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It seems that western powers are slowly beginning to realise that the days of promoting freedom at home and subjugation abroad is becoming unsustainable. Statements proclaiming displeasure with the way their dictator friend in Cairo is treating his compatriots started to emanate from Washington, Berlin, Paris and London. Your report ( Polic e crackdown as protesters defy ban and take to streets , 27 January) quotes statements of world leaders. One word is common in all statements and reveals the west’s priority. We would be fooling ourselves if we think that word could be “democracy”. No, the word on the lips of all world leaders is “stability”. The US secretary of state Hillary Clinton – rather then criticising the Egyptian government – said that the country was stable and Egyptians had the right to protest. Expressing his “extreme concern”, the German foreign minister, Guido Westerwelle, said that “a country’s stability is not endangered by granting civil rights”. And the British foreign secretary, William Hague, said: “Openness, transparency and political freedom are important tenets of stability.” They are not wrong, the dictionary meaning of “stable” includes phrases such as “perpetual”. We know Mubarak rules the country of the Pharaohs, but the long-suffering people of Egypt must be wondering what could be more perpetual for a world leader than 30 years? Chowdhury Mueen-Uddin London • Like a giant that’s just come back from slumber-land, Egypt is rubbing its eyes and stretching its muscles. This uprising will prove to be a turning point in Egypt’s history and that of the whole of the Middle East ( Report , 29 January). Egypt has been taken out of the power equation in the Arab-Israeli conflict; first by Sadat and then by Mubarak. He pursued policies that were consistent with the American project for the Middle East – complete alignment with Israeli interest and scant regard to the rights of the Palestinian people. The departure of Egypt from the progressive camp created an imbalance in the equilibrium of peace that allowed Israel to act with impunity and to leave the Palestinian Authority pleading for the famous “fig leaf”. Now that the nightmare is nearly over perhaps more level-headed policies will be pursued. Jamal Sheri London • More than 30 years since the Iranian revolution, western governments have still not learned that support for despots in the Middle East is a no-win policy. All the fine words about democracy are lost when the possibility of governments hostile to Israel being elected is faced. And yet we are repeatedly told that, as Israel is the only democracy in the region, it is worthy of our support. It is the only democracy because our governments make sure it is. Until the US abandons its policy of unconditional support for Israel there will be no genuine peace. Ian O’Neill Warlingham, Surrey • After Mubarak the biggest threat to Egyptian democracy is the US relationship with the Egyptian military. In 2010 the US gave Egypt $1.3bn in military aid, plus equipment. The Obama administration has requested similar sums for 2011. An Egyptian government that deviated from the present policy of good relations with Israel would not be given one cent. The failure of the Middle East process and the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan guarantee that a freely elected Egyptian government would not have a similar foreign policy. After Mubarak, will the generals support a government whose policies threaten the loss of their aid package? It is doubtful. George D Lewis Brackley, Northamptonshire • After nearly 30 years of supporting Egypt’s Mubarak dynasty, suddenly the US and UK speak of democratic rights and reform. These are the voices of slave owners seeking to salvage influence when the end of tyranny is close. Egyptians are far beyond platitudes. Surely the western powers remain active behind the scenes, continuing to provide police and armed forces with weapons and counterinsurgency support. Bruce Lambert Stockholm, Sweden Egypt Middle East Israel Palestinian territories US foreign policy guardian.co.uk

