Tag-Archive for » egypt «

Sixty hurt as Bahrain troops fire on protesters

While millions of Egyptians staged a “Victory March” feting their overthrow of autocrat Hosni Mubarak last week after 30 years, protesters elsewhere, inspired by their success, pursued struggles against their own authoritarian rulers.

The bloodshed near Pearl Square in the Bahraini capital Manama occurred a day after police forcibly swept away a protest camp from the traffic circle in the city, killing 4 people and wounding more than 230.

At least two people were killed in Yemen when security forces and pro-government loyalists clashed with crowds demanding an end to President Ali Abdullah Saleh’s 32-year rule.

In Libya, soldiers fought to suppress disturbances in the country’s second city Benghazi, while opposition groups said they were fighting troops for control of a nearby town after security swoops in which U.S.-based Human Rights Watch said at least 24 protesters were killed on Wednesday and Thursday.

The spreading contagion of unrest — particularly worries about its possible effects on the world No. 1 oil producer Saudi Arabia — helped drive Brent crude prices to a 28-month high of $104 a barrel on Thursday.

It was a factor in gold prices extending early gains to five-week highs. By Friday afternoon, Brent was just over $102 a barrel in London.

“LIVE BULLETS”

In Bahrain, Ali Ibrahim, deputy chief of medical staff at Salmaniya hospital, said 66 had been admitted suffering wounds from the clash in Pearl Square in the capital. Four were in a critical condition.

The injuries were worse than those seen on Thursday, he said.

Sayed Hadi, of the Wefaq bloc which quit parliament on Thursday, said demonstrators marking the death of a protester killed earlier this week had made for Pearl Square, where soldiers opened fire. Police had no comment.

Reports: Egypt President Mubarak to Step Down Tonight

Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak will step down Thursday evening, sources have told NBC News, and is expected to announce the nature of his departure via a taped speech to air on Egypt’s state television later tonight .

Current vice-president Omar Suleiman will take over the presidency, sources also said.

Military forces in the country have begun to prepare for the transition, according to a report from Reuters.

“The Higher Army Council held a meeting today under Hussein Tantawi the head of the armed forces and minister of defense to discuss the necessary measures and preparations to protect the nation, its gains and the aspirations of the people,” the state news agency MENA said. “The council decided to remain in continuous session to discuss measures that can be taken in this regard.”

State television carried footage of the meeting which did not show the presence of Mubarak or his vice president Omar Suleiman.

Al-Arabiya television said Mubarak was no longer in Cairo, but had traveled to the Red Sea resort of Sharm el-Sheikh with his army chief of staff. However, NBC’s Middle East correspondent Richard Engel just said that those reports are not true. Mubarak is still in Cairo – as of 12 p.m. EST, 7 p.m. Cairo time.

Broadcasts on Al-Jazeera television showed protesters gathered in Tahrir Square chanting and cheering the reports.

Egypt has been rocked by two weeks of protests demanding that Mubarak, who has ruled for 30 years, step down before his term expires in September.

Mubarak Announces He Will Not Step Down; Tahrir Square Erupts

President Hosni Mubarak has refused to step down and the crowds in Tahrir Square are not pleased.

Chants of “Leave, leave” and “go, go” are being reported.

“I am speaking to all Egyptians in Tahrir and beyond,” Muabark began at about 3:50 EST. He mentioned the “martyrs and injured” will not be forgotten and that those who are responsible will be punished. “Your demands are legitimate and just demands,” he added.

“I will never accept ‘foreign’ dictations,” he said.

He said that he will not run for president in September as he promised, but that he will continue the oath of his office. He says that he will “continue to shoulder” his responsibilities and will work for a peaceful transition of power.

He says confidence needs to be restored, and points out that the protests have affected the economy.

“It’s not about me, it’s not about Hosni Mubarak. It’s about Egypt,” he added.

I have spent my life defending this country, witnessed its wars, lived through its defeat, and victories. I have faced death several times.

Mubarak said he will transfer powers to Vice President Omar Suleiman.

Hosni Mubarak Has NOT Resigned from Ruling Party

The LA Times is reporting that the top leadership of Egypt’s governing National Democratic Party, which has long been synonymous with corruption and rigged elections, resigned Saturday as the regime struggled to convince the country it was instituting change while still holding onto power.

Among those who resigned was President Hosni Mubarak’s son Gamal, who was once thought by some Egyptians to be his likely successor.

Earlier reports by Al Arabiya television and Al Jazeera that President Mubarak had resigned his party role were retracted.

The dismantling of the party’s power structure is a dramatic indication of the pressure on Vice President Omar Suleiman to purge the vestiges of Mubarak’s power and snip the ambitions of his son.

Earlier………

It appeared the resignations were part of negotiations underway to transition the country to a new government, and did not signal that Mubarak would step down as president.

*For what it’s worth, Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak has resigned as leader of the country’s ruling party today, according to state television.

The 82 year-old president and his son, Gamal Mubarak, were among the leaders of Egypt’s ruling National Democratic Party who resigned, state television said.

Mubarak wants to go: Egypt dictator’s outburst as fears grow for tourists

The president of Egypt last night declared that he is ‘fed up and wants to go’ as bloody clashes continued in Cairo.
But Hosni Mubarak said he would not resign immediately – because he feared there would be ‘chaos’.
His remarks came as pro-government mobs targeted Western journalists and human rights activists near Tahrir Square, the centre of the protests.

