressed sluggishly. Even after 30 years in power, the president heaped obstacles in the path of a choice of successor and an orderly handover of power. He kept his son Gemal dangling without a final decision and denied him the chance to prepare himself for the task.

In the parliamentary poll of December 2010, opposition parties were kept off the ballot by Egyptian security services headed by Intelligence Minister Gen. Omar Suleiman.
Opposition organizations were therefore more than ready for a showdown with the government when the spark from Tunis appeared to help ignite the street.
Tuesday night, debkafile reported:
More than 100,000 turned out Tuesday, Jan. 25 in central Cairo and other Egyptian cities for stormy demonstrations such as Egypt has not seen for more than a quarter century. Airing many grievances, they called on President Hosni Mubarak to resign after 30 years in power. Officials said three people had been killed in clashes between stone-throwing demonstrators and policemen using tear gas, water cannon and night sticks – two demonstrators and a policeman. debkafile's sources report the number is higher and, while no figure was given for the injured, our sources estimate that there were at least 150.

After dark Tuesday, the authorities announced that Mubarak's supporters would mount a counter-demonstration the following day. A collision between the two camps might well lead to further upheavals.
The anti-government movement mustered its biggest show of strength at central Cairo's Liberation Square. The authorities estimate the figure at 10,000. debkafile sources say it was at least 30,000. Some 10,000 also rallied in Alexandria with thousands more in the cities of the Delta and along the Suez Canal.

The government and security forces were not prepared for these numbers, the extent of the unrest or the force of the demonstrators' anger. They had counted on their warning Monday night that all demonstrators faced arrests to deter many from joining the protests. Instead of making good on this warning, the Egyptian police at first stood by quietly and watched the protesters sounding of. But when hundreds broke through the police phalanx and ran toward the parliament building, they were told to use rubber bullets, stun grenades and tear gas.

A mass melee resulted such as Cairo has not seen since 1977 when mass riots forced Anwar Sadat to back down from bread price hikes.

Cairo remained tense Tuesday night after some 15,000 protesters decided to stage a vigil in Liberation Square in protest against police violence.
debkafile's Cairo sources report that the organizers plan to keep their protest going non-stop to absorb all the non-religious opposition elements in the country. So far, the Islamic parties led by the Muslim Brotherhood have ordered their followers not to join in. If this order is changed, the Mubarak regime will be in trouble.
Further north, Tuesday also saw fierce Sunni-Christian riots across Lebanon against Prime Minister-designate Najib Miqati, who was attacked as a pawn of Hizballah and Iran. Anti-government outbreaks also continued in the streets of Tunisia and Jordan. For the first time in decades of Middle East history, Arab streets are willing to battle incumbent regimes and brave the security forces ranged against them.
 

mzkitty

I give up.
Protesters in Suez, Egypt, set fire to government building, security forces and witnesses tell Reuters
Part of an ongoing story
via user7:43PM GMTJan 26, 2011
spotted by editor spotted by editor


*


Al Jazeera publishes photo collection of protests in Egypt on Flickr
Part of an ongoing story
via user7:40PM GMTJan 26, 2011
spotted by editor spotted by editor
viaenglish.aljazeera.net

http://english.aljazeera.net/news/middleeast/2011/01/2011126183533678436.html
 

mzkitty

I give up.
TOP STORIES: Guardian reporter beaten and arrested in Cairo. (Guardian) Audio: http://source.ly/10CgM

Part of an ongoing story
via user8:45PM GMTJan 26, 2011
spotted by editor spotted by editor
viatwitter.com/DailySourceNews


----------

Egypt protests: 'People are being hauled out by police and beaten' - audio

Jack Shenker, the Guardian's reporter in Cairo, was beaten by police alongside protesters last night. He recorded the experience as they were driven in the dark through the city
 

mzkitty

I give up.
It's really hoppin' over there now:

1 protester, 1 policeman killed in anti-government protest in Cairo, official says - AP

Part of an ongoing story
via user9:08PM GMTJan 26, 2011
spotted by editor spotted by editor
 

mzkitty

I give up.
More at link + vid:

Egypt's protests and Mubarak's future (video)

The 'regime' looks secure for now, but can President Hosni Mubarak -- or his son -- hold on?