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All now rests on the determination of the people of Egypt. And they have, surely, come too far to retreat Hosni Mubarak has run out of road. This is obvious to all: to the police who have fled the streets, to senior members resigning from the ruling party, and to the millions of Egyptians who have taken over its cities . But not to the president himself. On Saturday he appointed a successor – as if he still had the moral authority to do so. The demonstrators did not budge. Anti-government slogans were sprayed on the side of tanks, with the tacit approval of the conscripts manning them. The curfew kept on being ignored, and yesterday a new name was added to the passenger list of the plane that the crowds hope will fly the regime to Saudi Arabia. It was that of the president’s latest appointee. He is General Omar Suleiman , the intelligence chief who saved his president in an assassination attempt, and has since been involved in all Egypt’s power-brokering, in Israel and elsewhere. He once negotiated a truce between Fatah and Hamas, but has since helped to keep Gaza’s siege intact and the Palestinians divided. The self-appointed nemesis of Hamas’s political relative, the Muslim Brotherhood in his own country, he is the sort of Arab strongman whom Israel feels (and the US used to feel) instinctively at home with. A doer, whose deeds are as effective as they are hidden. The same reasons make him anathema to the nationalist revolution taking place on the streets. How things develop depends very much on the role that the army is seen to play in the next few critical days. Citizens woke up yesterday to find al-Jazeera’s broadcasts via an Egyptian satellite halted, and a heavy military presence on the streets. It is the one remaining sign of the state and the regime is clearly playing the security card, one of the last it has to play. Its message is crude – but could still be effective. It is saying that the only alternative to Mubarak is chaos. And yet the fact that some of the looting is being organised by plain-clothed policemen is not lost on citizens. Many have formed vigilante groups to protect their property. A battle is being waged for the army’s hearts and minds. Demonstrators want it to guarantee constitutional change, and to oversee the creation of a national unity government and then fresh and fair elections. But for that to happen, Mubarak and his henchmen have to go first. If, however, the military checkpoints going up all over Egypt’s cities become a Suleiman-tied noose, lowered gently round the neck of mass protest, a very different scenario could emerge. Yesterday troops fired into the air to protect a fire engine being attacked in Tahrir Square , the centre of the storm, while air force jets soared provocatively overhead. There were no signs of the popular protest dimming yesterday, which was supposed to be a day of work. In Tunisia, a government of national unity has become a revolving door , as the remaining stalwarts of the ousted Ben Ali regime are whistled off stage, one by one. About the only one left is the prime minister himself. A similar clear out could soon be underway in Egypt if this revolution succeeds. Prime minister Binyamin Netanyahu said Israel was watching events closely, as well he might. The US, in full retreat from the position it expressed only a week ago, told Mubarak that shuffling the deck would not be enough, and secretary of state Hillary Clinton yesterday uttered two words that are particularly ominous for him – “orderly transition”. However this drama plays out, something quite profound is changing in the Arab world. So often written off, or thought to have been subsumed by Islamism, pan-Arabism is finding voice once again in the shape of this secular protest against dictatorship. A demonstration taking place in Jordan was cut short only by the collective wish of Jordanians to watch al-Jazeera’s live coverage of the progress of this potent political force on the streets of Cairo. All now rests on the determination of the people of Egypt. And they have, surely, come too far to retreat. Egypt Middle East Protest guardian.co.uk

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The world’s growing population has already brought predictions of the need for fake meat to feed everyone, and one South Carolina scientist can’t wait. Vladimir Mironov of the Medical University of South Carolina is one of a few scientists around the world trying to perfect the technique, reports Reuters . “It…

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Might Sarah Palin be softening her rhetoric after all? Politico thinks so, noting what she urged a group in Arizona last night: “Don’t retreat, stand tall.” It’s a switch from her “Don’t retreat, reload” line that—along with the crosshairs map—drew all kinds of criticism in the wake of…

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Detroit police say they arrested a 63-old-man from California who drove across the country with plans to blow up a mosque. They arrested Roger Stockham outside the Islamic Center of America in Dearborn with a load of explosives in the trunk of his car—all because he’d blabbed about his…

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Egyptian protests – timeline for the weekend’s events

