RSS Feed     Twitter     Facebook

Posts Tagged ‘Cairo’

Anti-government protests must stop: Egypt vice president

Omar SuleimanEgypt’s newly appointed Vice President Omar Suleiman said Wednesday evening he would not speak with the opposition until Egyptian protesters stop demonstrations and return to their homes. “The request by President (Hosni) Mubarak to open dialogue with opposition will not continue until protesters stop and leave the Egyptian streets to return to normalcy, which will [...]

212 more Indians return from Egypt

A third batch of 212 Indians stranded in Egypt, which is in the midst of a political upheaval, arrived here early Thursday in a special flight. Air India flight AI-160 landed with the Indians at 5.30 a.m., an official said. This is the third flight to Mumbai in Air India’s efforts to bring back the [...]

Anderson Cooper Attacked, Punched In Head In Egypt

Egypt isn’t safe for a Silver Fox these days…or anyone else for that matter. CNN reporter Anderson Cooper was attacked and narrowly escaped serious injury after he and crew were overtaken by a mob of protesters as political upheaval continued to rock Cairo on Wednesday. The Anderson 360 host, who reported from the frontlines of [...]

Egypt’s transition must begin now: Obama

barack-obama-2Hours after embattled Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak announced that he would not run for re-election in September, President Barack Obama warning of “difficult days ahead” said the transition in Egypt must begin now. “We’ve borne witness to the beginning of new chapter in the history of a great country and a long-time partner of the [...]

Millions in ‘final push’


