http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/africa/a-people-defies-its-dictator-and-a-nations-future-is-in-the-balance-2197769.html

<http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/africa/a-people-defies-its-dictator-and-a-nations-future-is-in-the-balance-2197769.html>

Egypt Erupts:

A people defies its dictator, and a nation's future is in the balance

A brutal regime is fighting, bloodily, for its life. *Robert Fisk* reports
from the streets of Cairo

*Saturday, 29 January 2011*

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It might be the end. It is certainly the beginning of the end. Across Egypt,
tens of thousands of Arabs braved tear gas, water cannons, stun grenades and
live fire yesterday to demand the removal of Hosni Mubarak after more than
30 years of dictatorship.

And as Cairo lay drenched under clouds of tear gas from thousands of
canisters fired into dense crowds by riot police, it looked as if his rule
was nearing its finish. None of us on the streets of Cairo yesterday even
knew where Mubarak – who would later appear on television to dismiss his
cabinet – was. And I didn't find anyone who cared.

They were brave, largely peaceful, these tens of thousands, but the shocking
behaviour of Mubarak's plainclothes battagi – the word does literally mean
"thugs" in Arabic – who beat, bashed and assaulted demonstrators while the
cops watched and did nothing, was a disgrace. These men, many of them
ex-policemen who are drug addicts, were last night the front line of the
Egyptian state. The true representatives of Hosni Mubarak as uniformed cops
showered gas on to the crowds.
At one point last night, gas canisters were streaming smoke across the
waters of the Nile as riot police and protesters fought on the great river
bridges. It was incredible, a risen people who would no longer take violence
and brutality and prison as their lot in the largest Arab nation. And the
police themselves might be cracking: "What can we do?" one of the riot cops
asked us. "We have orders. Do you think we want to do this? This country is
going downhill." The government imposed a curfew last night as protesters
knelt in prayer in front of police.
How does one describe a day that may prove to be so giant a page in Egypt's
history? Maybe reporters should abandon their analyses and just tell the
tale of what happened from morning to night in one of the world's most
ancient cities. So here it is, the story from my notes, scribbled amid a
defiant people in the face of thousands of plainclothes and uniformed
police.

It began at the Istikama mosque on Giza Square: a grim thoroughfare of gaunt
concrete apartment blocks and a line of riot police that stretched as far as
the Nile. We all knew that Mohamed ElBaradei would be there for midday
prayers and, at first, the crowd seemed small. The cops smoked cigarettes.
If this was the end of the reign of Mubarak, it was a pretty unimpressive
start.

But then, no sooner had the last prayers been uttered than the crowd of
worshippers, perched above the highway, turned towards the police. "Mubarak,
Mubarak," they shouted. "Saudi Arabia is waiting for you." That's when the
water cannons were turned on the crowd – the police had every intention of
fighting them even though not a stone had been thrown. The water smashed
into the crowd and then the hoses were pointed directly at ElBaradei, who
reeled back, drenched.

He had returned from Vienna a few hours earlier and few Egyptians think he
will run Egypt – he claims to want to be a negotiator – but this was a
disgrace. Egypt's most honoured politician, a Nobel prize winner who had
held the post of the UN's top nuclear inspector, was drenched like a street
urchin. That's what Mubarak thought of him, I suppose: just another trouble
maker with a "hidden agenda" – that really is the language the Egyptian
government is using right now.

And then the tear gas burst over the crowds. Perhaps there were a few
thousand now, but as I walked beside them, something remarkable happened.
>From apartment blocks and dingy alleyways, from neighbouring streets,
hundreds and then thousands of Egyptians swarmed on to the highway leading
to Tahrir Square. This is the one tactic the police had decided to prevent.
To have Mubarak's detractors in the very centre of Cairo would suggest that
his rule was already over. The government had already cut the internet –
slicing off Egypt from the rest of the world – and killed all of the mobile
phone signals. It made no difference.

"We want the regime to fall," the crowds screamed. Not perhaps the most
memorable cry of revolution but they shouted it again and again until they
drowned out the pop of tear gas grenades. From all over Cairo they surged
into the city, middle-class youngsters from Gazira, the poor from the slums
of Beaulak al-Daqrour, marching steadily across the Nile bridges like an
army – which, I guess, was what they were.

