http://www.youtube.com/watch?&v=HC8PJNCrhmM

On Sat, Jan 29, 2011 at 12:10 PM, Ghulam Muhammed <[email protected]
> wrote:

> Saturday, January 29, 2011
>
>
>
>
> http://www.indianexpress.com/comments/cairos-audacity-of-hope/743444#postComment
>
>
>
>
>
> Comments posted on Indian Express website over news story: Cairo’s audacity
> of hope
>
>
>
> The serial toppling of Arab/African govts. is a new wave of regime change
> mode of war on the weak by the strong: the US. It has exhausted its funds
> for wars by losing in Iraq and Afghanistan. It is now using Face-book and
> Twitter, as new tools of war to sow dissent and divisions in restive people
> of the region and impose its hegemony through its chosen proxies.
> Progressives like herd of sheep, are helping US strengthen its stranglehold
> on new colonies. US after unleashing its fake 'war on terror' is now embark
> on a new fake 'revolution for democracy' campaign by organized protests even
> in friendly countries to deepen its tentacles in their governance. Egypt is
> targeted for refusing to supply gas to Israel. Just like Mullah Omar was
> toppled and demonized for refusing to give UNOCAL permission of a pipeline
> through Afghanistan. Argentina's govt toppled (for cutting in on UNOCAL).
> Indian media and people should be very vigilant with US moves in the name of
> common strategies that will eventually rob of its freedom.
>
>
>
>
>
> *Ghulam Muhammed, Mumbai*
>
> *[email protected]*
>
> *http://ghulammuhammed.blogspot.com
> *
>
>
> **
>
> *--------------------*
> http://www.indianexpress.com/news/cairos-audacity-of-hope/743444/0
>
> *Sat, 29 Jan 2011
>
> * <http://www.indianexpress.com/>
>
> Cairo’s audacity of hope
> [image: FP]
>
>
> * New York Times <http://www.indianexpress.com/columnist/nyt/> * *
>
> Tags : Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, streets of Cairo, Al Jazeera, Middle
> East diplomacy* *
>
> Posted: Sat Jan 29 2011, 02:18 hrs
>
> **Cairo: *
> *
> Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak ordered the military into the streets to
> reinforce police struggling to contain one of the most serious challenges to
> his long and autocratic rule. *
>
> *The president also imposed an overnight curfew nationwide, but fighting
> continued on the streets of Cairo and smoke from fires blanketed one of the
> city’s main streets along the Nile. The ruling party’s building was in
> flames at nightfall, and dramatic video footage on Al Jazeera showed a crowd
> pushing what they identified as a burning police car off a bridge. *
>
> *CNN said Mubarak was expected to deliver a televised address, though it
> was unclear when that would happen. Internet traffic into and out of the
> country was cut off and cellphone networks disrupted. Vodafone said “all
> mobile operators in Egypt have been instructed to suspend services in
> selected areas.” *
>
> *Demonstrations began earlier in the day as thousands poured from mosques
> after noon prayers, growing increasingly violent as protesters clashed with
> police who fired tear gas, rubber bullets and water cannons. The
> demonstrations, on what protesters called a “day of wrath,” were on a scale
> far beyond anything in the memory of most residents.
> *
>
> *The unrest in Egypt came after weeks of turmoil across the Arab world
> that toppled one leader in Tunisia and encouraged protesters to overcome
> deep-rooted fears of their autocratic leaders and take to the streets. But
> Egypt is a special case — a heavyweight in Middle East diplomacy, in part
> because of its peace treaty with Israel, and a key ally of the United
> States. The country, often the fulcrum on which currents in the region turn,
> also has one of the largest and most sophisticated security forces in the
> Middle East. *
>
> *Calling out the military is a signal of how dramatically the situation
> had spiraled out of control. The army, one of the country’s most powerful
> and respected institutions, prefers to remain behind the scenes and has not
> been sent into the streets to quell unrest in many years. But the police, a
> much reviled force prone to violent retribution against anyone who publicly
> defies the state, appeared unable to quell the unrest. In several cases in
> the capital and elsewhere, the police were forced to back down by throngs of
> protesters. *
>
> *In one of the most dramatic scenes of the day, in Alexandria, protesters
> snatched batons, shields and helmets from the police. Honking cars drove up
> and down a main street, holding police riot shields and truncheons out the
> windows as trophies. *
>
> *In both Cairo and Alexandria, some army patrols were greeted with
> applause and waves from the crowds — a seemingly incongruous response from
> demonstrators who say they want to bring down the president. *
>
> *Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, reading a prepared statement,
> called Friday on Egypt’s government to “restrain the security forces” and
> said that “reform is absolutely critical to the well-being of Egypt.” *
>
> *“We urge the Egyptian authorities to allow peaceful protest and to
> reverse the unprecedented steps it has take to cut off communications,” she
> said. She also urged that protesters “refrain from violence and express
> themselves peacefully.” *
>
> *The unrest in Egypt, a close ally, poses unique challenges for the Obama
> Administration, which has publicly supported Mubarak but privately pushed
> him to reform after decades in power. *
>
> *At least one person appeared to have been killed during rioting in Suez,
> east of Cairo and the site of some of the most violent clashes. Reuters
> reported that protesters were carrying a man’s body through the streets as
> one demonstrator shouted, “They have killed my brother.” Details of his
> death were not immediately clear. *
>
> *According to the Associated Press, Egyptian security officials said they
> had placed the most prominent opposition figures, Mohamed ElBaradei, under
> house arrest, but that could not be independently confirmed and reports
> throughout the day had been contradictory. *
>
> *Shortly before, police doused ElBaradei with a water cannon and beat
> supporters who tried to shield him. “This is an indication of a barbaric
> regime,” said ElBaradei, the former head of the International Atomic Energy
> Agency, as he took refuge in a nearby mosque. “By doing this they are
> ensuring their destruction is at hand.” *
>
> *At Al Azhar in old Cairo, thousands of people poured from one of the most
> iconic mosques of Sunni Islam, chanting “The people want to bring down the
> regime.” DAVID D KIRKPATRICK & ALAN COWELL*
>
>
>
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