CAIRO (Agencies) – EgyptÂ’s President Hosni Mubarak said on Tuesday he would not run for the presidency again and would work in the last months of his term to allow the transfer of power as millions across the country staged protests against his rule.
Following the speech, the mammoth crowd gathered in Tahrir Square roared “We are not going, he (Mubarak) should go.”
Mubarak, in his speech, said the main priority was the stability of the nation to allow the transfer of power. He said he would seek changes to the constitution. Mubarak said he won’t seek re-election in September presidential election. “It’s a choice between chaos and stability. Speaking on state TV, Mubarak promised constitutional reform, but said he wanted to stay until the end of his current presidential term.
The president presented elections without him as the only choice between chaos and stability. “Currently the people are feared of tomorrow,” said Mubarak.
Earlier in the day, millions of people rallied across Egypt on Tuesday clamouring for President Hosni Mubarak to give up power, piling pressure on a leader who has towered over Middle East politics for 30 years to make way for a new era of democracy in the Arab nation. A sea of Egyptians took to the streets in scenes never seen before in the Arab nationÂ’s modern history, roaring in unison for President Mubarak and his new government to quit.
More than a million protesters – and perhaps as many as two million – flooded into central Cairo, turning Tahrir Square into a sea of humanity, according to CBS News TV channel.
Packed shoulder to shoulder in and around the famed Tahrir Square, the mass of people held aloft posters denouncing the president, and chanted slogans “Go Mubarak Go” and “Leave! Leave! Leave!”
Hundreds of thousands of people also took part in similar demonstrations, calling on Mubarak to step down, across other cities, including Sinai, Alexandria, Suez, Mansoura, Damnhour, Arish, Tanta, El-Mahalla el-Kubra, Ismailia and Mahalla el-Kubra.
Tens of thousands marched in Alexandria while the number of those protesting in Sinai was estimated over 250,000. “Mubarak you coward, you agent of the United States.”
Protest organisers had called for an indefinite strike to be observed across the country, the eighth day of an uprising that has claimed at least 150 lives.
Soldiers, some perched atop armoured vehicles defaced with anti-Mubarak graffiti, smiled and nodded as protesters punched the air and shouted: “The people and the army are hand in hand … down, down Hosni Mubarak.”
A couple of hundred pro-Mubarak supporters gathered near the Foreign Ministry, a little distance from Tahrir Square. “Yes to Mubarak, No to ElBaradei, No to spies in Egypt,” they shouted, their small number serving to highlight his unpopularity.
Mohamed ElBaradei was edging towards taking over as EgyptÂ’s interim president as support fell away from President Hosni Mubarak.
Reports from sources close to the former UN nuclear agency chief said he met senior figures from the army on Tuesday morning as protesters gathered in major cities calling for Mr Mubarak to go.
He also held a meeting with Omar Suleiman, the new vice-president, and representative of a number of opposition parties. Mr Suleiman also talked to other opposition figures.
The US ambassador, was another caller, by telephone – the United States had not confirmed any direct contact with Mr ElBaradei as late as Monday afternoon.
With the army refusing to take action against the people and support from long-time backer the US fading, the 82-year-old strongmanÂ’s days seemed numbered. His downfall after three decades could reconfigure the geopolitical map of the Middle East, with implications from Israel to oil-giant Saudi Arabia. Unrest is already stirring in other Arab countries such as Jordan and Yemen.
EgyptÂ’s opposition, embracing the banned Islamist group the Muslim Brotherhood, Christians, intellectuals and others, began to coalesce around the figure of Mohamed ElBaradei, a Nobel Peace laureate for his work as head of the UN nuclear agency.
ElBaradei said on Tuesday Mubarak must leave Egypt before the reformist opposition would start talks with the government on the future of the Arab worldÂ’s most populous nation.
“There can be dialogue but it has to come after the demands of the people are met and the first of those is that President Mubarak leaves,” he told Al Arabiya television.
Gauging the numbers of protesters was difficult but Reuters reporters estimated it had hit the million-mark that activists had called for.
“Mubarak wake up, today is the last day,” they shouted in Alexandria.
Soldiers in Tahrir Square erected barbed wire barricades but made no attempt to interfere with people. Tanks daubed with anti-Mubarak graffiti stood by.
Barbed wire barricades also ringed the presidential palace, where Mubarak is believed to be hunkered down.
“We have done the difficult part. We have taken over the street,” said protester Walid Abdel-Muttaleb, 38. “Now it’s up to the intellectuals and politicians to come together and provide us with alternatives.”
Effigies of Mubarak were hung from traffic lights. The crowds included men, women and children from all walks of life, showing the breadth of opposition to Mubarak.
