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Egypt protest spreads across Middle East –with teargas and arrests

Iranians defy government ban to join rally in Tehran, with demonstrations and street clashes in Bahrain and Yemen Egypt’s uprising has sent powerful shockwaves across the Middle East , with demonstrations and street clashes as far afield as Iran, Bahrain and Yemen. As protests and strikes erupted across Egypt, thousands of Iranians defied a government ban and volleys of teargas to join a rally in Azadi Square in the centre of Tehran. The protests were the biggest since those that erupted following the disputed 2009 presidential elections. Mir Hossein Mousavi, leader of the Green movement, was placed under house arrest, as was Mehdi Karroubi, another prominent opposition figure. Protest rallies were also held in Isfahan and Shiraz. Iran’s Islamic regime has hailed the uprisings in both Egypt and Tunisia, though neither involved organised activity by Islamist opposition movements, but instead were led by young people seeking political freedoms and an end to autocracy – just like many Iranian demonstrators. Large numbers of police and security forces, wearing riot gear and many mounted on motorbikes, were stationed around Tehran’s main squares. Mobile phone connections were down in the area of the protests. Unrest in the Gulf island state of Bahrain on a “day of rage” organised by activists using Twitter and Facebook appeared to be similarly inspired by events in Cairo and Tunis but rooted in local factors, especially anger at discrimination against the Shia majority by the Sunni Al-Khalifa dynasty. It was the first sign of post-Egypt unrest anywhere in the wealthy Gulf states. Riot police fired teargas and rubber bullets at demonstrators demanding the release of Shia detainees. “Our movement is peaceful and our demands are legitimate,” read one slogan. At least 14 people were injured in Newidrat village in the south-west of the kingdom — a key western ally that hosts the US fifth fleet. “We are only asking for political reforms, right of political participation, respect for human rights, stopping of systematic discrimination against Shias,” activist Nabeel Rajab told al-Jazeera. Rajab later reported that one person had died of injuries sustained during the protests. In the Yemeni capital Sana’a protesters marched for a fourth consecutive day, demanding the removal of President Ali Abdullah Saleh. Saleh, who has ruled the Arab world’s poorest country since 1978, pledged recently not to run again for the presidency in 2013, but opposition forces are demanding that he emulate Egypt’s Hosni Mubarak and step down at once. They faced attacks by government supporters wielding broken bottles, daggers and rocks. Police were unable to control the crowds in Taiz, where thousands of Yemeni protesters had held a night-long rally. The disturbances occurred while Saleh and the main opposition group were preparing for talks that the government hoped would help avert an Egyptian-style revolt. In the West Bank town of Ramallah, the Palestinian prime minister, Salam Fayyad, sacked his entire cabinet in what was widely interpreted as a gesture intended to satisfy growing calls for reform across the Arab world – though there too, local political factors are at work. Middle East Egypt Iran Bahrain Yemen Protest Ian Black guardian.co.uk

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Paul Krugman would like to suggest a slogan for the Republicans’ budget plan: “Eat the future.” After all, their proposal is all about making cuts to “programs whose benefits aren’t immediate,” he writes. The cold, hard truth (bolstered by a recent Pew survey) is that voters don’t actually want to…

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General Motors will hand out profit-sharing checks totaling $189 million this year, or more than $4,000 per worker, the company announced today. That more than doubles the automaker’s previous record of $1,775, set in 2000, according to the New York Times . The payout will be less than the…

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Cost of Living: Venezuela

The Central Bank of Venezuela has announced that produce prices went up nearly 70 per cent in 2010. Hugo Chavez, the Venezuelan president, blames the jump on vendors. However, they say they have no choice but to raise prices. Al Jazeera’s Craig Mauro reports from the capital, Caracas.

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In the race to poke at the biggest Grammy Awards fail (Christina Aguilera’s trip ? Lea Michele’s “wimmers” ?), plenty of publications piled on Serene Branson, a CBS LA reporter who seemed to speak gibberish during a post-show segment. Which seemed pretty funny–until reports broke that her garbled speech may…

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Egypt’s army calls for end to strikes as workers grow in confidence

