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Britons arriving home after fleeing escalating violence in Egypt describe Cairo as full of marauding thugs Britons arriving home after fleeing escalating violence in Egypt described Cairo as a war zone with marauding thugs and escaped prisoners terrorising the streets. Some of the 161 passengers arriving last night at Gatwick Airport on a Foreign Office-chartered flight spoke of their relief at escaping the riot-hit city. Among those fleeing the violence was 16-year-old Shukria Ahmed-Nur who told how marauding thugs terrorised the streets near where she lived. She said: “There were men with samurai swords, machetes and other weapons. “They were outside our apartments, walking up and down the stairs, which was really scary. “We were just hoping we would get out alive.” Mother-of-two Jala Ibrahim, 33, from Fulham, west London, said: “The country is in a really bad state at the moment. It’s a bit like a war zone but the people are fighting for their rights.” Robert Mant, 34, who lives in Cairo with his 33-year-old Egyptian wife Kariman, said he saw escaped prisoners dressed in civilian clothes roaming the streets. He said: “There are gun battles between prisoners in the streets. I got hit by a rock. It’s disgusting, it’s a disgrace what is happening.” Stephanie Harkin, 25, teacher from Luton, Bedfordshire, said: “Our main problem was prisoners escaping from a nearby prison. We had a lot of men outside our house and so we had to create a makeshift neighbourhood watch. “We had to sleep with knives by us as well. Across the road on the next compound there were reports that seven people had been killed and that neighbours had been attacked by thieves.” Foreign Secretary William Hague condemned the violence as “reprehensible”. The Foreign Office has chartered a second plane tomorrow to bring home stranded Britons. British nationals without a pressing need to be in Cairo, Alexandria or Suez were urged to leave by commercial means, where it was safe to do so. Egypt Middle East guardian.co.uk

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Enjoy that handsome new iPhone, Verizon customers. But not too much: Verizon Wireless put into place a new policy today that allows it to slow the speed of the top 5% of data users, reports BGR.com . The policy applies not just to iPhones but to Androids and Blackberrys as…

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Scientists have uncovered the fossilized remains of the largest bear known to walk the Earth, LiveScience reports. Unearthed in Argentina, the giant short-faced bear was at least 11 feet tall when standing on its hind legs and weighed between 3,500 and 3,855 pounds—almost twice as big as…

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Mubarak: ‘If I go now there will be chaos’

Egyptian president has ‘had enough’ and ‘wants to go’ but still refuses to bow out before the autumn elections Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak refused yesterday to bow to pressure at home and abroad to stand down immediately, claiming that, though he was fed up and would like to go, he feared chaos if he did so. Mubarak, in the first major interview since the protests began, expressed no sense of betrayal over President Barack Obama’s call on Tuesday for him to begin the transition to democracy “now”. But there was a hint of resentment when he said Obama did not understand Egyptian culture and the trouble that would ensue if he left office immediately. “I am fed up. After 62 years in public service, I have had enough. I want to go,” Mubarak said in an interview with ABC’s Christiane Amanpour. “If I resign today, there will be chaos.” Mubarak, in a statement on Tuesday, promised he would not stand for election in the autumn, but insisted he would remain in office until then, a formula that satisfied neither the protesters nor the White House. In spite of the widespread violence since Tuesday, Mubarak’s comments to ABC suggest that he was not planning an imminent departure from office or Egypt. “I would never run away,” he said. “I will die on this soil.” He was speaking on the eve of what protesters have dubbed “departure Friday”. The hours after Friday prayers are potentially the most explosive point of the week. Although the government is widely suspected of having employed thugs to beat up anti-government protesters, Mubarak, speaking from the presidential palace in Cairo, denied this and insisted that he was troubled by the violence. “I was very unhappy about yesterday. I do not want to see Egyptians fighting each other,” he said. When Mubarak was asked if he felt betrayed by the US after having been a longtime ally, Amanpour said he had waved his hands, rejecting the notion. Obama was a very good man, he said. But he had told Obama, in a phone call on Tuesday, that the US leader did not appreciate the consequences of leaving office straight away. “You don’t understand the Egyptian culture and what would happen if I step down now,” Mubarak said. He reiterated Tuesday’s claim that he had decided not to seek re-election before the protests began. He also denied that he had been planning the succession of his son, Gamal, 46, who sat in the room during the interview. Mubarak said: “I never intended to run again. I never intended Gamal to be president after me.” Hosni Mubarak Egypt Middle East Protest Barack Obama Ewen MacAskill guardian.co.uk

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Three Sumo wrestlers have admitted fixing matches in Japan, and the scandal is only expected to grow, reports the Guardian . “It is certainly the national sport,” said Prime Minister Naoto Kan. “If matches have been fixed, it is a serious betrayal of the people.” Police found incriminating texts on the…