From the cabinet meeting to formally submit its resignation to security forces announcing the extension of the curfew Saturday’s events 10.42am Overnight, President Mubarak makes his first appearance to announce that he is sacking his cabinet. Protesters throw stones as riot police try to enter Tahrir square in central Cairo. Egypt’s cabinet meets to formally submit its resignation. 11.51am Egyptian state television announces that the curfews imposed in Cairo, Alexandria and Suez have been extended to run from 4pm (2pm GMT) to 8am (6am GMT). 12.18pm The armed forces close the pyramids, with tanks and armoured personnel carriers sealing off the normally packed site on the Giza plateau to tourists. Reuters says the country’s stockmarket will be closed tomorrow. The move comes after sharp falls over the last few days. 12.29pm King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia backs Mubarak. ‘he Kingdom of Saudi Arabia … declares it stands with all its resources with the government of Egypt and its people,’ he is quoted as saying. 1.13pm The Foreign Office says that around 30,000 British tourists are in Egypt. While it wasn’t advising Britons to leave, it said they should not take part in the protests and should abide by the curfews.The department is advising against all but essential travel to the cities of Cairo, Alexandria, Luxor and Suez. 2.01pm AP reports peaceful protests in Tahrir Square with few police in the crowds, soon followed by news of police opening fire near the interior ministry. A number of people are wounded by gunshots. 2.15pm Egyptian state television reports that looters have broken into the Egyptian Museum and destroyed two ancient mummies. Demonstrators form a human chain around army tanks in Tahrir Square as they help to protect the museum. 2.23pm Thousands of people continue to protest after the start of the extended curfew. Defying an army warning that anyone violating the order would be in danger, crowds throng in central Cairo and Alexandria. 3.22pm : Police in Cairo are firing live rounds at protesters , according to Jack Shenker. He says there’s still confusion over the military’s role. Outside the ministry he saw a tank roll in to cheers from protesters. But it then appeared to move into a holding position, prompting some protesters to throw rocks at it. Other demonstrators tried to stop them. 3.30pm AP reports that at least three demonstrators have been killed around the area of Tahrir Square after thousands tried to storm the interior ministry. The news agency now puts the death toll at 48 4.23pm Former air force commander Ahmed Shafiq is appointed prime minister . Egypt’s intelligence chief, Omar Suleiman, is now vice-president – the first to hold this office since Mubarak took power in 1981. 4.25pm Reuters reports on the deployment of army vehicles to protect wealthy areas of Cairo’s suburbs. Witnesses say the action was taken after they heard gunshots and accounts of looting. 5.58pm Peter Bouckaert, emergencies director for Human Rights Watch, says he went to the morgue at the Alexandria general hospital, where he saw 13 bodies. He says an Egyptian lawyer counted 20 bodies at another Alexandria morgue. An hour later, al-Jazeera reports more than 100 people have died in the protests in the past 24 hours – including 25 in Cairo, 38 in Suez and 36 in Alexandria. AP puts the toll at 62 over the last two days. 7.04pm : Various news sources report that the curfew has been broken in Alexandria and Cairo , and that looting is now a major concern. 7.55pm In a joint statement with Nicolas Sarkozy and Angela Merkel, David Cameron says: ‘The Egyptian people have legitimate grievances and a longing for a just and better future … We urge President Mubarak to embark on a process of transformationreflected in broad-based government and free elections.’ 8.10pm : AFP reports 12 dead in fighting between demonstrators and police in Beni Suef, 100km south of Cairo. 9.29pm al-Jazeera reports the arrest of gangs in Alexandria, and 9.46pm Reuters reports that police have shot dead 17 people who were trying to attack two police stations in Beni Suef governorate . Dozens of others were injured in the exchanges. 10.58pm As protests continue across Egypt, both AP and al-Jazeera report that 19 private jets carrying the families of wealthy businessmen have departed Cairo for

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Where in the world is Gamal Mubarak?

There has been a great deal of speculation over the man who was widely expected to succeed Hosni Mubarak. Gamal Mubarak, the president’s younger son, is thought to have fled to London after protests began in Egypt. At the Egyptian Embassy in London, protesters have been demonstrating for a third day. Gamal has not been seen in England, but he would not be welcome if he did appear. Al Jazeera Paul Brennan reports from London.

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Friend or foe? Egypt’s army keeps protesters guessing

