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An Egyptian reporter who was shot during clashes a week ago died of his wounds yesterday, his employer said, in the first reported death of a journalist in the chaos surrounding Egypt’s protests. Ahmed Mohammed Mahmoud, 36, was taking photographs of fighting between protesters and security forces from the balcony…

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Traversing Cairo’s tense neighborhood patrols

On January 30, amid a nearly complete internet blackout in Egypt, an Al Jazeera web producer traveled with friends from an office with internet access toward Tahrir Square. On the way, the group had to navigate a series of tense checkpoints manned by armed civilians attempting to defend their neighborhood.

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Counting the Cost – The economic battle for Egypt

As Cairo and its people come under attack, we explore life under Hosni Mubarak’s regime – the numbers and the analysis. We also look at the knock-on effects as one of the world’s important oil routes comes under pressure and the price per barrel rockets. And we ask: Can Israel’s economy weather the battle for its closest Middle East ally?

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Egyptian unrest and US media bias

The coverage of Egyptian uprising in the TV Channels across US have been criticised for being both pessimistic and superficial. Since the pro-democracy protests began, the mainstream American media has focused sharply on what it all means for the US and its allies in the region.

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Egypt protests – Saturday 5 February

Rolling coverage of all the day’s events in Egypt 10.08am: More world leaders have joined the US president in putting pressure on Mubarak for an orderly transition of power. The German chancellor, Angela Merkel, backed the pro-democracy demonstrators, saying the rest of the world would be remiss “if we were not siding with these people”. Speaking at a security conference in Munich, she added: “There will be a change in Egypt … but it needs to be change in such a way that it is peaceful and orderly.” However, Merkel added that early elections would probably be unhelpful. “Early elections at the beginning of the democratisation process is probably the wrong approach,” she said. At the same conference, the United Nations secretary-general, Ban Ki-moon, said the turmoil in Egypt, Tunisia and other Arab countries demonstrated the risk of insecurity caused by a “deficit of democracy”. He said democracy created peace and security but “where it is absent there is chaos and uncertainty. We see this of course … most recently in Tunisia, Egypt and other countries in the Middle East.” The causes of this instability include “human insecurity, poverty, diminished or disappointed expectations, lack of good governance, corruption, ineffective governance of public institutions and deficits of democracy”, the UN chief added. 9.52am: Egyptian state television has reported that saboteurs blew up a gas pipeline in north Sinai. It quoted an official as saying that the “situation is very dangerous and explosions were continuing from one spot to another” along the pipeline, according to Reuters. “It is a big terrorist operation”, a state TV reporter said. There were no injuries and the blaze was quickly brought under control after the gas flow was shut off, according to the Associated Press. The governor of the region, Abdel Wahab Mabrouk, said he suspected “sabotage”. Security sources told Reuters that the Egyptian army closed the main source of gas supplying the Jordanian branch of the pipeline, blaming the attack on “foreign elements”. Israel Radio said the Egypt-Israel pipeline was not damaged, but the supply has been stopped as a precaution. Jack Shenker said it is thought that the explosion is linked to the ongoing dispute between Mubark’s government and the Sinai Bedouins, rather than being directly related to the current protests against the regime. 9.38am: Good morning this is David Batty with the Guardian’s live coverage of the unrest in Egypt. It is the twelfth day since mass protests began against the regime of President Hosni Mubarak and thousands of people spent the night in Tahrir Square in central Cairo, after another huge rally demanding his resignation. Jack Shenker and Mustafa Khalili are in Cairo for the Guardian and will be filing reports throughout the day. We’ll also be bringing you a roundup of UK and international news coverage of the protests. In the meantime, here is a roundup of the latest developments: • Thousands of people spent the night in Tahrir Square following another huge rally against Mubarak. • The US has raised the pressure on Mubarak, with President Barack Obama urging him to begin an “orderly transition” of power. US officials say a meeting between Egypt’s leaders and the opposition could be held in the next few days, perhaps even this weekend. • Egypt’s finance minister, Samir Radwa, says talks are planned between the vice-president and opposition leaders. The outlawed Muslim Brotherhood is not expected to take part. • Reuters reports that there has been a blast near Egypt’s gas pipeline with Israel in north Sinai. Jack Shenker will have more details on this shortly. Egypt Middle East David Batty guardian.co.uk

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Listening Post – The media battle for Egypt

Despite the best efforts of Hosni Mubarak’s government, images of millions of Egyptians protesting on the streets of Cairo, Alexandra and Suez have been beamed around the world. But while the clashes between anti- and pro-Mubarak protestors dominated the airwaves, the journalists covering the fighting became targets themselves. Many were harassed, arrested and beaten while others had their equipment confiscated, but they continued to cover the story. The government pulled the plug on the country’s internet connection, cut the phone lines for a time, poured propaganda out on state-controlled media but the momentum of the demonstrators was unstoppable. We trail the coverage of one of the biggest political protests in Arab history, one that came together online, dominated the headlines and sent tremors all the way from Sanaa to Washington.

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Frost Over the World – Is the world facing a hungry future?

