Live: Al Jazeera coverage of Egypt’s growing revolution

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Re: Live: Al Jazeera coverage of Egypt’s growing revolution

Postby JackRiddler » Thu Jul 14, 2011 11:05 pm

.

The protests are getting somewhere, it seems.


http://www.bloomberg.com/news/print/201 ... tests.html

Egypt Postpones Elections, Purges Police Following Protests

By Mariam Fam and Abdel Latif Wahba - Jul 13, 2011


Egypt postponed parliamentary elections and ended the service of hundreds of police officers in an attempt to appease protesters who have camped in Cairo’s Tahrir Square for almost a week.

The elections, originally due in September, will be held the following month or in November, Egypt’s state-run Middle East News Agency reported today, citing an unidentified military official. “Polling procedures” will start before the end of September and voting will take place within 60 days, MENA said.

The Interior Ministry also announced it was “ending the service” of 669 senior police officers, including 505 generals, 82 brigadier generals and 82 colonels. Some of the officers have been referred to trial, the ministry said in a statement distributed to reporters, without giving further details.

Protesters, some of whom have occupied Tahrir Square since July 8, demanded the removal of police officers accused of abuses under former President Hosni Mubarak and during the revolt that ousted him, in which at least 800 people died. Other demands include speeding up efforts to prosecute officials and officers accused of corruption or the killing of demonstrators.

Many activists had also called for postponing the first legislative vote since Mubarak’s ouster, saying holding elections so soon would benefit established forces such as Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhood at the expense of the young protesters who were the main driver of the revolt.

Premier’s Pledges

The rallies in Cairo and other cities continued even after Prime Minister Essam Sharaf announced July 11 that he would change members of his Cabinet within a week and that he had ordered the removal of senior police officers accused of crimes. Many protesters said his pledges fell short of their demands.

Egyptian shares rallied the most in seven weeks before today’s announcements, which came after the market closed.

The benchmark EGX30 Index gained 2.4 percent, the most since May 29, to 5,092.18 at the 2:30 p.m. close in Cairo. The gauge is the third-best performer among 91 indexes tracked by Bloomberg. Orascom Telecom Holding SAE, North Africa’s biggest mobile-phone company by subscribers, rose the most since May 22. Orascom Construction Industries advanced 2 percent.
‘Cleansing the Police’

“We have always called for cleansing the police forces,” Mahmoud Ghozlan, a spokesman for the Muslim Brotherhood, said by telephone in Cairo. “What happened is a response not just to our demands but to those of the Egyptian people. We hope that elections can be held as soon as possible so that the military council can turn power over to an elected, civilian authority.”

Abdel Rahman Fares, an activist who has been camped out in Tahrir since July 8, said the changes aren’t enough to end the sit-in. “These are good steps but you cannot throw us a bone and expect us to leave,” he said in a telephone interview. “The sit-in will continue” until all demands are met, including an end to military trials of civilians, he said.

State employees returned today to their work at the main government building in Tahrir Square, a site that had been closed by some protesters, MENA reported.

To contact the reporter on this story: Mariam Fam in Cairo at mfam1@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Andrew J. Barden at barden@bloomberg.net.


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Re: Live: Al Jazeera coverage of Egypt’s growing revolution

Postby JackRiddler » Mon Jul 18, 2011 11:34 am

.

Mixed signals as army retrenches politically: They speak for the first time of a "Turkish model," but referring not to the current Erdogan period but the strong-arm role of the army historically, such as in the 1980 coup. But they may be ready to concede a bill of rights, the elections have been delayed, and the protests remain strong.


http://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/17/world ... nted=print

July 16, 2011

Egypt Military Aims to Cement Muscular Role in Government

By DAVID D. KIRKPATRICK


CAIRO — The military council governing Egypt is moving to lay down ground rules for a new constitution that would protect and potentially expand its own authority indefinitely, possibly circumscribing the power of future elected officials.

The military announced Tuesday that it planned to adopt a “declaration of basic principles” to govern the drafting of a constitution, and liberals here initially welcomed the move as a concession to their demand for a Bill of Rights-style guarantee of civil liberties that would limit the potential repercussions of an Islamist victory at the polls.

