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North Korea hasn’t kicked its southern brother in the shins for a few weeks now, so the South is finally responding to Pyongyang’s calls for talks. The South announced today that the two will hold “low-level and preliminary” military-level talks next week, and South Korean President Lee Myung-bak won’t rule…

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Inside Story – New faces, same old policies?

After 30 years of resistance, why has Hosni Mubarak , the Egyptian president, chosen to appoint a vice president now? Is this appointment and the appearance of other new members of the cabinet a sign for real change? And what is the West looking for if Mubarak falls?

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The president of the Hollywood Foreign Press Association said host Ricky Gervais’ “totally unacceptable” behavior at the Golden Globes “crossed the line” … but, er, that doesn’t mean they don’t want him back next year. “The ratings went up again, and the organizers asked me to consider a third year,…

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In Pictures: Revolt in the Nile

Images of the thousands of Egyptian protesters that defied a curfew in the capital Cairo and other cities taken throughout the week.

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Cairo’s “march of a million” looks like it’s living up to its billing, reports al-Jazeera , with something along those lines gathered in Tahrir Square to call for Hosni Mubarak’s departure. A second “million-strong” demonstration is also scheduled in Alexandria, and in there have been “increasingly large pockets of pro-government protests”…

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Omar Suleiman, Mubarak deputy who may be key to resolving Egypt protests

Spymaster appointed to vice-presidency enjoys military’s full confidence and is authorised to tackle fundamental reforms Omar Suleiman, Hosni Mubarak’s intelligence chief and now his vice-president, is the keeper of Egypt’s secrets, a classic behind-the-scenes operator who has been intimately involved in the most sensitive issues of national security and foreign policy for nearly 20 years. Now, as mass protests continue in Cairo and elsewhere, this discreet spymaster faces intense scrutiny at home and abroad as he holds the key to the political future of the Arab world’s largest country, with profound implications for the region and the world. Late on Monday, Suleiman went on TV to announce that he had been ordered by Mubarak to tackle “constitutional and legislative reforms” and, crucially, to include opposition parties in the process. That looked like an attempt to defuse the crisis by entering a dialogue it is hoped will ensure the survival of the regime. Suleiman’s appointment as vice-president on Saturday morning carried two highly significant messages: for the first time since coming to power in 1981 Mubarak now has a designated successor, finally quashing speculation that it would be his son Gamal; and that successor has the full confidence of the powerful military. Suleiman, 74, is bald and mustachioed, and despite his military bearing has a penchant for dark suits and striped ties. Acquaintances often remark on his exquisite manners. In 1995, two years after taking over Egypt’s General Intelligence Service (known, as in all Arab countries, as the mukhabarat ), he saved the president’s life during an assassination attempt in the Ethiopian capital Addis Ababa, having insisted his boss travel in an armoured car. He also played a key role in defeating the insurrection mounted by Egyptian armed groups such as Islamic Jihad, some of whose members went on to found al-Qaida. For 30 years before that he served in the army, fighting in Yemen as well as in the 1967 and 1973 wars against Israel, rising to be director of military intelligence. Like many Egyptian officers of his generation he was trained in the-then Soviet Union. In recent years one of Suleiman’s biggest preoccupations has been dealing with the volatile Palestinian file, mediating between the western-backed Fatah movement and the Islamists of Hamas – a group with special resonance in Egypt because of its control of the Gaza Strip and its links to the banned Muslim Brotherhood. He has also been involved in the tangled affairs of Sudan and led mediation attempts between rebels and the government in Yemen. Suleiman figures prominently in the US diplomatic cables released by WikiLeaks last year. In a meeting with a US military delegation in April 2009 he explained that “his over-arching regional goal was combating radicalism, especially in Gaza, Iran, and Sudan”. The US and other western governments still see him as a safe pair of hands as Egypt’s future hangs in the balance. Egypt Protest Middle East Ian Black guardian.co.uk

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Egypt protests: 1 million urged to take to the streets – video

Tension builds in Cairo as biggest day of demonstrations against Hosni Mubarak’s government arrives

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That “potentially historic” winter storm hasn’t really started yet, but that didn’t stop Missouri from declaring a state of emergency. All across the Midwest, residents are preparing early—and, in some cases, enthusiastically—for the storm, with schools closing, airlines canceling flights, and emergency generators selling out as the first…

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Witness – A multi-media uprising?