As food prices reach a record high, Sir David talks to a panel of experts about the issue of feeding the world’s growing population. He is joined by: Sir Gordon Conway, the former chief scientist for the British government; Matt Ridley, a food crisis ‘sceptic’; Duncan Green from Oxfam; and Olympic champion and UN food ambassador, Carl Lewis.

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Inside Story – Changing the US vision of the Middle East

History in the making: The Egyptian peoples’ uprising is a turning point that is likely to change the face of the Middle East. But can it also mark a new chapter in the US approach to and vision of the region? Inside Story investigates.

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Mubarak urged to act quickly

World leaders have been keeping a close eye on the ongoing events in Egypt. US president Barack Obama spoke about the situation in Egypt, on Friday, urging Mubarak to consider his legacy and reminding him that the world is watching. Al Jazeera’s Nick Spicer reports from Washington.

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Egypt: Demonstrations and political pressure, but Hosni Mubarak clings on

Barack Obama sends Mubarak his strongest message yet: it’s time to go Barack Obama today tried to nudge Hosni Mubarak towards the exit, sending his strongest message yet to the Egyptian president that it was time for him to quit. But Mubarak, even after hundreds of thousands took to the streets in Cairo, Alexandria and elsewhere in Egypt to call on him to go, remained defiant and showed little sign of preparing to depart. Mubarak earlier this week promised to leave in the autumn but that has failed to satisfy the protesters who want him to go immediately. Obama, taking questions from the media for the first time since the crisis began, used a White House press conference to drop a series of heavy hints that the US regarded Mubarak as having outlived his usefulness and that it would be better if he went. “In light of what’s happened the last two weeks, going back to the old ways is not going to work,” Obama said. “Suppression is not going to work. Engaging in violence is not going to work.” He added that work on an orderly succession had to begin “right now”, had to be meaningful and broad-based, which meant involving opposition groups. The US president stopped short of calling unambiguously for Mubarak to stand down immediately but his comments went further in support of the protesters than his brief statement on Tuesday. He condemned the attacks on journalists, human rights activists and protesters and said he held the Egyptian government responsible for their safety. He appealed to Mubarak to make the right choice with regard to his departure and to think about his legacy. “I believe that President Mubarak cares about his country,” Obama said. “He is proud, but he is also a patriot.” Obama said Mubarak had made the “psychological breakthrough” by announcing he’d stand down in the autumn, seemingly suggesting that the president should not make a fuss about a few more months. US officials confirmed that while Washington publicly does not want to be seen to be interfering in Egyptian domestic affairs, it is engaged with senior Egyptian officers and politicians about life after Mubarak, assuming he leaves soon. The EU also kept up pressure on Egypt’s government for a swift, orderly and peaceful transition today on a day that saw hundreds of thousands rally on the streets. It is possible that after such a huge turnout produced no tangible effect at home or abroad the protests will become harder to sustain – unless the fragmented opposition formulates more detailed demands. Diplomatic sources signalled that if Mubarak was not going to leave and thus deprive the protest movement of a “symbolic victory,” it might still be possible to pursue a dialogue with the government. “There are people digging in around Mubarak but others who are edging in the right direction,” a western official said. European leaders called for an immediate transition to a “broad-based” government, but like the US declined to call explicitly for Mubarak’s resignation. An EU summit in Brussels wrestled over a response to the crisis, with David Cameron urging more robust action in line with Washington while leaders such as Silvio Berlusconi praised Mubarak, and suggested he should continue in office. The UN secretary-general, Ban ki-Moon, demanded new elections be held as soon as possible, and not in September. US officials are proposing that a transitional government fronted by the military invite members from a range of opposition groups, including the banned Muslim Brotherhood, to begin work to open up the electoral system in an effort to bring about free and fair elections. “We have discussed with the Egyptians a variety of different ways to move that process forward, but all of those decisions must be made by the Egyptian people,” said White House spokesman Tommy Vietor. But the limits of US pressure were graphically illustrated by Admiral Mike Mullen, chairman of the US joint chiefs of staff, when he warned in an ABC interview against any move to reduce the $1.3bn (£800m) in annual US aid to Egypt – apparently in response to calls that the funding be cut if the governmental transition in Egypt does not happen soon. “There is a lot of uncertainty out there and I would just caution against doing anything until we really understand what’s going on,” Mullen said. “I recognise that ($1.3bn) certainly is a significant investment, but it’s an investment that has paid off for a long, long time.” The US and Egyptian military are closely intertwined through extensive joint training and exercises in support of US interests in the Middle East. The US would suspend aid immediately if the Egyptian army was to crack down on peaceful protesters in the way the Iranian Revolutionary Guard did in 2009 and the Chinese military did in 1989. Mullen, defence secretary Robert Gates and other senior Pentagon figures have been in regular contact with their Egyptian counterparts all week. The largely trouble-free rally in Cairo suggested the government had acted smartly to rein in the pro-Mubarak demonstrators who caused mayhem and attracted international condemnation this week. The defence minister, Field Marshal Mohamed Hussein Tantawi, paid a very public visit to Tahrir Square and talked to protesters and military commanders — conveying the message that Egypt’s most powerful institution was sanctioning the rally. Egypt Middle East Hosni Mubarak Barack Obama United Nations European Union Ian Black Ewen MacAskill Ian Traynor guardian.co.uk

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