But legal experts enlisted by the military to write the declaration say that it will spell out the armed forces’ role in the civilian government, potentially shielding the defense budget from public or parliamentary scrutiny and protecting the military’s vast economic interests. Proposals under consideration would give the military a broad mandate to intercede in Egyptian politics to protect national unity or the secular character of the state. A top general publicly suggested such a role, according to a report last month in the Egyptian newspaper Al- Masry Al- Youm. The military plans to adopt the document on its own, before any election, referendum or constitution sets up a civilian authority, said Mohamed Nour Farahat, a law professor working on the declaration. That would represent an about-face for a force that, after helping to oust President Hosni Mubarak five months ago, consistently pledged to turn over power to elected officials who would draft a constitution. Though the proposed declaration might protect liberals from an Islamist-dominated constitution, it could also limit democracy by shielding the military from full civilian control.

The military is long accustomed to virtual autonomy. Its budget has never been disclosed to Parliament, and its operations extend into commercial businesses like hotels, consumer electronics, bottled water and car manufacturing.

Some are already criticizing the military’s plans as a usurpation of the democratic process. Ibrahim Dawrish, an Egyptian legal scholar involved in devising a new Turkish constitution to reduce the political role of its armed forces, said the Egyptian military appeared to be emulating its Turkish counterpart. After a 1980 coup, the Turkish military assigned itself a broad role in politics as guarantor of the secular state, and in the process, contributed to years of political turbulence.

“The constitution can’t be monopolized by one institution,” he said. “It is Parliament that makes the constitution, not the other way around.”

Jurists involved in drafting the text say the Egyptian military told them to draw from several competing proposals that are circulating in Cairo. At least one assigns only a narrow, apolitical role to the military as guardian of national sovereignty. But others grant it sweeping authority and independence or a writ to intercede in civilian politics similar to the Turkish model.

Mr. Farahat said he was unsure of the wisdom of granting the armed forces a role in Egyptian politics, but he said he supported shielding the defense budget from public scrutiny as a guarantee of national security and military independence.

Others picked by the governing council to draft the declaration have argued publicly for a broad, Turkish-style role for the Egyptian armed forces in post-revolutionary politics. “The military in Egypt is unlike militaries in other countries where the military is isolated from the political life,” said Tahani el-Gebali, a judge involved in the drafting. “The military’s legacy gives it a special credibility, and hence it is only normal that the military will share some of the responsibility in protecting the constitutional legitimacy and the civil state.”

She said that she would prefer the governing council submit the declaration for up-or-down approval in a referendum, but that if it did not pass as expected, the document would derive its legitimacy from the authority of the governing military council.

The announcement of the declaration is a setback for the Muslim Brotherhood, the Islamist group considered Egypt’s best-organized and most formidable political force. It was poised to win a major role in the new Parliament, and thus in the writing of the new constitution. The group has opposed liberal proposals to draft a constitution before parliamentary elections expected this fall or to postpone the elections long enough to let liberals catch up in organizing.

Liberals — most notably Mohamed ElBaradei, the former United Nations diplomat who is now running for president of Egypt — have advocated a code of agreed-upon universal rights as a compromise in the increasingly bitter debate between Islamists calling for an early election and liberals demanding a constitution first. Mr. ElBaradei, whose own proposal includes a provision that narrowly defines the military’s role guarding national security, said the declaration “really should be put to a referendum so it would have some legitimacy.”

That is especially relevant now, because the military council has come under mounting criticism for its opaque and inaccessible decision-making, occasionally heavy-handed tactics against civilian protesters, continued trials of civilians in military courts and intimidation of journalists who criticize it. Many have grown especially impatient with the pace of legal action against Mr. Mubarak and other former officials.

Demonstrators have returned to Tahrir Square with increasing frequency to voice their demands, culminating in a weeklong sit-in rivaling the days of the revolution. The military-led government, in turn, has appeared to respond to public demands with repeated concessions — including replacing an interim prime minister with the handpicked choice of the Tahrir protest leaders, arresting Mr. Mubarak and his two sons and releasing jailed activists. Last week, the government offered concessions, removing hundreds of senior police officers accused of killing protesters during the uprising. It also announced “the declaration of basic principles.”