The demonstration was an emphatic rejection of MubarakÂ’s appointment of a new vice-president, Omar Suleiman, a cabinet reshuffle and an offer to open a dialogue with the opposition.
Analysts said behind the scenes a transition was already under way but the military top brass would want to grant Mubarak a graceful exit.
“It is possible that people might accept an interim military leader for a short period of time – although not Suleiman. But not for as long as six months,” Maha Azzam, a Middle East expert at Chatham House think tank in London. An election scheduled for September might have to be brought forward.
In Washington, a US official said American special envoy Frank Wisner, a former ambassador to Cairo, spoke with President Mubarak about the need for an orderly transition in his countryÂ’s government.
He met in Egypt with Mubarak. The New York Times reported Wisner conveyed a message from President Barack Obama that Mubarak should not run for another term in elections in September. .
Also Tuesday, the US ambassador to Egypt, Margaret Scobey, spoke to Nobel Peace laureate ElBaradei.
US Defence Secretary Robert Gates spoke with Mohamed Hussein Tantawi, EgyptÂ’s defence minister. The Pentagon declined to give details about the call.
Some influential US lawmakers called for Mubarak to go, including John Kerry, the Chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and an Obama ally.
In an opinion piece in The New York Times, Kerry urged Mubarak to “step aside gracefully to make way for a new power structure.”
The prospect of a hostile neighbour on IsraelÂ’s western border also worries Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. He said he hoped IsraelÂ’s 1979 peace treaty with Egypt would survive any changes that took place.
But pressure on Mubarak also came from elsewhere.
Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan said Mubarak should listen to the peopleÂ’s demands. The solution to political problems lay in the ballot box, he said.
The British government said it was disappointed by the new cabinet as its members were unlikely to produce the kind of political change demanded by the countryÂ’s citizens.
Protesters were inspired in part by a revolt in Tunisia which toppled its president Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali on January 14. But years of repression have left few obvious civilian leaders able to fill any gap left by MubarakÂ’s departure.
The military, which has run Egypt since it toppled King Farouk in 1952, will be the key player in deciding who replaces him. Armed forces chief of staff Sami Enan could be an acceptable leader, a member of the Muslim Brotherhood said.
Enan was a liberal who could be seen as suitable by the nascent opposition coalition, prominent overseas cleric Kamel El-Helbawy told Reuters.
“He can be the future man of Egypt,” Helbawy said.
In Geneva, Navi Pillay, the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, said up to 300 people may have been killed in EgyptÂ’s unrest and called for calm during protests in Cairo. He urged Egyptian authorities to ensure the police and army avoid any excessive use of force and work to protect civilians.
Meanwhile, King Abdullah of Jordan, a close US ally, Tuesday replaced his prime minister after protests over food prices and poor living conditions, naming a former premier with a military background to head the government.
“King Abdullah II designated Maruf Bakhit to form a new government to replace the government of Samir Rifai,” a palace statement said. “Bakhit’s mission is to take practical, quick and tangible steps to launch true political reforms, enhance Jordan’s democratic drive and ensure safe and decent living for all Jordanians.” Jordan’s powerful Islamist opposition said on Monday that it had started a dialogue with the state, saying that unlike the situation in Egypt, it did not seek regime change.
Opposition demands included “the resignation of the government, the amendment of the electoral law and the formation of a national salvation government headed by an elected prime minister,” a member of the Islamic Action Front’s executive council, Zaki Bani Rsheid, said.
The Islamists have also called for constitutional amendments to curb the kingÂ’s power in naming government heads, arguing that the premiership should go to the leader of the majority in parliament.
The constitution, adopted in 1952, gives the king the exclusive prerogative to appoint and dismiss prime ministers.
Despite recent government measures to pump around 500 million dollars into the economy in a bid to help improve living conditions, protests have been held in Amman and other cities over the past three weeks to demand political and economic reform.
TunisiaÂ’s popular revolt, which ousted veteran strongman Zine El Abidine Ben Ali, has inspired dissidents across the Arab world.
Rifai, 43, formed a first government in December 2009, and reshuffled it in November 2010.
Bakhit, who was born in 1947, served as prime minister from 2005 to 2007.
He was appointed in 2005, two weeks after a triple suicide bombing against Amman hotels, claimed by Jordanian-born Al-Qaeda in Iraq leader Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, killed 60 people.