Uncertainty underlined by a visit made by President Hosni Mubarak to generals, supposedly to ‘review’ security It began with a growing roar that the crowd felt before they saw them: two sharp, banking shapes sweeping so low over Cairo’s Tahrir Square that the engine flames were visible. It was a noise that made the demonstrators duck, a deafening wall of sound as two Egyptian air force F-16s buzzed the central Cairo square that has become the symbolic centre of opposition to the three-decades-long regime of President Hosni Mubarak. For the first time the army swamped the streets with tanks, a squadron of them trying to push into the square, stopped by an at first angry crowd who sat down in front of them, fearing the army – once seen as their allies – might try and retake the square. The jets and helicopters making the deafening low sweeps over the crowd were an apparent attempt to intimidate the tens of thousands who had gathered for the sixth day running. The assertion of authority by the military, who were initially welcomed by the protesters when armoured vehicles first appeared on the streets last Friday night, has become more complicated in the last 24 hours, with many saying they were becoming suspicious of where the army stood. That uncertainty was underlined by a visit made by Mubarak to army chiefs, supposedly to “review” security in the country after persistent attacks by protesters on the interior ministry, seat of his police state. What was abundantly clear was that after a night of gunfire and violence, where Cairo residents armed themselves against gangs of looters in their neighbourhoods, and thousands of prisoners escaped from the jails, Egypt awoke to the first indications that the army was moving to take control. “First we trusted them, and now we don’t trust them so much any more,” said Mohamed Ali, 67, who was standing in front of the tanks. Sherif Gaber, 43, the owner of a contracting company who had been in the square overnight, agreed. “They’re trying to frighten people. The army are supposed to be our saviour,” he said. “What are they doing here today?” “This terrorism,” said Ashraf Subayi, a 35-year-old physician. “Do you think something like this could happen in a European country? We will stay here, even if we have to die.” As the sun set, however, the crowds swelled and protests were reinvigorated. Mohamed ElBaradei – the Nobel peace laureate whom opposition movements want to lead a transitional government – addressed the crowd by megaphone, promising “change in the coming days” and demanding the unequivocal end of Mubarak’s regime. “You have taken back your rights. What has been done cannot be undone. We are entering a new era.” ElBaradei’s arrival in the square was largely met with approval by protesters, thousands of whom surged forward to try to hear his words. A few people were critical, yelling “This is our revolution, not yours” at the 68-year-old, but they were shouted down. “The people are escalating their demands, calling for Mubarak to be put on trial,” said Nour, the son of prominent Egyptian dissident Ayman Nour. “There’s a problem with some political figures and forces who are coming in late to these demonstrations, trying to ride the wave. But despite that, we’re very optimistic. This display of social solidarity we’re seeing – people cleaning the streets, feeding each other, protecting strangers they’ve never met – is unique, not only to Egypt but also the rest of the world.” The events in the square had followed a no less extraordinary period the night before, where at the interior ministry protesters had fought pitched battles with riot police and state central security officers, tossing fire bombs from roofs while police responded with live rounds. There were fatalities. But by morning there, too, the army was in control. At 4.30am, 20 officers were seen leaving the building and burning their uniforms and 20 police vehicles fled in convoy at 7am. Hassan Samir, 27, an antiques gallery owner whose apartment block overlooks the ministry, said: “They left at 7am in cars and vans, firing out of the windows. There had been snipers on the roof the night before. Since they left there has not been any more firing.” The consequences of the fighting were horribly visible in a nearby mosque, which had been turned into a makeshift aid station for the dead and wounded. It was little more than a narrow passage between two tall buildings, but it had been transformed into a hospital, with blood soaking through the prayer mats and the muezzin’s microphone, normally used to send out the call to prayer, pressed into use by an imam shouting instructions to the medics. Occasionally he prayed. “The police have been shooting at these people with live fire,” explained Dr Mona Mina, a paediatrician who had travelled across the city to answer an urgent call for medical assistance on Saturday night. “I came down four hours ago, and I’ve seen six deaths here today – mostly from penetration wounds, but one was from gas suffocation.” As she spoke, a commotion broke out in the doorway and a heavily bleeding child was carried in. On the white columns of the mosque, volunteers had taped IV drips and hung carpets to give a little privacy to the injured, while bystanders joined hands to stop those being treated on the floor from being jostled. A man in his early thirties lay in the middle of one group, screaming, his shirt pulled up to show a small, ugly puncture on the right side of his stomach below his rib cage. A surgeon, still wearing his suit, was pulling out a fragment of metal with a forceps. “See this,” the doctor said, holding it up. “Do you see this? They are shooting people with live rounds.” Another volunteer brought over a handful of .22 calibre shell casings. In a corner of the mosque, another man screamed as iodine was swabbed on to his knee, punctured by a piece of buckshot. A young woman, inconsolable, fell into a faint after being told that her husband had been killed. “Please don’t stay here,” a volunteer implored. “It is too dangerous.” With the police who had done the shooting gone and no more in sight, army vehicles set up checkpoints on the main roads, stopping vehicles crossing one of the key Nile bridges and searching pedestrians entering Tahrir Square. Egypt Middle East Protest Peter Beaumont Jack Shenker guardian.co.uk

