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.
Posts Tagged ‘Secretary Robert Gates’
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Pakistani Taliban behind NY bomb plot: US
NEW YORK – Senior Obama administration officials on Sunday blamed the failed attempt to blow up a bomb in Times Square on the Pakistani Taliban, in what was seen as part of a move to step up pressure on the Pakistan military to attack the militant group in North Waziristan.
“We’ve now developed evidence that shows the Pakistani Taliban was behind the attack,” Attorney General Eric Holder said in an interview on ABC television’s news programme ‘This Week’.
Later, appearing on NBC’s “Meet the Press,” he said the Taliban in Pakistan ‘directed this plot’ and may have also financed it. The Pakistani Taliban, he said, was ‘intimately involved’ in the attempt on May 1 by Faisal Shahzad, an American citizen of Pakistani descent, to blow up gasoline and propane tanks secreted inside a vehicle.
John Brennan, President ObamaÂ’s chief counterterrorism adviser, echoed HolderÂ’s statements Sunday morning, saying it appeared that Shahzad, a resident of Bridgeport, Connecticut, who spent five months in Pakistan until February, was working for Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP).
Political observers noted that Obama administration officials were now speaking out more firmly and publicly than before in an obvious attempt to build up pressure on Pakistan. Following Secretary of State Hillary Clinton warning regarding ‘severe consequences’, the US Commander in Afghanistan, Stanley McCrystal, spoke to Army Chief Gen Ashfaq Parvez Kayani, in Rawalpindi, urging him to launch an offensive in North Waziristan.
“The conclusion that the Pakistani Taliban is behind the attempted bombing underscores the serious threat that we face from a very determined enemy,” Brennan said on CNN’s “State of the Union”.
Shahzad, who was arrested at Kennedy International Airport aboard an Emirates Airlines airplane bound for Dubai little more than two days after the bomb was discovered, soon told police that he trained in Waziristan, the main base for the Pakistani Taliban and Al-Qaeda, according to US media reports.
Neither Holder nor Brennan indicated what new information led them to the firmer conclusions about the role of the Pakistani Taliban.
Brennan said Pakistan was being very cooperative in the investigation but that the US wanted to know exactly who might have been helping Shahzad.
“There are a number of terrorist and militant groups operating in Pakistan,” he said. “And we need to make sure there’s no support being given to them by the Pakistani government.”
Brennan would not say whether Shahzad may be connected to American-Yemenese Cleric Anwar al-Awlaki, other than to acknowledge that his Internet sermons are popular among extremist Muslims.
Defence Secretary Robert Gates said Pakistan had recently stepped up efforts to root out extremists.
“The Pakistanis have been doing so much more than 18 months or two years ago any of us would have expected,” Gates told reporters at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas.
He referred to Pak Army offensives, dating to spring 2009, against Taliban extremists in areas near the Afghan border, including in South Waziristan.
Gates said the Obama administration was sticking to its policy of offering to do as much training and other military activity inside Pakistan as the Pakistani government was willing to accept.
“It’s their country,” Gates said. “They remain in the driver’s seat, and they have their foot on the accelerator.”
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Pakistan snubs US over new operation
ISLAMABAD – Pakistan on Thursday conveyed to the US that it couldn’t launch any other military operation until it fully secured and stabilised South Waziristan Agency, the stronghold of the banned Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), sources informed TheNation.
This policy decision was conveyed to the visiting US Defence Secretary Robert Gates who met separately with Pakistani civil and military leadership.
Gates who is leading the largest US delegation met with President Asif Ali Zardari, Prime Minister Syed Yousuf Raza Gilani, Defence Minister Ch Ahmed Mukhtar, Chairman Joint Chiefs of Staff Committee Gen Tariq Majid and Chief of Army Staff Gen Ashfaq Parvez Kayani.