Washington Post Confirms that Egyptian Looters Were Agents Provocateur

The Washington Post writes today:Human Rights Watch confirmed several cases of undercover police loyal to Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak’s regime committing acts of violence and looting in an attempt to stoke fear of instability as demonstrations …

Serbians return from Egypt

A plane with 120 Serbian tourists from Sharm El Sheikh and Hurghada landed on Monday evening at Belgrade’s Nikola Tesla Airport.
As Serbian Ambassador to Cairo Dejan Vasiljević said earlier, after the departure of that group from the two resorts, no Serbian tourists remain in Egypt.

Egyptians up the ante


CAIRO (Agencies) – Egyptian protesters on Monday called for an indefinite general strike and said they planned a “million man march” on Tuesday (today) to mark one week since the start of deadly anti-government protests.
“It was decided overnight that there will be a million man march on Tuesday,” Eid Mohammed, one of the protesters and organisers, said.
“We have also decided to begin an open ended general strike,” he said.
The strike was first called for by workers in the canal city of Suez late on Sunday.
“We will be joining the Suez workers and begin a general strike until our demands are met,” Mohammed Waked, another protest organiser, said.
In Tahrir square, hundreds of protesters camped out overnight, in a bid to keep up the biggest anti-government protests in three decades.
Troops backed by American-built tanks paid for with US aid made no effort to disperse the crowd well after dark, hours after a curfew started. Military helicopters flew overhead.
In the square, protesters insisted they will not leave until Mubarak does, chanting “We will stay in the square, until the coward leaves.”
The army said it would not use force against Egyptians staging protests demanding President Mubarak step down, a statement said.
It said “freedom of expression” was guaranteed to all citizens using peaceful means.
A number of businessmen holding economic posts have been removed. Some Egyptians have resented the influence of the tycoons.
Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak overhauled his government to try to defuse a popular uprising against his 30-year rule but angry protesters rejected the changes and said he must surrender power.
The President removed Interior Minister Habib al-Adly, who is widely despised by protesters. He named General Mahmoud Wagdy, previously head of Cairo criminal investigations department, as the new interior minister.
There are few major changes in the new cabinet line-up, with Foreign Minister Ahmed Abul Gheit and Defence Minister Gen Mohamed Hussein Tantaw both keeping their posts.
The President also slapped curfew across the country to stem ‘a million man march’ on Tuesday (today).
The opposition is declaring a general strike and talks of bringing a million people onto the streets tomorrow but itÂ’s far from clear that they have the coherent structure to keep sustained pressure focused on the Mubarak administration.
Many protesters dismissed the new cabinet appointments.
Looters have pillaged a number of warehouses containing ancient Egyptian artefacts, stealing and damaging some of them, archaeologists and warehouse workers said on Monday.
A group of looters attacked a warehouse at the Qantara Museum near the city of Ismailia on the Suez Canal that contained 3,000 objects from the Roman and Byzantine periods, a source at the tourism police said.
Many of the objects had been found in Sinai by the Israelis after they occupied the peninsula during the 1967 war with Egypt, and had only been recently returned to Egypt.
The United States, which has poured billions of dollars of aid into Egypt since Mubarak came to power, stopped short of saying openly that it wanted him out. President Barack Obama and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton instead urged reform and spoke about “an orderly transition.”
Israeli officials said Egypt has moved about 800 troops into the Sinai peninsula with IsraelÂ’s consent to beef up security as protests aimed at toppling President Hosni Mubarak spread across Egypt.
Meanwhile, foreign governments, airlines and tour operators worked together on Monday to fly their nationals out of Egypt where protesters pressed their campaign to topple President Hosni Mubarak.

Former Director of the CIA’s Counter-Terrorism Center: American Policy in the Middle East is Failing Because the U.S. Doesn’t Believe in Democracy

Robert Grenier – a 27-year veteran of the CIA’s Clandestine Service, and Director of the CIA’s Counter-Terrorism Center from 2004 to 2006 – writes today: Events in the Middle East have slipped away from us. Having long since opted in favour of…

Cairo contagion fires up oil price

We’re nudging closer to $100 a barrel of crude oil. The tensions in Egypt making the news headlines are making oil traders nervous and adding to upward price pressures. But Egypt isn’t a big-scale oil producer, so why would that be? Here’s an interesting article summing it up… 

Cairo contagion

Egypt situation being monitored: Pakistan

pakistan map54Islamabad is “watching what is happening” in Egypt and will evacuate its citizens if the situation worsens, authorities said. Express Tribune reported Monday that the Foreign Office did not make it clear as to when it plans to bring back around 150 Pakistani families. Anti-government protests in Egypt Monday entered the seventh day as demonstrators [...]

Egypt protesters defy curfew; Baradei says no going back

Anti-government demonstrators defied a curfew to protest Monday morning in Egypt’s capital, demanding President Hosny Mubarak step down from office after three decades of rule. Leading opposition activist Mohammed ElBaradei had earlier Sunday promised tens of thousands of protesters that change would come to their country, as they staged a sixth day of demonstrations in [...]

Prominent Former Egyptian MP and Presidential Candidate: The Looting of the Cairo Museum Was Carried Out by Government Employees

As I noted earlier, there have been many reports that the looting in Egypt has been carried out by agents provocateur.There have also been widespread rumors that the looting of the Cairo Museum, and the damage to several mummies, was carried out by gov…