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Egypt’s vast protest movement is showing signs of converging behind a single leader: Nobel laureate Mohamed ElBaradei . Various opposition groups threw their support behind him today, none more significant than the controversial Muslim Brotherhood. ElBaradei addressed the throngs at a rally in downtown Cairo, despite the curfew that exists in…

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No one wants the Muslim Brotherhood to take over, no one wants violence – just elections and a new constitution This is a sweet, sweet revolution; it is peaceful. Tell everyone we are peaceful. We do not owe this revolution to the Muslim Brotherhood, not to anybody. They say the Ikhwan is more organised – maybe. But this is the people on the street; this is not about any political party. Look, he says, more and more people are coming; Tahrir Square is getting more and more full. I am sorry, the man tells me, but I hate your president. What is this speech he gives? Why can’t he support us? He says we can have human rights but he gives us no political rights? To America, we are monkeys, monkeys, monkeys. We Egyptians don’t deserve a constitution, don’t deserve freedom, don’t deserve democracy. We are in the streets every day since 25 January and you give us Omar Suleiman , an agent? We are out here demanding our rights and you give us the head of intelligence? We will not accept Suleiman. America puts the security of Israel above the people of Egypt. We are monkeys to America. They are saying we Egyptians don’t deserve political rights, don’t deserve freedom. It’s over… the fact that the outside world continues to engage this guy Mubarak is ridiculous. It’s over. This has nothing to do with any political party. It is truly a popular movement. There is concern about what is going to happen next. We need to continue to experience this with joy. We have to remain peaceful until we get our demands. Look, there are more and more people walking into Tahrir Square. We want new elections to set up a committee to write a new constitution. We want clean elections; once we have a new constitution, we can elect a new government. We are not less than South Africa. Tell the Americans we are not less than South Africa. We deserve our rights. So far the judges have not spoken yet. We are waiting to hear from the judges about bringing about the constitutional changes that we need. But the judges are not being allowed to speak to the people. Clinton just spoke: she says we deserve human rights. We want political rights. Please tell the people in America we want our rights. Please explain we don’t have internet. Everyone has to understand that the rights of the Egyptian people are being sold for Israel’s security. Our rights are being sold. It’s as if we are monkeys. They have one strategic consideration and that’s Israel. We sleep at night in fear. We sleep without police at night. Do you know what that’s like? To wake up one day and there’s no police, no prisons, no safety? The police is over. We are scared. The curfew was for 6pm and the police were told to go home. There are two theories of what happened to the police a) the police were shocked by the people’s reaction, got scared and took off b) the ministry of the interior is teaching us a lesson, so they withdrew the police to scare us. But it backfired. We were out all night in the streets guarding our neighbourhood in Zamalek. Together, neighbour with neighbour. We worked together. Most of us hadn’t even met before this. The ministry of the interior pulled all the police to scare us: it backfired. We are taking care of each other. There is too much anger at police. Some are good and tried to stop the chaos. But there is a lot of anger: in one neighbourhood someone got shot. The interior ministry is under siege; they are shooting live ammunition into the crowds. There is a street battle. This is why they turned the phones back on because the ministry of interior people needed to be able to talk to each other – they had no phones themselves, they were using walkie-talkies. In some police stations, there are stand-offs. Police are trapped and they are shooting. The army needs to take over the interior ministry. Nothing short of this. The level of demand is high. The people are so aware, they know what they want. The majority of people are happy but some are scared and concerned about what will happen next. No one wants the Muslim Brotherhood to take over, no one wants violence. We are being peaceful, tell them we are being peaceful. On Thursday night they shut down the internet. Khalas . Tell them we have no contact, no texting, no internet, nothing. Listen, they are chanting in the streets: “Gamal, Gamal, tell your father we hate you.” Are the crowds anti-US, I ask. Not so far, no anti-American sentiments in the crowds. They have brought back the slogan from the 1980s: “Mubarak traitor, agent of Americans.” It’s a sweet, peaceful revolution. Tell them. Look, more and more people are coming into Tahrir… Egypt Protest Middle East Amr Shalakany guardian.co.uk

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