Ruling military council also appeals for end to political protests while seeking to reassure youth leaders Egypt’s new military government has appealed for an end to the strikes sweeping the country as workers use their new-found freedom to demand pay increases after years of rising food prices. Transport, bank and tourism employees were joined by steel, oil and gas workers in stoppages that undermined the army’s attempts to return Egypt to normality after the three weeks of unrest that toppled Hosni Mubarak. The ruling military council called on Egyptians to go back to work, saying that strikes “damage the security of the country”. “Noble Egyptians, see that these strikes, at this delicate time, lead to negative results,” it said in a statement read on state television. Reuters reported that the army was considering using martial law to ban work stoppages, although that may prove difficult to square with its promises of democratic liberalisation. In the statement, the army also called for an end to political protests, having forced out the last few hundred remaining demonstrators in Cairo’s Tahrir Square, who had refused to leave until the military stepped aside in favour of an interim civilian administration. Soldiers barred foreign television cameras from filming the operation. The army sought to reassure youth leaders, who played a leading role in the protests, that it is serious about democratisation by telling them that it will hold a referendum on constitutional changes within two months. But it is not clear who will be making the changes or to what extent they will free Egyptian politics. The most immediate challenge for the military regime, though, is the unleashing of years of pent-up frustration and anger among workers about rising prices. More than half of Egypt’s population lives on less than £1 a day. They are heavily reliant on subsidised foods, particularly bread, after sharp increases in the price of staples such as rice and pasta in recent years. Egypt’s military rulers declared Monday a bank holiday after bank employees went out on strike along with workers in the state-run oil and gas industries, ambulance drivers, textile- and steelworkers and post office employees. Police officers and employees of the culture and health ministries joined the strikes. Hundreds of Bank of Alexandria workers demonstrated outside its branch in central Cairo urging their bosses to “leave, leave” – the same slogan used in mass protests against Mubarak. Striking workers in the state-owned Cairo transport authority took to the streets to demand a pay increase and benefits such as free hospital care. Among them was Ahmed Said, who has worked as a driver for the company for 18 years. His take-home pay is about £60 a month, of which more than half goes on rent. He feeds a family of five on the rest. “There is just enough money for food. We have meat once a week but not all weeks. Some days we do not eat dinner. If a child goes to the hospital and we have to pay for that, then me and my wife do not have a meal,” he said. “This is wrong. How can Mubarak be worth so much and we have so little?” He said that after years of staying silent out of fear of the pervasive secret police under Mubarak’s rule, he would not now be intimidated. “Before, we had to be careful. We would be arrested. But now we can talk. We need food. We have been on strike four days. The army cannot stop us,” he said. Another transport worker, Hatem Saleh, waved a wage slip that showed he earned E£238 (£25) in basic pay last month, with E£225 (£24) in overtime and bonuses. Again, more than half goes on rent. Saleh entered the flat he shares with his wife and two teenage daughters, and opened the fridge. “We have a big fridge, but look, it is empty. What is there? Some vegetables. Not enough vegetables for more than two days. We have some bread. We have not had meat in two weeks because we had to pay some money for my daughter’s school. If we buy clothes, we eat less. How can this be when I have worked for nearly 20 years?” he said. The food crisis stalked the Mubarak regime for years. Egypt’s attempts to reform its system of subsidised food for the poor, which ate up more of the national budget than health and education, and the government’s decision to encourage the growth of crops for export in place of wheat, contributed to a surge in food prices in recent years. It came just as demand for subsidised foods increased because people were less able to afford such staples as rice and pasta owing to surging oil and crop prices. Three years ago, activists organised a series of food protests that in some ways presaged this year’s uprising. A strike and protests were partly organised by emails, text messaging and the internet, but the government was able to outmanoeuvre them with a 30% pay rise for state workers, and by rounding up some of the organisers and through intimidation. But Egypt’s new military government faces workers who are no longer so afraid of authority. Egypt Protest Middle East Chris McGreal guardian.co.uk

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Troops in Tahrir restore order, ban filming

Soldiers attempt to get traffic moving in central Cairo – but prohibit TV crews from filming. James Bays, Al Jazeera correspondent, reports.

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Cost of Living: Mexico

The tortilla is a staple of the Mexican diet. But the price of corn – a key ingredient in tortillas – has soared in the past year. In the second report of Al Jazeera’s ‘Cost of Living’ series, Franc Contreras examines how the rising cost of corn has affected Mexican households.

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Hundreds of Iranian riot police shot tear gas at protesters in Tehran today, as thousands marched toward the city’s central square in a show of solidarity with Egypt. Some police rode motorcycles and wielded paintball guns, the New York Times reports. Protesters chanted “Death to the dictator”—meaning Mahmoud Ahmadinejad….

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Are the events unfolding in Egypt evidence of he coming apocalypse? The editors at FoxNation apparently think that possibility does exist. They’ve reposted, in its entirety, a WorldNet Daily entry that excitedly points out an “ethereal … pale green image that resembles an erect rider atop a horse” in this…

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