Anarchy reigns over Egypt


CAIRO (Agencies) – Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, clinging on despite mass popular demands for an end to his 30-year rule, met on Sunday with the generals who may hold the keys to EgyptÂ’s future, but in Cairo protesters defied a curfew.
As his key ally the US called for an “orderly transition,” Mubarak’s disparate opponents, including the banned Muslim Brotherhood, rallied behind former international diplomat Mohamed ElBaradei to lead possible talks with the army on organising a handover of power to a national unity coalition.
“I ask of you patience, change is coming in the next few days,” Baradei told thousands of demonstrators on Cairo’s Tahrir Square after dark. “You have taken back your rights and what we have begun, cannot go back.”
The protesters took over the centre of Cairo on the sixth day of demonstrations against the rule of President Mubarak.
The police, who have been involved in violent clashes with protesters in recent days, have largely disappeared from the streets. There was a heavy military presence in the city, but soldiers were not intervening.
Meanwhile, al-Jazeera’s broadcasts via an Egyptian satellite have been halted. The Egyptian government had earlier ordered the Al Arabiya TV channel, which has been showing blanket coverage of the protests, to shut down its operations in the country. In Washington, US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said the US wanted to see an orderly transition of power in Egypt. “We want to see an orderly transition so that no one fills a void, that there not be a void, that there be a well-thought-out plan that will bring about a democratic participatory government,” Clinton told the ‘Fox News Sunday’ programme. “We also don’t want to see some takeover that would lead not to democracy but to oppression and the end of the aspirations of the Egyptian people,” she said.
“America’s message has been consistent. We want to see free and fair elections and we expect that will be one of the outcomes of what is going on right now,” Clinton said during an interview with NBC’s “Meet the Press.”
As thousands gathered in the streets, unmolested by patient troops in their American-built tanks, the fragmented opposition gave a sign of coming together.
In a series of interviews with US television networks, ElBaradei said he had a mandate to negotiate a national unity government and would soon reach out to the army, at the heart of power in Egypt for more than a half century.
He put pressure on the US to support calls for Mubarak to step down, saying “life support to the dictator” must end.
ElBaradei said it was only a matter of time before Mubarak, who has ruled Egypt for three decades, stepped down. He urged US President Barack Obama to take a stand.
“Mubarak has to leave today,” he told CNN before joining thousands of demonstrators in central Cairo’s Tahrir Square.
“The people want the regime to fall!” the crowd chanted.
Earlier on Sunday, a leading member of EgyptÂ’s Muslim Brotherhood said Egyptian opposition forces had agreed to support ElBaradei to negotiate with the government.
In his interviews, ElBaradei rejected concerns about extremism within the Muslim Brotherhood.
“They are no way extremists. They are no way using violence,” he told ABC’s “This Week” programme.
President Mubarak visited a military headquarters and met top commanders, state media reported, showing the leader chairing a meeting as protesters who have rocked the country demanded he quit.
State television showed Mubarak meeting newly-appointed Vice-President Omar Suleiman, Defence Minister Mohamed Hussein Tantawi, Chief of Staff Sami al-Anan and other commanders.
The official state news agency said Mubarak was reviewing the armed forces headquarters in charge of security operations.
With tanks still on the streets, no-one yet knows if President Mubarak will order the army to turn against the protesters, but scenes like these are potent and powerful.
Clashes between protesters and the security forces – mostly riot police – are reported to have left at least 100 people dead across Egypt since rallies began on Tuesday. Thousands have been injured as violence has flared in cities including Cairo, Suez and Alexandria.
As many as 10,000 people defied curfew and protested in Tahrir Square, a rallying point in the centre of Cairo, to express anger at poverty, repression, unemployment and corruption.
As the curfew started and was ignored, warplanes and helicopters flew over the square. By late afternoon more army trucks appeared in a show of military force but no one moved.