This time, however, the demonstrators refused to budge. On Saturday afternoon, Gen. Tarek Mahdy, a member of the governing council, attempted to speak in Tahrir Square and was chanted off a stage, witnesses said. Many say they have grown increasingly cynical about the military. “They do comply with our demands, but within limits that they put on it themselves,” said Shady el-Ghazaly Harb, one of the organizers of the revolution.

The protests are increasingly taking aim at the military. On Thursday, a coalition of 24 political groups and five presidential contenders endorsed a call by the young leaders of the protests for the military to cede more power to a civilian government now rather than wait for elections.

The military leaders are sounding increasingly exasperated. In a news conference, Major General Mamdouh Shaheen, the council member who reportedly suggested a Turkish-style military role, recalled the military’s support for the revolution and its pivotal decision not to help uphold Mr. Mubarak.

The military would not give up “until there is an elected civil authority,” he said, but “the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces “does not want to stay in power.”

Heba Afify contributed reporting.





In Yemen:


http://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/18/world ... nted=print

July 17, 2011
Yemenis Organize Shadow Government

By LAURA KASINOF

Even as antigovernment protesters in Yemen struggled to revitalize their movement, sketching somewhat shaky plans over the weekend for a transitional government, they produced a show of their core strength, taking to the streets in huge numbers on Sunday to protest the rule of President Ali Abdullah Saleh.

It was the 33rd anniversary of Mr. Saleh’s rule, dubbed a “day of rage” by the protesters, tens of thousands of whom turned out across the country. But despite their numbers, any advance in their position seemed tenuous, and the country remained deadlocked and leaderless.

The president’s supporters also turned out to demonstrate on his behalf, although their numbers were significantly smaller. Mr. Saleh, who is in Saudi Arabia recuperating from the severe injuries he suffered in an attack on the presidential palace last month, has refused to leave office, defiantly dismissing the nationwide uprising, which is demanding his ouster, and the loss of international support.

The protest leaders’ announcement of a planned shadow government represents their strongest effort yet to bring some structure and organization to the disparate groups of mostly youthful demonstrators who have rocked the country for months. But the move also reflected their fundamental fragmentation and disorganization, with the announcement taking many of the people named as leaders of the transitional government by surprise.

Nor was it clear what role the shadow government would play, what its relationship would be with the formal political opposition or how much support it had.

At a news conference in the capital, Sana, on Saturday, the protest organizers named members of a transitional council who would become the movement’s political leaders. Towakil Karman, who announced the decision, said the council would “implement the goals and the demands of the people’s youth revolution” and would serve during a “transition period not exceeding nine months.”

The council is to appoint a shadow cabinet of technocrats and ultimately select a 501-member national assembly to draft a new constitution.

Ms. Karman asked “the international community to respect the decisions of young people by recognizing the institutions of the revolution.”

The 17 council members come from many segments of society: former members of the governing party, military leaders, members of various opposition political parties and southern separatists.

But many of the council members named by Ms. Karman said they had no idea the council would be announced Saturday.

One of them, Judge Fahim Abdullah Mohsin, the chief of the appeals court in Aden, said he had not known that he would be chosen to represent the protesters, the official Saba news agency reported.

Horeya Mashoor, who also was announced as a council member, said that while she supported the idea of a transitional council she was “surprised” to find her name among its members. Ms. Mashoor said the council can begin a political transition to help Yemen “find solutions to prevent the country sliding into chaos more than it already is now.”

A government spokesman, Abdu al-Janadi, denounced the council as a “coup against the Constitution.”

The formal political opposition did not comment officially on the council. Opposition leaders had considered naming their own shadow government but said that they had been pressured against it over the last few weeks by Western nations because it could be seen as a hostile move by some of the remaining governing party leaders.

Nor was there public comment from the government’s two most powerful opponents, the military commander Ali Mohsin al-Ahmar and the tribal leader Sheik Hamid al-Ahmar.

But the Houthi rebels, a militant group that controls large portions of northern Yemen and which is not represented in the protesters’ list of council members, released a statement on their Web site warning that “declaring a transitional council before the collapse of the regime will only repeat the Libyan experience.”

The Houthis also said the council was “a dangerous step, and it may lead to fighting and civil war.”

