Wednesday, February 2, 2011

Egypt protesters react angrily to Mubarak's televised address


Egypt protesters react angrily to Mubarak's televised address

'How dare he talk to us like children?' say demonstrators. 'If he's here until September then so are we'


Egypt: Reaction from Cairo's Tahrir Square Link to this video
The crowd had rigged up a huge screen to show al-Jazeera. Mubarak's speech was broadcast live. As he announced that he would not be standing for another term, the rally exploded in anger.
The screen was pelted with bottles and the cry "Irhal, irhal" went up repeatedly: "Leave, leave". It was taken up by the hundred thousand people who thronged Tahrir Square. At one point demonstrators held up their shoes to the screen – an insulting gesture in Arab culture.
None of them were appeased by Mubarak's announcement. If anything, they were emboldened to step up their protests and to push their demands further. Many were saying that not only must Mubarak leave immediately but that the whole of his National Democratic party regime had to go and should be put on trial.
"If he's here until September then so are we," said Amr Gharbeia, an activist who is camping out in the square.
"Perhaps this would have been enough to appease people a few days ago but it's much too late now. He has to leave and he has to leave today," added Ibraheem Kabeel, a 26-year-old physician.
"This has only made us angrier. He must leave today. He can't wait until September. Mubarak's plane is ready," said Ahmed Defouki, a 30 year old pharmacist. "Everybody here has different opinions politically but on this issue we are united: Mubarak leaves today."
A new energy infused the crowds. People seemed more excited, sensing that they could bring Mubarak down. Another protester added: "This is the Tunisian scenario, where Ben Ali promised to stand down eventually but was quickly removed."
A prominent liberal dissident, Gamila Ismail, dismissed the president's overtures. "He gave us nothing concrete," she said. "You can't have clean elections and a fair parliament until you have a political system untainted by emergency law.
"You can't have political justice while the state security holds the political apparatus in its grip. Mubarak danced around these issues, preferring instead to show off his muscles to us. He's trying to intimidate us.
"He did not mention the citizens who have died from the bullets and bombs of his police force. This will provoke us even more. He wants this country to be burned down. This is a president playing with fireworks."
Karim Medhat Ennarah, a 27-year-old worker, said: "I watched this speech in a coffee house downtown where everybody was winding down after a long day's protest but when the speech ended the whole coffee house rose as one and began marching back to Tahrir Square. He's a man trying to bargain without realising that he has nothing left to bargain with."
Another demonstrator, Abdallah Moktar, caught the mood. "This speech has angered us much more now. How dare he talk to us like naughty children? He must go immediately," he said.
Egypt protests: In Alexandria, anti-government demonstrators clash with Mubarak supporters - Video
In Alexandria, however, following Mubarak's broadcast his supporters clashed with protesters occupying the main square. Sticks were brandished and rocks thrown. Bursts of gunfire were heard, thought to have been soldiers shooting into the air in an attempt to separate the two factions. There were no immediate reports of casualties.
There were similar, small-scale confrontations in central Cairo. Hundreds of pro-Mubarak activists, some on motorcycles, tried to march on Tahrir Square following the speech but were repelled by the demonstrators. Some, carrying sticks, were chanting: "We love you Hosni" and "We will defend you with our blood and souls."
Earlier hundreds of thousands of people had crammed into Tahrir Square to call for an end to Mubarak's three decades in power. Government security forces were nowhere to be seen.
The protesters hung vast banners from buildings, beat drums and chanted, they picnicked with their children on patches of scrubby grass, and walked round the square holding up vast Egyptian flags.
Most of all they called for their president to go in a multitude of different ways. "Wake up, Mubarak, this is your last day," they chanted. "We won't leave until you do."
Their banners – in Arabic, English, French and Spanish, a nod to the international audience watching this extraordinary uprising unfold – said "Game over" and "Leave now and we'll leave you alone".
Above the crowd a helicopter circled, feeding live images to Mubarak's senior security officials.