“Hosni Mubarak, Omar Suleiman, both of you are agents of the Americans,” shouted protesters, referring to the appointment on Saturday of intelligence chief Suleiman as vice president, the first time Mubarak has appointed a deputy in 30 years of office.
Chants of ‘Mubarak, Mubarak, the plane awaits’ could be heard on Sunday, a reference to protesters’ hopes that President Mubarak will step down and leave Egypt.
In surreal scenes, soldiers from Mubarak’s army stood by tanks covered in anti-Mubarak graffiti: “Down with Mubarak. Down with the despot. Down with the traitor. Pharaoh out of Egypt.”
Asked how they could let protesters scrawl anti-Mubarak slogans on their vehicles, one soldier said: “These are written by the people, it’s the views of the people.”
Many protesters once again climbed onto tanks and armoured vehicles around the square, with many soldiers apparently on friendly terms with the anti-Mubarak demonstrators.
Throughout the city, armed citizensÂ’ groups have formed to respond to the widespread looting and disorder that has accompanied the growing sense of lawlessness.
The vacuum left by police melting away has prompted residents to form neighbourhood protection groups, armed with firearms, sticks and clubs. The citizens set up self-styled checkpoints and barricades and used bricks and metal traffic barriers to block off side streets.
Groups of youths also directed traffic in parts of Cairo, chasing away the gangs of criminals smashing passing cars. Residents said gangs were also stopping people on the streets and robbing them.
For one Egyptian, Gamal Hassanein, it began with a slap. The unemployed 24-year-old was arguing with a police officer when the man struck him across the face – a blow that seemed to sting for months. “He stole my dignity with that slap,” said Hassanein, who does odd jobs to make money. “We could never stand up to those officers before because we were afraid. But weÂ’re no longer willing to be silenced by our fear.
Across Egypt, thousands of prisoners are reported to have escaped from jails after overpowering their guards. Security officials said several inmates were killed and wounded, but gave no specific figures.
Sunday saw a number of Egyptian political movements issue a joint statement calling on leading opposition figure Mohamed ElBaradei to form a transitional government.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has said his government is watching events in Egypt carefully and hoping to maintain peaceful relations with its Arab neighbour.
The Rafah crossing between Egypt and the southern Gaza Strip is closed, Palestinian officials said.
The US government, which previously had advised US citizens against non-essential travel to Egypt, is now advising Americans in Egypt to consider leaving the country as soon as possible. The UK has advised against all but essential travel to Cairo, Alexandria, Luxor and Suez. A number of other European countries have also advised against visiting the country.
Gangs of armed men attacked at least four jails across Egypt before dawn Sunday, helping to free hundreds of extremists and thousands of other inmates.
The army sent hundreds more troops and armoured vehicles onto the streets of Cairo and other cities but appeared to be taking little action against gangs of young men with guns and large sticks who were smashing cars and robbing people.
At least one Nile-side shopping mall in Cairo was on fire after being looted the previous day.
Fighter jets and army helicopters were flying low over Cairo.
President Barack Obama met with security aides Saturday afternoon and issued a plea for government restraint in Egypt, where Washington has long feared increasing influence by Muslim militants.
Meanwhile, in Tunisia, leading Islamist Rachid Ghannouchi returned home on Sunday from 22 years in exile, witnesses said. Thousands turned out to greet him at the airport. His return is the most powerful symbol to date of the change that has swept this country since its president was toppled by popular protests this month.
Meanwhile, Sudanese police beat and arrested students on Sunday as protests broke out throughout Khartoum demanding the government resign, inspired by a popular uprising in neighbouring Egypt.
Hundreds of armed riot police fired tear gas on students demonstrating in central Khartoum and in at least two universities in the capital, which were surrounded by police reinforcements. At one, students hurled stones at police cars.
Police beat students with batons as they chanted anti-government slogans like: “We are ready to die for Sudan” and “Revolution, revolution until victory.”

