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-   -   Balk Like an Egyptian: Thousands in Egypt ignore curfew (https://www.thevettebarn.com/forums/showthread.php?t=7180)

onedef92 01-31-2011 10:28am

Balk Like an Egyptian: Thousands in Egypt ignore curfew
 
Thousands in Egypt ignore curfew

Cairo, Egypt (CNN) -- Thousands of Egyptians -- taking to the streets across the country for a seventh straight day -- defied a mid-afternoon government curfew Monday, despite a bulked-up and proactive military deployment scattered around the restive nation.

In Alexandria, an armored personnel carrier fired warning shots as around 2,000 to 3,000 people gathered. But the actions were seen as an apparent effort to intimidate protesters near a hotel.

A government-imposed curfew began at 3 p.m. (8 a.m. ET), but this daily restriction has been largely ignored by protesters over the past few days.

In Cairo, the crowd has swelled compared with Saturday and Sunday, and people gathered Monday in Tahrir Square, a focal point of the protests. Some of them said they had spent the night, and the smell of smoke from campfires lingered in the air.

Helicopters hovered overhead in Egypt's capital as one group held signs and chanted, "The Egyptian people want the government to fall."

Police have been virtually absent from the streets since Saturday, after a brutal crackdown a day earlier when thousands of riot and plainclothes police clashed violently with protesters.

But police forces were scheduled to start deploying and resuming their duties throughout Egypt on Monday, state-run Nile TV reported.

Activists in Cairo and Alexandria said they were organizing "million-man" marches in those cities for Tuesday, a week after the anti-government protests began.

Egyptian security forces in Cairo have been setting up concrete barriers around key locations ahead of the march. Those locations include Tahrir Square, the Egypt State TV building, and the Interior Ministry

The demonstrations were inspired by the Tunisian uprising following years of social, political, and economic, grievances building up among the populace. The lack of opportunities, corruption and poverty have coalesced into a push to oust long-time President Hosni Mubarak from power.

While it's difficult to ascertain a solid death toll during the violence, Human Rights Watch staffers have confirmed 80 deaths from two hospitals in Cairo, 36 deaths in Alexandria and 13 fatalities in Suez, according to Heba Morayef, a researcher for the group in Cairo.

The unrest has paralyzed daily life in Egypt, with many grocers closing shop and spotty food shipments.

The Egyptian stock exchange and banks also were closed Monday, and the Moody's ratings agency downgraded debt ratings for the country because of the turmoil.

Most of Cairo was not operating normally. There were long lines in front of bread shops and supermarkets, ATMs and gas stations were closed, and there was a minimal police presence. In one neighborhood, sanitation workers were seen collecting garbage.

In Alexandria, people waited in long lines outside bakeries and supermarkets. Nile TV set up a hotline for citizens to call in and report bread shortages across the country. A private sanitation company was seen collecting trash there.

Shops and businesses were looted and abandoned police stations were stripped clean of their arsenals.

Men with makeshift weapons patrolled neighborhoods, creating checkpoints to fill the void left when police stopped patrolling the streets. The self-appointed defense groups appear to be working closely with the military.

There have been reports of prison breaks, and state-run Nile TV said on Monday nearly 2,100 escaped inmates have been arrested.

Al-Jazeera, the Qatar-based news network, said six of its journalists arrested in Cairo earlier Monday have been released but their camera equipment remains seized.

The unrest has forced the evacuations of foreigners. More than 200 Americans have departed, the State Department said.

Suez Canal authorities have said operations there are unchanged and the army is in control. However, shipping companies are predicting delays.

Soldiers are guarding the pyramids in Giza.

Mubarak -- who has ruled Egypt with an iron fist for three decades -- has given no indications of giving up his 30-year rule.

While it was widely believed he was grooming his son, Gamal, as his successor, that plan now has been complicated by demands for democracy.

Mubarak appointed his trusted and powerful intelligence chief, Omar Suleiman, as his vice president on Saturday, the first time the authoritarian regime has had such a post.

The president charged the Cabinet of his reshuffled government, to be shaped by newly appointed Prime Minister Ahmed Shafiq, to restore security in the country, along with Egyptians' faith in their country's economy. Mubarak on Monday swore in Mahmoud Wagdy as the new interior minister. He will replace Habib el-Adly, who has been criticized by protesters because of police actions.

Mohamed ElBaradei, the Nobel laureate and former head of the International Atomic Energy Agency, is one of several opposition figures whose name surfaces when protesters talk about possible future leaders of Egypt. Among other names is Amre Moussa, head of the Arab League.

Several opposition movements have been represented on the streets in the demonstrations. Mounir Fakhry Abdel Nour, secretary-general of the Wafd Party, told CNN the group's followers have been "extremely active." He said he hopes opposition forces such as his party can help bring about a peaceful transition of power.

Yerf Dog 01-31-2011 10:30am

Title-riffic! :cheers:

C5SilverBullet 01-31-2011 10:30am

Quote:

Originally Posted by Yerf Dog (Post 114679)
Title-riffic! :cheers:

:withstupid:

Sea Six 01-31-2011 10:31am

Quote:

Originally Posted by Yerf Dog (Post 114679)
Title-riffic! :cheers:

Yep.