They will have seen the crush below, but not the detail in it: families and friends, bearded Islamic students, work colleagues, the rich, the middle-class and the poor putting hands on shoulders to move through the vast press of bodies in snaking lines.
They won't have seen the happy chance meetings of friends and colleagues; the intense pockets of debate about the future of the revolution that broke out on dozens of street corners; the faces lit up with the exhilaration of free expression and free assembly, as exciting as for any crowd at a football match or a rock concert. It was, as one banner had it, a festival of freedom. But what was truly extraordinary about this gathering was how far Egypt has come in a week.
People who once would not have thought of coming to protest, who would never have thought of speaking ill of a president who has ruled for 30 years or given their names to foreign journalists, have found a voice.
So they filed in their hundreds and thousands through checkpoints run by the army and checkpoints run by volunteers – who frisked all male protesters, checking their IDs to ensure that no plain clothes police officers could infiltrate the crowd. The volunteers passed out printed leaflets from soldiers asking for a peaceful assembly. Young men came with free boxes of mango juice and water to hand out, round bread and biscuits, cheese and dates. Others moved through the throng collecting litter and holding up signs for the camera.
It was a victory over fear that was assisted by a declaration from Egypt's army last night that it would not use force against those who came out on the streets today.
So they came in numbers vaster than anyone had predicted, gathering not only in the capital, but also in Alexandria, Suez and other major cities. The march of the million, Egypt's protest movement called it.
Even if it is not certain whether they reached that figure, it is clear that a transformation has taken place.
In Alexandria, at the height of the demonstration, the crowd went wild as a man in army fatigues was hoisted on to shoulders and carried into the square. He brandished his ID card and waved a national flag before the cheering masses. Was he a soldier? "Of course," said Marwa Massoud, 34. "We are the army and the people, united."
The reasons protesters gave for their presence varied only in the words they chose, not their substance. "Mubarak has lost the legitimacy of his people. It is the end of 30 years of dictatorship," said Khaled Mohammed, 52. "We want the same as every civilised nation, fair elections." A man in a wheelchair grinned and gave a thumbs-up: "Egypt! Egypt!"
A group of doctors in white coats unfurled a banner demanding the fall of the president. Almost all the signs were scrawled on cardboard ripped from cartons, a sign of a grassroots revolt. The crowd roared: "Wake up, Mubarak, today is your last day."
The streets belonged to Mubarak's opponents; those with different views kept their heads down. "Not everyone wants him out," said a taxi driver. "He's not all bad. These people are crazy."
Commenting on the military's assurances regarding protesters' security, Muhammad Warsi, a 60-year-old surgeon, in Cairo said: "The high command of the army delivered a hidden message.
"It is the same message that the elites of the country's society are delivering. They're saying [to Mubarak], 'We loved you 30 years ago. We don't want to humiliate you. We don't want you to end like [Romanian president] Nicolae Ceausescu. Go in peace.'"
Admiration for Egypt's youth was a common theme running through the crowd.
"I'm ashamed of my generation. We old people sat back and lived through decades of corruption without lifting a finger," said Aza el-Hadari, a 63-year-old bookshop owner. "This new generation has given me the best years of my life back.
"I feel sorry that Mubarak, who was after all a hero of the 1973 war effort, should be reduced to leaving with such little dignity, but he has brought this upon himself.
"Mubarak will go down in Egyptian history as the president who ordered security forces to fire live bullets into the bodies of his sons and daughters. There's no way back from that."
Mohamed Warsi was sitting on a bench waiting for his daughters, like many other recent additions to Egypt's burgeoning revolution. He told a joke doing the rounds. "OK," he says, "So Hosni Mubarak is lying on his death bed and his doctor comes and says: 'Hosni, you have to prepare a message to say goodbye to your people.' 'For my people?' asks Mubarak. 'Why? Where are the people going?'" Today the answer came – to Tahrir Square, to bid their president of 30 years goodbye