What’s Happening in Egypt?

Events are moving very quickly in Egypt.The Egyptian government has expelled Al Jazeera.Al Jazeera coverage has also been blacked out throughout most of the United States.Fighter jets flew low over Cairo.However, Al Jazeera just said that the commander…

Is the Egyptian Government Using Agents Provocateur to Justify a Crack Down On the Protesters?

Al Jazeera reported today:[Al Jazeera reporter] Ayman Mohyeldin reports that eyewitnesses have said “party thugs” associated with the Egyptian regime’s Central Security Services – in plainclothes but bearing government-issued weapons – have been loot…

Revolt sweeps across Egypt


CAIRO (Agencies) – EgyptÂ’s president gave the first indication on Saturday he was preparing an eventual handover of power by naming a vice-president for the first time in 30 years after protests that have rocked the foundations of the state.
Hosni MubarakÂ’s decision to pick Omar Suleiman, his intelligence chief and confidant, as his No 2 is the first time the 82-year-old leader has hinted at a succession plan and may suggest he will not run in an election scheduled for September.
Until five days of unprecedented scenes of popular defiance and chaos across the country, officials had suggested Mubarak would run again. If not him, many Egyptians believed, his son, Gamal, 47, could be lined up to run. This now seems impossible.
Suleiman, 74, has long been central in key policy areas, including the Palestinian-Israeli peace process, an issue vital to EgyptÂ’s relationship with key aid donor the United States.
Some protesters, whose actions forced Mubarak to send the army onto the streets of the biggest Arab nation, were not happy with a decision that looks set to ensure power stays in the hands of military and security institutions.
“He is just like Mubarak, there is no change,” a protester told Reuters outside the Interior Ministry, where thousands were protesting, moments after the appointment.
The appointment as prime minister of Ahmad Shafiq – who is, like Mubarak himself, a former commander of the air force – also indicated a preference for responding to public demands for change with limited changes in personnel. MubarakÂ’s decision on Friday to sack the government failed to impress protesters.
The speaker of parliament was later quoted as saying that there were no plans to meet demands for early elections.
Thousands of anti-government protesters clashed with police in several Egyptian cities after President Mubarak spurned demands that he end his 30-year authoritarian rule.
Witnesses said police used teargas and live ammunition against demonstrators in Alexandria. Protesters also gathered on a main square in the capital Cairo in defiance of military orders for them to disperse.
Police opened fire on 1,000 protesters trying to storm the Interior Ministry in Cairo, Al Jazeera reported. Earlier, angry protesters set on fire ruling partyÂ’s headquarters.
The fresh unrest broke out as Mubarak clung to power, replacing his cabinet in an effort to appease angry Egyptians, complaining about poverty, corruption and unemployment.
The president ordered troops and tanks into Cairo and other cities overnight and imposed a curfew in an attempt to quell the protests that have shaken the Arab worldÂ’s most populous nation, a key US ally, to the core.
Tanks were parked on roads leading into the square. One army armoured personnel carrier had been gutted by fire. The square was strewn with rubble, burned tires and charred wood that had been used as barricades overnight.
Buildings, statues and even armoured security vehicles were covered in anti-Mubarak graffiti, including the words ‘Mubarak must fall’, which by morning had been written over to say ‘Mubarak fell’.
Despite scores of deaths in clashes, Egyptians said they would press on with protests until Mubarak quits. “We are not demanding a change of cabinet, we want them all to leave, Mubarak before anyone else,” said Saad Mohammed, a 45-year-old welder who was among about 2,000 people gathered in Cairo’s central Tahrir Square.
The capital was strewn with wreckage from a day of protests on Friday when protesters fought running battles with police firing rubber bullets, teargas and wielding batons – an unprecedented turn of events in the tightly-controlled country.
Government buildings, including the ruling party headquarters, still blazed on Saturday morning after being set alight by demonstrators who targeted symbols of MubarakÂ’s rule.
According to a Reuters tally, at least 82 people have been killed in the unrest. There was no official figure. Medical sources said at least 1,030 people were injured in Cairo, but with more protests starting throughout the country, the number was bound to rise.
Clashes broke out between police and prisoners attempting to escape from a Cairo prison on Saturday, a security source said.
None of the prisoners managed to escape, but eight were killed and 123 were wounded in the clashes at Abu Zaabal prison, northeast of Cairo, the security source said.
As well as Cairo and Alexandria, clashes have also occurred in Suez, site of the strategically important canal.
Mubarak, whose government still rules with emergency laws, promised to address EgyptiansÂ’ grievances in a television address on Friday night. He sacked the cabinet but made clear he intended to stay in power and he condemned the violence. The cabinet members tendered resignations on Saturday.
Prominent activist Mohamed ElBaradei returned to Egypt from Europe to join the protests. But many Egyptians feel he has not spent enough time in the country.
In an interview with France 24 television, El Baradei said Mubarak should step down and begin a transition of power.