By Dan Murphy, Staff writer / January 26, 2011

The second day of unprecedented public protests in Egypt today revealed a regime determined to prevent a snowballing of popular protest like the uprising that swept Tunisia's Zine El Abidine Ben Ali from power earlier this month.

Egypt protester stares down a water cannon in Cairo (video)

Hundreds of activists were arrested today and beatings were handed out to the smaller numbers of protesters out on the streets of Cairo and at least one other city today. Jack Shenker of The Guardian has a gripping account of being caught up in a riot police sweep through downtown Cairo last night that well illustrates what protesters are facing, and what they'll continue to face if they keep pressing for the resignation of President Hosni Mubarak.

It's hard to see Mubarak stepping down in the face of these protests. He's ruthlessly faced down challenges in the past, all indications are that the military and the police remain squarely behind him, and the circle of people whose prosperity and power relies on his regime is wide.

But I'm beginning to wonder if the elite around the 82-year-old Mubarak will be able to bring themselves to support him -- or his son Gamal -- in presidential elections scheduled for next September. While it was no secret that the Mubaraks were unpopular with their own people, the visible fury against them in the past few days is likely giving players in the ruling National Democratic Party and the military establishment pause about extending Mubarak rule to 35 years (Hosni's 30th anniversary in office comes shortly before the election.)

Consider this video of an angry, gleeful crowd trampling posters of the president outside of a train station yesterday (H/T 3Arabawy, who has dozens of videos on his site from the past two days and is blogging furiously):

http://www.csmonitor.com/World/Backchannels/2011/0126/Egypt-s-protests-and-Mubarak-s-future-video
 

mzkitty

I give up.
Journalists beaten, websites blocked amid protests in Egypt

New York, January 26, 2011--The Committee to Protect Journalists condemns the violence against journalists covering demonstrations in Egypt. Plainclothes and uniformed security personnel have beaten at least 10 journalists between Tuesday and today and detained others. Egyptian authorities have also shut down the websites of two popular independent newspapers and a number of social media sites.

The protests began on Tuesday after an Internet campaign called for a national "Day of Anger" through anti-government protests, according to news reports. The demonstrations are the largest since the January 1977 bread riots.

"We call on Cairo to bring to an immediate end all forms of violence against the media, release all detained journalists, and lift online censorship," said Mohamed Abdel Dayem, CPJ's Middle East and North Africa program coordinator.

Egyptian authorities have blocked access to at least two websites of local online newspapers: Al-Dustour and El-Badil, local journalists told CPJ. The government has also blocked domestic access to social networking sites Twitter and Facebook, as well as Bambuser, a video-streaming website, according to multiple news reports, although sources on the ground tell CPJ that access to Facebook is intermittent. "It is an attempt to black out information and to stop the use of social media and communication to block those who are demanding democracy," Gamal Eid, executive director of the Cairo-based Arabic Network for Human Rights Information, told CPJ.

Local and international journalists have been widely targeted during the demonstrations. At least six journalists working for Al-Masry al-Youm were assaulted by security forces: Ahmad al-Howari, Mustafa al-Mursafawi, Nashwa al-Houfi, Hisham Omar Abdel Halim, and Maha al-Bahnasawi, the independent daily reported. Lina Attalah, the managing editor of Al-Masry al-Youm's English edition was also attacked. Attalah was covering the demonstrations in downtown Cairo when police blasted water cannons and tear gas. "I started running but four policemen pulled me by my hair and kicked me in my face and back," Attalah told CPJ via phone. "I tried telling them that I'm a journalist but they were too busy kicking me." Her glasses were broken and police confiscated two cell phones.

Al-Jazeera correspondent Mustafa Kafafi was also beaten. "I fell on the street and I started screaming 'Let me go, I'm a journalist,' but they didn't care," Kafafi told CPJ today. "Only after they found out that I'm with Al-Jazeera did they leave me alone." Two journalists, Mohamed Abdel Qudous and Yahya Qalash, both members of the Egyptian Journalists' Syndicate, were also attacked and arrested today, according to local news reports. They were among seven or eight journalists rounded up from the front steps of the syndicate. Al-Jazeera reported that among them was veteran journalist Karem Yehya.