From Tahrir Square in Cairo to the corniche in Alexandria, all over Egypt thousands of people have taken to the streets to protest against Hosni Mubarak’s government. Blogs, twitter, Facebook and mobile phone footage have all played some part in mobilising the crowds and getting messages to the wider world. And this despite a draconian crackdown on media and an unprecedented blackout of the internet by the authorities. Witness presenter Samah El-Shahat is joined by two guests who have been following media developments in Egypt. Sharif Nashashibi is the chairman and co-founder of Arab Media Watch, an independent, non-profit watchdog, set up in 2000 to strive for objective coverage of Arab issues in the British media. And Ramy Aly is a researcher who has written about social networking in Egypt.

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Egyptian regime begins to reveal its strategy

Army pledge not to use force may be part of plan to appear open to talks and allow Hosni Mubarak to choose manner of his exit After a week spent caught in the headlights, the Egyptian regime is showing signs of assembling a strategy to extricate itself from its perilous predicament. Whether the strategy can work is another matter entirely. The regime’s survival plan centres on Omar Suleiman, the head of intelligence, President Hosni Mubarak’s close confidant, and newly installed vice-president . At this point, Suleiman is the most powerful man in Egypt, backed by the military (from whence he hails), the security apparatus and a frightened ruling elite hoping to salvage something from the wreckage. Suleiman is, in effect, heading a military junta at this point, with all the principal civilian power positions – the presidency, the vice-presidency, the premiership, the defence and interior ministries – held by former senior officers, and with the military itself in full support. Mubarak is now reduced to the role of figurehead, sheltering behind this clique. But they will not sacrifice him if they can avoid it. There will be no ignominious flight to Saudi Arabia, like Tunisia’s deposed president, Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali . Mubarak’s pride won’t allow it. The military’s pride won’t allow it. They probably now accept that the old man will have to go, sooner rather than later. But they seem determined that when his departure comes, it will be with dignity, at a time of their collective choosing. As they see it, the honour of the nation demands no less. The army’s pledge not to use violence against peaceful protesters was a canny political move that had Suleiman’s fingerprints all over it. If the armed forces stick to that vow today, it could help avoid the sort of chaotic, escalating confrontations with demonstrators that, in other countries, have turned unrest into fully fledged revolution. The renunciation of force will also play well in the White House and the US media. It meets one of the key concerns voiced by Barack Obama: that a regime closely allied to the US not be seen to be shooting down its own citizens whose only crime is to seek greater freedom. What the army spokesman meant when he said the military recognised the “legitimacy” of the protesters’ demands is open to interpretation, no doubt deliberately. It cannot be assumed this meant Suleiman and the army agree that Mubarak must resign. More likely, it was their way of appearing reasonable and open to negotiation. Part of Suleiman’s plan is immediate talks with the opposition, however defined. Again, this posture will reduce western pressure on the regime. The regime may also be hoping that the lawlessness and looting that erupted in several cities will convince the people, particularly middle-class Cairenes, that revolution is too risky. Mubarak has always symbolised order. The prospect of chaos is a good argument for caution. Meanwhile there were signs today that the security forces are closely marshalling the protests, attempting to exert maximum control without actually crushing them. Likewise, rising food and fuel prices, shortages, lost earnings, closed businesses, falling exports and reduced tourism caused by the unrest will have a growing impact on ordinary working people at the heart of the protests. The regime’s strategy appears to be wait them out, to wear them out, to hope that, in time, the fervour and size of the protests will abate – that literally, they will run out of energy. On the political front, a proffered timetable for fresh parliamentary and presidential elections, possibly this autumn, coinciding with the end of Mubarak’s term, under some form of international or independent supervision, may soon be forthcoming – another way for the regime to escape the morass. Mubarak could then hand over power in the normal way (though it would be abnormal for Egypt). His son, Gamal Mubarak, presumably, would play no future part. Just how honest and open new elections might be, once the pressure on the streets has abated, is questionable. Whether they would usher in a truly new era for Egypt is highly doubtful at this point. At this moment, there remains all to play for. But through history, the fate of revolutions is to be hijacked. Egyptians will hope they don’t get fooled again. Egypt Middle East Protest US foreign policy Obama administration Simon Tisdall guardian.co.uk

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