Still the gas grenades showered over them. Coughing and retching, they
marched on. Many held their coats over their mouths or queued at a lemon
shop where the owner squeezed fresh fruit into their mouths. Lemon juice –
an antidote to tear gas – poured across the pavement into the gutter.

This was Cairo, of course, but these protests were taking place all over
Egypt, not least in Suez, where 13 Egyptians have so far been killed. The
demonstrations began not just at mosques but at Coptic churches. "I am a
Christian, but I am an Egyptian first," a man called Mina told me. "I want
Mubarak to go." And that is when the first bataggi arrived, pushing to the
front of the police ranks in order to attack the protesters. They had metal
rods and police truncheons – from where? – and sharpened sticks, and could
be prosecuted for serious crimes if Mubarak's regime falls. They were
vicious. One man whipped a youth over the back with a long yellow cable. He
howled with pain. Across the city, the cops stood in ranks, legions of them,
the sun glinting on their visors. The crowd were supposed to be afraid, but
the police looked ugly, like hooded birds. Then the protesters reached the
east bank of the Nile.

A few tourists found themselves caught up in this spectacle – I saw three
middle-aged ladies on one of the Nile bridges (Cairo's hotels had not, of
course, told their guests what was happening) – but the police decided that
they would hold the east end of the flyover. They opened their ranks again
and sent the thugs in to beat the leading protesters. And this was the
moment the tear-gassing began in earnest, hundreds upon hundreds of
canisters raining on to the crowds who marched from all roads into the city.
It stung our eyes and made us cough until we were gasping. Men were being
sick beside sealed shop fronts.

Fires appear to have broken out last night near Mubarak's rubber-stamp NDP
headquarters. A curfew was imposed and first reports spoke of troops in the
city, an ominous sign that the police had lost control. We took refuge in
the old Café Riche off Telaat Harb Square, a tiny restaurant and bar of
blue-robed waiters; and there, sipping his coffee, was the great Egyptian
writer Ibrahim Abdul Meguid, right in front of us. It was like bumping into
Tolstoy taking lunch amid the Russian revolution. "There has been no
reaction from Mubarak!" he exalted. "It is as if nothing has happened! But
they will do it – the people will do it!" The guests sat choking from the
gas. It was one of those memorable scenes that occur in movies rather than
real life.

And there was an old man on the pavement, one hand over his stinging eyes.
Retired Colonel Weaam Salim of the Egyptian army, wearing his medal ribbons
from the 1967 war with Israel – which Egypt lost – and the 1973 war, which
the colonel thought Egypt had won. "I am leaving the ranks of veteran
soldiers," he told me. "I am joining the protesters." And what of the army?
Throughout the day we had not seen them. Their colonels and brigadiers and
generals were silent. Were they waiting until Mubarak imposed martial law?

The crowds refused to abide by the curfew. In Suez, they set police trucks
on fire. Opposite my own hotel, they tried to tip another truck into the
Nile. I couldn't get back to Western Cairo over the bridges. The gas
grenades were still soaring off the edges into the Nile. But a cop
eventually took pity on us – not a quality, I have to say, that was much in
evidence yesterday – and led us to the very bank of the Nile. And there was
an old Egyptian motorboat, the tourist kind, with plastic flowers and a
willing owner. So we sailed back in style, sipping Pepsi. And then a yellow
speed boat swept past with two men making victory signs at the crowds on the
bridges, a young girl standing in the back, holding a massive banner in her
hands. It was the flag of Egypt.

*Egypt's day of crisis*

**President Mubarak's regime called in the army and imposed a curfew after
tens of thousands of protesters took to the streets demanding an end to his
rule.*

**Large numbers of protesters defied the curfew in Cairo to storm the state
TV building and the Foreign Ministry.*

**The headquarters of the ruling National Democratic Party were set alight.*

**Protesters chased riot police away from Cairo's main square. Some police
are reported to have removed their uniforms to join the demonstrators. Tanks
and troops were ordered to retake the square.*

**At least 20 people were killed in violent clashes in Egyptian cities.*

**Nobel Peace laureate Mohamed ElBaradei was put under house arrest after
being hosed by water cannon.*

**Mobile phone and internet services were disrupted to prevent social
networking sites such as Facebook being used to orchestrate protests.*

**Mr Mubarak announced he will form a new government this morning. He has
asked his cabinet to resign.*

**US President Barack Obama made a televised address in which he revealed
that he told Mr Mubarak he must deliver on reforms.*


-- 
Peace Is Doable

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