Hosni Mubarak vows to stand down at next election – but not now - Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak's announcement


Hosni Mubarak vows to stand down at next election – but not now

Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak's announcement that he will serve out remaining term immediately rejected by angry crowds
Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak announces on state TV that he will serve out remaining term – his sixth – before stepping down in September Link to this video
Egypt 's embattled president, Hosni Mubarak, bowed to the pressure of millions of people massing on the streets, pledging to step down at the next election and pave the way for a new leader of the Arab world's largest country.
But Barack Obama, who effectively withdrew US support for the leader of its key Arab ally in a day of fast moving developments, gave an equivocal welcome to the speech by saying that "change must begin now" while praising the "passion and dignity" of the demonstrators in the streets as an inspiration.
Mubarak said he would not be a candidate for a seventh term but would remain in power to oversee reform and guarantee stability – a position that was immediately rejected by angry crowds and promised yet more drama in Egypt's extraordinary crisis.
"In the few months remaining in my current term I will work towards ensuring a peaceful transition of power," Mubarak said. "I have exhausted my life in serving Egypt and my people. I will die on the soil of Egypt and be judged by history" – a clear reference to the fate of Tunisia's president who fled into exile last month.
Looking grave as he spoke on state TV last night in front of the presidential seal, Mubarak attacked those responsible for protests that had been "manipulated by political forces", caused mayhem and chaos and endangered the "stability of the nation".
In a defiant, finger-wagging performance the 82-year-old said he was always going to quit in September – " a position he had never made public until now.
Opposition leaders had already warned throughout a dramatic eighth day of mass protests that only Mubarak's immediate departure would satisfy them.
The Egyptian leader made his announcement after meeting a White House special envoy who conveyed the message that Washington had in effect withdrawn US support for the man who had been the linchpin of its Middle East strategy.
The White House declined to reveal details of the message conveyed by the envoy, Frank Wisner, a former US ambassador to Cairo who is close to Mubarak other than to say he urged him not to seek re-election. But after the Egyptian leader's speech, Obama spoke to Mubarak for 30 minutes and then made a statement at the White House in which he praised the protesters and called for the transition of power to begin immediately.
But the US president did not explicitly call for Mubarak to resign immediately, leaving open the possibility of Washington accepting the Egyptian leader overseeing the transition in the face of unprecedented protests and an insistence by opposition leaders that they would not negotiate while Mubarak remains in power.
"What is clear, and what I indicated tonight to President Mubarak, is my belief that an orderly transition must be meaningful, it must be peaceful and it must begin now," said Obama.
"Furthermore the process must include a broad spectrum of Egyptian voices and opposition parties. It should lead to elections that are free and fair."
But in Washington and Cairo there were questions over the Obama administration's position with some Americanpoliticians, such as John Kerry, chairman of the Senate's foreign affairs committee, saying Mubarak must resign immediately.
Certainly many Egyptians want that. "May it be tonight, oh God," chanted the crowds in Cairo's Tahrir Square as they waited to hear the historic speech.
Mubarak's statement came at the end of a day that saw epic protests. Millions of people rallied across the country.
"Illegitimate," chanted the vast crowds choking Tahrir Square. "He [Mubarak] will leave, we will not leave," went another slogan, in a festive atmosphere that belied the tense stalemate that has emerged between the people and the regime over an extraordinary 48 hours.
With the army standing by its landmark pledge not to use force against demonstrators, Mubarak faced an intense and co-ordinated US campaign to persuade him and the powerful Egyptian military to effect "an orderly transition".
But as troops barricaded the presidential palace with barbed wire, Egypt's fractured opposition rallied together to reject any talks with the ruling National Democratic party on political reform, insisting the president must stand down before any dialogue can get under way.
On Monday, Mubarak ordered his new vice-president and intelligence chief, Omar Suleiman, to begin a dialogue with opposition groups, including the powerful Muslim Brotherhood. "Omar Suleiman approached us, and we have rejected his approaches," Essam el-Arian, a Brotherhood spokesman, told the Guardian. "As long as Mubarak delays his departure, these protests will remain and they will only get bigger."
Mohammed ElBaradei, 68, the former UN nuclear weapons inspector who has been nominated to lead any negotiations, met protesters and the US ambassador to Egypt, Margaret Scobey, insisting afterwards that no talks were possible while the president remained in power.
"I hope to see Egypt peaceful and that's going to require as a first step the departure of President Mubarak," he told al-Arabiya TV. "If President Mubarak leaves then everything else will progress correctly."Mass protests were reported across Egypt, including in Alexandria, Suez and many other cities.
Underlining the regional impact of the crisis, the Jordanian prime minister was sacked after weeks of protests over price rises and unemployment and inspired by events in Tunisia and now Egypt.
The Foreign Office said in a statement last night: "We have been clear in public, and with President Mubarak and his government in private, about the need for a transition to a broader-based government that will produce real, visible and comprehensive change."
William Hague, the foreign secretary, said a charter flight would be sent to Cairo to bring Britons back but they would have to pay £300 for the service.

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