donderdag 3 februari 2011

Arab Regimes 97

thinking? What are his security forces really doing to the protesters they have detained? Is the Ahmadinejad regime really more brutal? Reader Supported News is staying on this story for the duration.
A protester holds an Egyptian flag during a massive rally in Tahrir Square in Cairo, Egypt, 02/01/11. (photo: Chris Hondros/Getty Images)
A protester holds an Egyptian flag during a massive rally in Tahrir Square in Cairo, Egypt, 02/01/11. (photo: Chris Hondros/Getty Images)


RSN Special Coverage:
Egypt's Struggle for Democracy

Reader Supported News
03 February 11

Al Jazeera: Clashes In Cairo


Egypt Protests - Live Updates

Guardian UK Blog
Follow all the latest developments and reaction here. READ MORE

Crackdown Widens to Foreign Observers

David D. Kirkpatrick and Alan Cowell
Moving against foreign media and human rights workers, the Egyptian government began an effort to remove witnesses to its battle with protesters. READ MORE

Egyptian Army Disperses Mubarak Supporters From Bridge

Peter Beaumont and Jack Shenker, Guardian UK
The Egyptian army intervened this morning in a belated attempt to end the violence that flared overnight in central Cairo as supporters of President Hosni Mubarak attacked anti-government protesters.
The intervention came as a retired Egyptian army general told the BBC the military was losing patience with the embattled Mubarak, and would open fire at regime loyalists if there were fresh attacks on protesters. READ MORE

Live From Egypt:
The True Face of the Mubarak Regime

Sharif Abdel Kouddous, Democracy Now!
Egypt’s popular uprising had come under a heavy and brutal assault nine days after it began. This was the true face of the U.S.-backed Mubarak regime that had repressed the Egyptian people for so many years. But this time, the whole world was watching.
While many pro-democracy demonstrators left Tahrir for the safety of their homes, a significant number remain inside, vowing not to leave until Mubarak does. It remains to be seen how the protesters will respond but Friday will undoubtedly be a decisive day. READ MORE

Amy Goodman | When Corporations Choose Despots Over Democracy

Amy Goodman, Truthdig
"People holding a sign 'To: America. From: the Egyptian People. Stop supporting Mubarak. It's over!" so tweeted my brave colleague, "Democracy Now!" senior producer Sharif Abdel Kouddous, from the streets of Cairo.
More than 2 million people rallied throughout Egypt on Tuesday, most of them crowded into Cairo's Tahrir Square. Tahrir, which means liberation in Arabic, has become the epicenter of what appears to be a largely spontaneous, leaderless and peaceful revolution in this, the most populous nation in the Middle East. Defying a military curfew, this incredible uprising has been driven by young Egyptians, who compose a majority of the 80 million citizens. Twitter and Facebook, and SMS text messaging on cell phones, have helped this new generation to link up and organize, despite living under a U.S.-supported dictatorship for the past three decades. In response, the Mubarak regime, with the help of U.S. and European corporations, has shut down the Internet and curtailed cellular service, plunging Egypt into digital darkness. Despite the shutdown, as media activist and professor of communications C.W. Anderson told me, "people make revolutions, not technology."READ MORE

Army Moves to Stop Clashes in Cairo Square

Ned Parker and Laura King, Los Angeles Times
Clashes flared for a second day Thursday between opponents and supporters of President Hosni Mubarak, spilling out of the central Cairo square occupied by antigovernment demonstrators and deepening the chaos gripping Egypt.
The army acted decisively for the first time to try to separate the two sides, planting tanks and soldiers in the no-man's land between what have become enemy lines. In the early afternoon, as helicopters circled overhead, the fighting was scattered and less intense than the previous day.
Confrontations were confined mainly to the periphery of Tahrir Square and the backstreets of the adjoining district, with relative calm in much the sprawling plaza itself. But a potentially larger confrontation loomed Friday, the main prayer day of the Muslim week, when protest organizers have called for a redoubling of efforts to force Mubarak to step aside.http://readersupportednews.org/off-site-news-section/132-132/4826-army-moves-to-stop-clashes-in-cairo-square

CNN: Who Are the Pro-Mubarak Demonstrators?

The CNN Wire Staff
The report begins: "For more than a week, opponents of Egypt's President Hosni Mubarak had the upper hand in Cairo, protesting with near impunity in the face of police and an army that did little to stop them.
That all changed on Wednesday.
The morning after Mubarak dramatically announced he would not run for re-election in September, his supporters waded into Tahrir Square by the thousands, and suddenly, serious, prolonged violence reigned in central Cairo." READ MORE

Getting In Line for a Revolution

Sharmine Narwani, Al Jazeera
Movements for democratization are springing up in many Arab countries - one by one the queue increases.
The protests that originally started in Tunisia galvanized the Egyptians into action, which is having a spillover effect pouring into other countries throughout North Africa, the Gulf and the Levant [CC - Ahmad Hammoud] What is interesting about the tsunamis of change cascading through the Middle East this past month is that the "dumb, undeserving-of-democracy" Arab masses have turned out to be magnificently savvy, efficient, focused and determined in flipping over longstanding dictatorships.
And it turns out they are polite too. Arab populations from North Africa, the Levant and the Persian Gulf have now, quite organically it seems, devised a wait-your-turn system for overthrowing the Middle East's iron-fisted leaders.
Opposition groups and ordinary citizens have taken to the streets in Yemen, Jordan, Palestine, Bahrain and Algeria recently to air their grievances and demand change. But they are not going full throttle quite yet. First, they are waiting for their brothers and sisters in Egypt to finish, as Egyptians did when Tunisians were focused on overthrowing the 23-year-old dictatorship of now deposed president Zine El Abidine Ben Ali. READ MORE

http://readersupportednews.org/news-section2/330-131/4801-rsn-special-coverage-egypts-struggle-for-democracy

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