There were reports the army was rounding up foreign cameramen and correspondents. A Greek man was reported to have died in the clashes.
Fears were growing that tourists could be next in line as Britain and other Western countries urgently evacuated their citizens. Last night 180 Britons flew out of Cairo on a specially chartered Foreign Office plane. As many as 25,000 remain.
Egypt yesterday pointed the finger at ‘foreign agendas’ for fuelling the protests.

Egypt Internet May Return Soon; 3 Reasons Why

1. It would be ruinous for Egypt’s economy
Writing at MSNBC.com, Wilson Rothman points out that while the government can afford to keep the Internet down over the weekend, Monday morning will be a whole other story.

“It’s currently the weekend in Egypt, which means the government’s decision to block all Internet traffic in response to protests may seem to many of the nation’s 84 million inhabitants as more of an inconvenience than cataclysm,” Rothman wrote, adding, “Not only would it impact government holdings, but it’s sure to hit those investors, businesses and middle-class citizens who may support the status quo of the Mubarak administration.”

2. It breeds further resentment
With Mubarak promising strides toward democracy, keeping the Internet restricted after so many Egyptians had already tasted its freedoms will not convince many citizens that their leader is serious. As Twitter’s company spokesperson put it today, ‘We believe that the open exchange of info & views benefits societies & helps govts better connect w/ their people.”

3. U.S. pressure
As President Barack Obama outlined today, the precarious support for the Mubarak government offered by the United States is posited on Egypt’s curtailing the use of force against the demonstrators and restoring access to the Internet. “I also call upon the Egyptian government to reverse the actions that they’ve taken to interfere with access to the Internet,” Obama said from the White House, “with cell phone service and to social networks that do so much to connect people in the 21st century.” Should Egypt persist with its Internet ban, what little American acquiescence remains toward Mubarak would likely evaporate.

Nine years later, tragedy replaced by farce

There are a number of holy books or sacred texts in the world. They constitute the core of some of the world’s major religions. It is generally thought to be, at the very least, simple good manners for people who have a strong belief in one of these holy books not to derogate, at least publicly, the holy book reverenced by another group. And most certainly it is thought to be but plain decency not to deliberately and ostentatiously set out to abuse, mock, defile or destroy the holy book of another group. For example, by burning a pile of them publicly after alerting the world to your deliberately disrespectful intent.
This is, indeed, what one cunning or dim-witted, rabid or naive, publicity genius or blundering innocent, self-proclaimed Christian pastor, Terry Jones, declared he was going to do with some 200 copies of the Koran Saturday, being the ninth anniversary of the attacks on the Twin Towers and the Pentagon. That announcement set in motion an extraordinary story and one which opens troubling questions about the war on terror and the current engagement of Western military in Afghanistan and Iraq.

First, the story tells us that in some rather difficult-to-articulate sense, this war has taken on aspects that are fundamentally not serious. When extraneous, or circumstantial, or ancillary matters occupy centre stage, it is a clear sign, by definition, that the main business has been sidelined.

And what or who is more extraneous or ancillary, more truly irrelevant, than Pastor Jones? How could a genuine world issue, of cardinal depth and significance, be hostage to such a trivial player, to a pathetic and obvious publicity ploy by a man the world had never heard of?

Why is anyone paying attention to this guy? He’s not a new version of Billy Graham or even Jerry Falwell. He has no earned iconic standing. He’s a non-entity of a splinter church with a piddling 30 or 50 followers. What he does or intended to do is of no social, symbolic or geopolitical consequence whatsoever.

But what was really odd was how the great and powerful of the world reacted. All week, he was being beseech-ed by the mighty of the Earth to stop what he and his little band of true believers were proposing to do. There was the Vatican, there was Tony Blair. In Canada, Stephen Harper, Peter McKay and Michael Ignatieff weighed in. And General David Petraeus, the overlord of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, astonishingly proclaimed that Terry Jones’ stunt would undermine the “total effort” of the war in Afghanistan.

This sideline preacher’s gruesome little barbecue would jeopardize, in other words, the main front in the war on terror. In fact, Barack Obama himself has been publicly pleading with Jones to put off the event. And most tellingly, Obama’s Secretary of Defense, Robert Gates, undoubtedly under orders from the White House, went into direct personal discussion and negotiation with the Florida-based pastor to get him to change his plans.

What a spectacle. How did a publicity stunt in Florida become a fulcrum for success or failure in the war on terror?

There is something profoundly unserious here, undignified and immensely off base. The first General of the United States, and the Secretary of Defense of the greatest war machine in the history of the world are both deferring to some fringe evangelist for fear that he might … what? Might lose the war for them? If this is the splinter the war on terror is hanging on to then it is, I fear, a house of cards in both theatres.

Nor is it irrelevant that by Friday another, better known exhibitionist, Donald Trump, had inserted himself into this story. “Unreality” doesn’t come in single doses. So now (the cast was assembling), it was the Imam, the Pastor and the Donald. It’s like a parody apocalypse.

Nine years out from the horrors of Sept. 11, 2001, there will be people marking this day with all the solemnity that grief and memory can bring to it. There will be military families ruminating on their sacrifices. I’m not sure how the weird, absurd and — I think — irrational events out of Florida fit with these observances. The whole saga has usurped the great messages of determination and purpose that filled the months and days after 9/11.

by Rex Murphy

COURAGE

Courage to stand up for what you believe to be right

“YOU CAN DO THIS”

Courage to believe in change
When there is a lot to blame

“YOU CAN DO THIS”

Courage to hold on when all is gone

“YOU CAN DO THIS”

Courage to believe by faith not sight
That everything no matter what will turn out all right

“YOU CAN DO THIS”

by Lennis; excerpt from the book “Are YOU Ready?”