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The machinations of the Mubarak regime could yet see much more blood spilt in Cairo Blood is not the ideal lubricant for the orderly transition which all political forces in Egypt claim to want. Nor is deceit. Yet there is a clear danger of more of both as the regime in Cairo wriggles and manoeuvres for advantage. They may understand on one level that things cannot go on as they did before, but on another, some of them at least are acting as if outflanking their opponents is the main objective. There is also evidence, in the shape of a worsening of the conditions under which foreign journalists have to work, that they want to do it without the international press at their elbow. Much of this manoeuvring centres on the physical possession of Tahrir Square. The passionate advocates of immediate change in Egypt have already been pushed out of part of the square by violent pro-Mubarak demonstrators. Now, in addition, they face the more insidious prospect of being “persuaded” out of this symbolic place by the argument that what they are doing will lead to dire consequences for the livelihood of ordinary Egyptians. The new prime minister, Ahmed Shafiq, yesterday apologised for the violence in the square on Wednesday and said it would not be repeated. But he did so in a way which not so subtly equated the two sets of demonstrators, while laying on the anti-Mubarak side the responsibility for the deterioration in the country’s economy. Vice-president Omar Suleiman did the same in an interview in which he recounted his attempts to conduct a dialogue with political parties and spoke of the length of time needed to make constitutional changes. The game here is an obvious one: paint the country as more or less equally divided and in need of arbitration and reconciliation, make economic normalisation the immediate priority, and draw out the political process. One does not have to believe that every pro-Mubarak demonstrator is a thug or a plainclothes policeman to understand that equating the two sides in this way distorts reality. And, while arguments about Egypt’s economic plight or the need to observe legalities cannot be dismissed, they are no substitute for creating the trust necessary if there are to be real negotiations about the country’s future. You cannot create that trust if you seek to strip the democracy movement of its singular achievement, the capture of the city’s most central place, without giving anything in return. President Mubarak could still wreck the chances of compromise. He, or diehards in his entourage, could initiate more violence in Tahrir. Or his government can hope, as the prime minister seems to do, that the demonstrators can be isolated by being portrayed as economic wreckers, or that opposition leaders can be caught in the sticky web of the complicated constitutional discussions that Omar Suleiman talks about. Lenin said of revolutions that they demonstrate two things. The first is that the people cannot go on being ruled in the old way. The second is that the rulers cannot go on ruling in the old way. Both must alter. The virtue of what came to be called “negotiated revolutions” after the transfers of power in South Africa and eastern Europe, is that a society obtains most of the benefits of radical change with few of the costs. For this you need a regime that knows its time is over. Equally, the classes who have most benefited from that regime have to be ready to give up much of what they have enjoyed in order to keep what remains. Those who have challenged the regime, on the other hand, will have to accept that elements of the old order will persist. Today in Tahrir Square, after Friday prayers, the Egyptian regime will face a test of its good intentions. It can and should curb the pro-Mubarak forces. It can and should ensure that the press can operate freely. And it can stop the dangerous games it has begun to play in its attempts to undermine the opposition. Protest Egypt Hosni Mubarak Middle East guardian.co.uk

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A ‘tense calm” has fallen on Cairo’s Tahrir Square after another day of clashes that saw pro-Mubarak supporters attack journalists and rights activists, reports Al Jazeera . Tomorrow could be pivotal, notes the Los Angeles Times : It’s the deadline protesters have given Hosni Mubarak to leave as well as the main…

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The people of Egypt are learning that their dictator Mubarak will not follow the example of Tunisia’s Ben Ali and slip quietly into exile ( The battle for Egypt , 3 February). Though the vast majority of Egyptians want to be rid of this evil man, counter-revolutionaries with the clear assistance of the army have brought violence to the streets in his support. David Cameron told UN secretary general Ban Ki-moon: “If it turns out that the regime in any way has sponsored or tolerated this violence, that is completely unacceptable.” Cameron is being disingenuous. The violence behind Mubarak’s regime is well documented and long ignored by the west. In February 2009 the US secretary of state, Hillary Clinton, was handed a document by her own officials which had this to say about the routine crimes of the Mubarak regime: “Security forces used unwarranted lethal force and tortured and abused detainees, in most cases with impunity … Security forces arbitrarily arrested and detained individuals, in some cases for political purposes, and kept them in prolonged pretrial detention. The executive branch placed limits on and pressured the judiciary. The government’s respect for freedoms of press, association and religion declined during the year.” Mubarak is a brutal dictator who has run Egypt as a police state for 30 years with the blessing and support of western powers – Britain included. Mubarak’s tyranny is founded on an immense apparatus of repression. His phony democracy, sham elections and manipulated plebiscites would not fool a child. Very shortly Mubarak – and his western apologists – will learn that no amount of repression can save him from the anger of a people he has abused for over a generation. As for Cameron’s recent appeal for “evolution not revolution”, that was answered on a placard outside the Egyptian embassy in London at the weekend: “World, are you watching? In Egypt history is being written.” Sasha Simic

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The 20-year-old son of former Enron CEO Jeffrey Skilling has been found dead in his apartment, wire services are reporting. John “JT” Skilling had been a sophomore at California’s Chapman College, and friends got suspicious when they hadn’t heard from him in a while. No cause of death has been…

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The new web domain suffix “.co” is about to get a whole lot more exposure. Go Daddy, which manages half of America’s web addresses, will push the suffix in two Super Bowl ads, reports the Los Angeles Times . It will do so in typical Go Daddy fashion, with racy ads…

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