The sources informed that host of issues including war on terror, regional security situation, US drone strikes into Pakistani territory, Indo-US nuclear relations as well as Pak-US bilateral defence cooperation came under dissuasion in the meetings. According to sources, Robert Gates had tossed up the US proposal seeking military operation in PakistanÂ’s North Waziristan Agency (NWA) in the meetings but received cold shoulder from Pakistani leadership.
“Islamabad has categorically told US Defence Secretary that it cannot undertake another military operation unless it secures and stabilises Taliban stronghold South Waziristan,” sources said.
President Zardari during a dinner meeting with Robert Gates’ team welcomed US affirmation of commitment to Pakistan’s stability and security. “It must be based on mutual respect and trust”, Farhatullah Babar quoted President as telling Gates.
President Zardari also emphasised that the issue of arrears in Coalition Support Fund (CSF) amounting to over $1.3 billion be resolved at the earliest. The President said that the economic cost of the war against terror amounting to $35 billion for the last eight years had gravely impacted PakistanÂ’s economy and the amount under CSF had actually been spent by Pakistan that needed to be reimbursed urgently.
“Pakistan has been facing delays in payments of Coalition Support Fund claims,” the President informed the Defence Secretary and urged for timely reimbursement of arrears. The President also expressed reservations over the new screening regime for Pakistani nationals saying it had generated resentment in the country and called for its review.
About the drone attacks on Pakistani territory, the President said that it undermined the national consensus against war on militancy and called for creating a mechanism whereby the drones were used by PakistanÂ’s security forces and not by foreign troops that raised questions of sovereignty.
“It was critical that national consensus on war against militancy was not allowed to erode and anything that tended to weaken it was avoided,” the President emphasised.
The President said when Pakistani security forces employed hi-tech in the war, it had no negative fallout. He said, “If our own security forces possessed drones, it would be a more helpful high tech weapon of war than when it was used by foreign forces.”
The President also called for strengthening law enforcing agencies and provision of necessary equipment for meeting the ends of fight against militancy. He said that democratic stability in Pakistan was contingent upon advancement of our development agenda and called upon the industrialised world to play a greater role.
President said that a Marshal Plan was needed to overcome economic problems and called for the Friends of Democratic Pakistan to translate into practice the pledges of economic and financial support to Pakistan. He also called for allowing greater market access to Pakistani goods in the US and European markets.
The President emphasised the need for early adoption of legislation in the US on Reconstruction Opportunity Zones (RoZs) to give the needed relief to the tribal people in their search for economic well-being and social and political stability to counter forces of extremism and militancy.
Referring to the new Afghan strategy of the US, the President said that Pakistan had legitimate interests in promoting peace and stability in Afghanistan and urged that US must remain sensitive to PakistanÂ’s core national interests and concerns.
US actions should remain on the Afghan side of the border, he added.
President Zardari also underlined the need for controlling drugs that he said, were serving as “a force multiplier “ to the benefit of militants.
Robert Gates appreciated PakistanÂ’s role in the war against extremism and militancy and assured full support to Pakistan in fight against militancy as well as economic rehabilitation.
The Prime Minister in his meeting with Gates conveyed sheer concerns of PakistanÂ’s Parliament over the continued US drones strikes into Pakistani territory. The PM called for reversing the US drone policy saying it was proving counterproductive, as efforts to separate tribesmen from Taliban were not paying off.
Defence Minister Ch Ahmed Mukhtar during his meeting with the US Defence Secretary called upon the US to enter into civilian-nuclear energy cooperation with Pakistan and also to recognise it as a nuclear state.
Military leadership including Chief of Army Staff General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani and Chairman Joint Chiefs of Staff Committee General Tariq Majeed in their separate meeting with US Defence Secretary called for enhanced intelligence sharing to make the terror war more meaningful and goal-oriented. They also expressed concerns over the manner Afghan soil was being used to destabilise Pakistan. The visiting US Defence Secretary also laid wreath at Yadgar-e-Shuhada.