Al-Hayat television reported today that station journalist Ahmad Hassan Kamel has not been heard from since covering the demonstrations in Cairo Tuesday night, and believes he has been detained.

Among journalists from international media outlets who have been attacked and beaten was Jack Shenker, the U.K. Guardian's correspondent in Cairo, who was arrested then released on Tuesday, the paper reported. The Associated Press reported that Egyptian police have detained an AP cameraman and his assistant--Haridi Hussein Haridi and Haitham Badry--while they were covering the demonstrations in Cairo today.

http://cpj.org/2011/01/journalists-beaten-websites-blocked-amid-protests.php
 

mzkitty

I give up.
Some tweets:

#
Twitter -
94
1 minute ago
#

NukeFreeFood‎ RT @estr4ng3d: Americans, remember that $1.5bn of your tax dollars are given to a regime that tortures dissidents and kills protesters. #Jan25 #Egypt
Twitter -
107
1 minute ago
#

abzzyy‎ RT @AhmedAlaa_SJ: BOYCOTT THE NATIONAL NEWSPAPERS TOMORROW !! #jan25 #egypt #25jan #cairo
Twitter -
108
1 minute ago
#

dianapop‎ RT @shadihamid: Some of my thoughts for The National on dangers of using lethal force on protestors #jan25 #Egypt
Full: Egypt clamps down but protesters come out for second day ...‎ - thenational.ae
Twitter -
110
1 minute ago
#

CHAVEZU‎ RT @AJEnglish: Live coverage from #Cairo on air now. Watch online #egypt #jan25 #suez
AJE - Al Jazeera English‎ - aljazeera.net
Twitter -
114
1 minute ago

#
freddydeknatel‎ RT @LondonReview: 'We need a radical shake-up. We have a saying in #Egypt that you can't make a sweet drink out of a rotten fish.'
‘Mubarak, your plane is waiting’ « LRB blog‎ - lrb.co.uk
Twitter - 1 minute ago
#

Hitteen48‎ AFP: Urgent: Clashes at the entrance to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in #Cairo. #Jan25 #Egypt via @halmustafa
Twitter - 1 minute ago

#
Hazem_ibrahim‎ RT @NevineZaki: Big shout out to Mona El Shazly & Mahmoud Saad for refusing to broadcast false news. New heroes are emerging by z second now #jan25 #Egypt
Twitter - 1 minute ago
#

em_claire‎ RT @bencnn: We're reaching the point where we can say #Egypt is in a state of revolt. President Mubarak remains silent. State is losing its grip. #Jan25
Twitter - 1 minute ago
#

GoldenTent‎ !! V @ASLANmedia #EGYPT: Reports say #Clinton forced #Egypt to get #Twitter back up and running. #cairo #jan25
Twitter - 1 minute ago

#
erickschonfeld‎ Powerful video RT @KarimShata I will die today for my country, yeah i cried when i watched this video, #Egypt
YouTube - Egyptian Revolution Jan 25th 2011 - Take what's ...‎ - youtube.com
Twitter - seconds ago
#

Grannny63‎ RT @Haithamomar: Egyptians calling for a 1 MILLION march All over egypt after friday prayers which end at 1pm share,Retweet,forward,broadcast #Jan25 #Egypt
Twitter - seconds ago

#
bendahman‎ #Suez police HQ burning #egypt
YouTube - 20110126007‎ - youtube.com
Twitter - seconds ago
#

fhilal‎ RT @Jnoubiyeh: UPDATE: Two more unarmed protesters have been murdered in #Cairo, bringing the death toll in the uprising to at least 7. #Egypt #Jan25
Twitter - seconds ago

#
willyamato‎ RT @weddady: #Egypt gove is trying to cover up what happened in city of #Suez. #Media banned from entry. #Jan25
Twitter - seconds ago
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RileyTX‎ RT @TimGamble: Follow the #jan25 and #Egypt hashtags to keep up with what's going on in Egypt. Getting really bad.
Twitter - seconds ago
#

Robert_Brown0‎ RT @Mido: Special coverage form AlJazeera in English, #Jan25 #EGYPT
Anger in Egypt - Al Jazeera English‎ - aljazeera.net
Twitter - seconds ago
 
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