The Muslim Brotherhood, an Islamist opposition group, has also stayed in the background, although several of its senior officials have been rounded up. The government has accused it of planning to exploit the protests.
The army told Egyptians on Saturday not to gather in groups and to observe the curfew, which was extended by two hours to begin at 4pm (2pm British time).
Tanks were parked on roads leading into Tahrir Square, which was strewn with rubble, burnt tyres and charred wood that had been used as barricades overnight.
The number of protesters was fewer than in previous days but they were nonetheless defiant.
Protesters mocked MubarakÂ’s sacking of his cabinet as an empty gesture.
Mahmoud Mohammed Imam, a 26-year-old taxi-driver, said: “All he said was empty promises and lies. He appointed a new government of thieves, one thief goes and one thief comes to loot the country.”
Throughout Friday, flames rose in cities across Egypt, including Alexandria, Suez, Assiut and Port Said, and security officials said there were protests in 11 of the countryÂ’s 28 provinces.
Looters broke into the Egyptian Museum during anti-government protests late Friday and destroyed two Pharaonic mummies, EgyptÂ’s top archaeologist told state television.
The museum in central Cairo, which has the worldÂ’s biggest collection of Pharaonic antiquities, is adjacent to the headquarters of the ruling National Democratic Party that protesters had earlier set ablaze. Flames were seen still pouring out of the party headquarters early Saturday.
Meanwhile, the European Union has cancelled all flights to Europe. A British Midland International flight to Cairo returned to London on Saturday after turning back in mid-flight due to protests in Egypt, and British Airways sent an extra plane to the country to evacuate tourists. The plane was carrying 64 passengers and six crewmembers.
Saudi ArabiaÂ’s King Abdullah has expressed support for President Mubarak in the face of massive protests, the official Saudi Press Agency (SPA) said on Saturday. It said King Abdullah phoned Mubarak after days of massive anti-government protests.
“No Arab or Muslim can tolerate any meddling in the security and stability of Arab and Muslim Egypt by those who infiltrated the people in the name of freedom of expression, exploiting it to inject their destructive hatred,” SPA quoted King Abdullah as saying.
Meanwhile, YemenÂ’s ruling party has called for dialogue with the opposition, the countryÂ’s state news agency said, in a bid to end anti-government protests fuelled by popular unrest across the Arab World.
Thousands of Yemenis have taken to the streets of the capital Sanaa in recent days demanding a change of government, inspired by the overthrow two weeks ago of Tunisian President Zine al-Abidine Ben Al Ben Ali and spillover to Egypt.
“We … call for the halting of media propaganda and urge all political parties to work together to make the dialogue a success and arrange for upcoming elections,” a committee of the ruling General PeopleÂ’s Congress (GPC) party was quoted as saying on the website of the Saba state news agency. “Furthermore, we urge an end to protests that ignite dissent to avoid dragging the country into conflict or sedition,” it said.
In London, hundreds protested outside EgyptÂ’s embassy calling for President Hosni Mubarak to go.
“Mubarak out, Islam in,” and “Allah take Mubarak the pharaoh,” chanted Islamist protesters, including organisers Hizb ut Tahrir. Women and men in the group protested separately.
Nearby, other demonstrators were careful to distinguish themselves from the Islamists, sticking to secular chants.
“WeÂ’re completely unrelated to that demonstration … It feeds into Western fears on how it would affect their interests, and thatÂ’s the excuse the Egyptian government is using to avoid change,” said protest organiser Rafik Bedair, 36.
Jordanian activists rallied outside government offices in Amman Saturday as they tried to step up their campaign to force Prime Minister Samir Rifai to step down.
Inspired by unrest in Tunisia and elsewhere in the region, about 200 Jordanians gathered outside the prime minister’s office shouting “Our government is a bunch of thieves” and holding banners reading “No to poverty or hunger.”
“We’ve come from distant, rural areas to Amman to ask Rifai to leave,” said Mohammed Sunaid, a prominent labour activist.

Obama talks tough with embattled Mubarak

barack obama1As revolt swept key ally Egypt, US President Barack Obama asked Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak to make good on his promises and avoid a violent response to the thousands of protesters in the streets. Obama spoke with Mubarak shortly after the latter addressed his country saying he was asking his government to make way for [...]

Obama calls on Mubarak to respect rights of Egyptians

barack-obamaUS President Barack Obama called Friday for the Egyptian government to respect the rights of its people, following days of protests demanding the ouster of President Hosny Mubarak. The US leader spoke from the White House, shortly after telephoning with Mubarak, who had just given his address vowing not to step down but announcing that [...]

Mubarak fires ministers, vows to stay, appeals for calm

Hosny MubarakEgyptian President Hosny Mubarak refused calls to step down, instead calling late Friday for his cabinet to resign amid nationwide protests. Thousands of demonstrators, who were in the streets all day and remained past midnight in central Cairo, demanded that Mubarak step down. “I have asked the government to resign,” Mubarak said in a televised, [...]