:iagree:

SteelCityBlue 01-31-2011 10:32am

Only a matter of time before this turns bloody

onedef92 01-31-2011 10:38am

Quote:

Originally Posted by SteelCityBlue (Post 114687)
Only a matter of time before this turns bloody

:iagree: Couldn't pass up the golden headline opportunity, though. :D

mrvette 01-31-2011 10:42am

Quote:

Originally Posted by onedef92 (Post 114701)
:iagree: Couldn't pass up the golden headline opportunity, though. :D

:above::above::D:D:o_o::hurray::lolsmile::lolsmile:

F40 01-31-2011 1:12pm

I see what you did there with the headline:skep:

73sbVert 01-31-2011 1:54pm

This is awesome news! If only BHO, the idiot in charge had some leadership ability, we could take advantage of the situation and help out those folks.

But, doubtful. He's not smart enough, and the morons he's surrounded himself with are even more stupid.

Those poor people are f'ked.


And, OD does it again!! Great headline J! :thumbsup:

Joecooool 01-31-2011 2:03pm

Quote:

Originally Posted by 73sbVert (Post 115090)
This is awesome news! If only BHO, the idiot in charge had some leadership ability, we could take advantage of the situation and help out those folks.

But, doubtful. He's not smart enough, and the morons he's surrounded himself with are even more stupid.

Those poor people are f'ked.


And, OD does it again!! Great headline J! :thumbsup:

We as a nation learned nothing in 1979 with Iran.

We like to say we support freedom and democracy around the world but its total bullshit. Only a naive moron believes that. We look out for number one only. We support brutal dictators around the world who oppress their people all in the name of upholding "peace and stability" which never lasts.

We let Mubarak treat his people like shit for thirty years because he was willing to make peace with Israel and not impede traffic through the Suez Canal. Had we let nature take its course, this guy would have been out of there years ago. He was only able to hang on to power because we gave him billions in foreign aid.

You watch and see whats going to happen. Mubarak is toast and the new guy - who ever that will be - is going to be really pissed off at us and rightly so.

Today its Egypt. Tomorrow Yemen, and soon, it will be Pakistan. The shit will really hit the fan with the islamofascist get their hands on Pakistan's nukes.

themonk 01-31-2011 2:06pm

It's always those ass backwards third world counties that are f'kn things up. Those people are un-educated barbarians who are no better than the cavemen that the west people evolved out of thousands of years ago.

The_Dude 01-31-2011 2:08pm

Quote:

Originally Posted by SteelCityBlue (Post 114687)
Only a matter of time before this turns bloody

Already has.

LATB 01-31-2011 2:09pm

Quote:

Originally Posted by Joecooool (Post 115138)
We as a nation learned nothing in 1979 with Iran.

We like to say we support freedom and democracy around the world but its total bullshit. Only a naive moron believes that. We look out for number one only. We support brutal dictators around the world who oppress their people all in the name of upholding "peace and stability" which never lasts.

We let Mubarak treat his people like shit for thirty years because he was willing to make peace with Israel and not impede traffic through the Suez Canal. Had we let nature take its course, this guy would have been out of there years ago. He was only able to hang on to power because we gave him billions in foreign aid.

You watch and see whats going to happen. Mubarak is toast and the new guy - who ever that will be - is going to be really pissed off at us and rightly so.

Today its Egypt. Tomorrow Yemen, and soon, it will be Pakistan. The shit will really hit the fan with the islamofascist get their hands on Pakistan's nukes.

Oh-my-God...

I agree w/ Mr. Coool

rep 4 U :cheers:

Bill 01-31-2011 7:56pm

Quote:

Originally Posted by themonk (Post 115144)
It's always those ass backwards third world counties that are f'kn things up. Those people are un-educated barbarians who are no better than the cavemen that the west people evolved out of thousands of years ago.

Have you BEEN to Egypt? Have you watched the news coverage of the protests? I'm guessing no, and no.

What we are witnessing live on CNN is not much different than when the East Germans had finally had enough and broke through the wall. The East Germans hungered for freedom, and so do the people protesting.

The Egyptians aren't 3rd world goat herding cave dwellers. These are educated people who are tired of being oppressed.

Notice that even though there were a few incidences of hooligans trying to rob some of the museums, using the chaos as cover, it was the people of Egypt who stood up to guard and defend those museums. Have you not seen the news? Even when the Egyptian Army showed up to defend Egypt's national treasures, those soldiers stood side by side with ordinary citizens who were willing to stand up and defend the treasures of Egypt's past.

Think about that. These are people forward thinking enough to understand that even in the chaos, these things need to be saved. Does that sound like ass backwards to you?

Bill 01-31-2011 7:59pm

Quote:

Originally Posted by Joecooool (Post 115138)
We as a nation learned nothing in 1979 with Iran.

We like to say we support freedom and democracy around the world but its total bullshit. Only a naive moron believes that. We look out for number one only. We support brutal dictators around the world who oppress their people all in the name of upholding "peace and stability" which never lasts.

We let Mubarak treat his people like shit for thirty years because he was willing to make peace with Israel and not impede traffic through the Suez Canal. Had we let nature take its course, this guy would have been out of there years ago. He was only able to hang on to power because we gave him billions in foreign aid.

You watch and see whats going to happen. Mubarak is toast and the new guy - who ever that will be - is going to be really pissed off at us and rightly so.

Today its Egypt. Tomorrow Yemen, and soon, it will be Pakistan. The shit will really hit the fan with the islamofascist get their hands on Pakistan's nukes.

:iagree:

"In a time of universal deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act."

George Orwell

Exotix 01-31-2011 8:06pm


wwomanC6 02-01-2011 3:03am

http://i586.photobucket.com/albums/s...Misc/s2863.gif

Hopefully down the road soon the Egyptians will be able to dance instead of Balk!
http://i586.photobucket.com/albums/s...Misc/s2863.gif


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