It was unclear what percentage of the protest movement was represented on the council. Even Ms. Karman, one of the organizers of the street protests that began in January, is a polarizing figure among some of the demonstrators.

“I would call this council Towakil and Khaled al-Ansi’s council,” said Adel al-Musanif, a graduate student, referring to Ms. Karman and the protest leader who announced the council with her.

Another protester, Abdul Rehman al-Qubati, said he recognized the need to organize. “The council is a good step toward the completion of the revolution, regardless of its drawbacks,” he said.

Nasser Arrabyee and Yasser Alarami contributed reporting from Sana, Yemen.

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Re: Live: Al Jazeera coverage of Egypt’s growing revolution

Postby vanlose kid » Sun Jul 24, 2011 11:37 am

Egyptian protest march descends into violent clashes
More than 140 injured after groups of men with knives attack demonstrators heading for military headquarters


guardian.co.uk, Sunday 24 July 2011 12.38 BST

Thousands of protesters trying to march to the headquarters of Egypt's military rulers have been attacked by groups of men wielding knives and sticks, triggering street clashes that have left more than 100 people injured.

An estimated 10,000 people set out from Tahrir Square in Cairo, but were stopped from reaching the military headquarters in the eastern Abbasiya neighbourhood by army barricades. Security forces also used teargas to disperse protesters.

Saturday's clashes came as tensions mount between the military council that took control of the country after a popular uprising forced President Hosni Mubarak from office and activists who want them to move faster in bringing former regime officials to justice and setting a date for the transition to civilian rule.

The military has appeared impatient with the pressure, accusing activists of treason, warning protesters against "harming national interests" and calling on "honourable" Egyptians to confront actions that disrupt a return to normal life.

The march coincided with the anniversary of the 1952 military coup that toppled the Egyptian monarchy and brought a series of military leaders to office. Bands of men armed with knives and sticks set upon marchers from side roads and in front of the barricades, triggering street battles.

Gunfire was heard, but it was unclear who was shooting. Some firebombs were thrown.

The identity of the attackers could not immediately be determined. Similar groups of men have tried to break up other rallies, and Mubarak's regime often used hired civilians to attack protesters. Some witnesses said they might have been residents or shopkeepers angry at the loss of business as a result of the protests. Others said local residents threw water bottles to the protesters and helped them reach safety.

At one point, a man perched over a female protester, squeezing her against the wall where she was taking cover from the flying rocks. The man cursed her and accused her of being hired to cause chaos, shouting: "Damn your revolution!"

An Associated Press reporter saw a firebomb flying from inside a garden in a side street, landing at a distance from the protesters. The attackers then charged toward the protesters and accused them of throwing the flaming bottle.

"We are extremely angry. These are Egyptians beating us," said Selma Abou el-Dahab, one of the marchers.

A medical official, who did not want to be named, said more than 140 people were taken to hospital with wounds from thrown rocks and falling in the stampede.

The violence broke out following a televised speech commemorating the 1952 coup by Field Marshal Mohammed Hussein Tantawi, head of the ruling military council, who attempted to diffuse tensions by praising young people who led the uprising that toppled Mubarak.

Many protesters have grown distrustful of the military rulers who assumed control of the country on 11 February. A few hundred have been camped out in Tahrir Square since 8 July to pressure the military into bringing those accused of killing nearly 900 protesters during the 18-day uprising to trial. So far, only one low-ranking policeman has been charged in absentia for killing protesters.

Saturday's march was the second consecutive day that protesters tried to reach the headquarters of Egypt's supreme council of the armed forces. On Friday, crowds tried to reach the building to denounce alleged beatings of demonstrators by military forces during another rally in the city of Alexandria.

Tantawi appealed for national unity and called the youth activists "a great product of Egyptian soil".

The military council has promised to hand over power to an elected civilian government within six months. Parliamentary elections are set for October or November, followed by presidential elections, likely next year.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/ju ... ry-council


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Re: Live: Al Jazeera coverage of Egypt’s growing revolution

Postby norton ash » Sun Jul 24, 2011 11:58 am

Thanks, Vanlose, for the update, even if it's not good news.

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Re: Live: Al Jazeera coverage of Egypt’s growing revolution

Postby vanlose kid » Sun Jul 24, 2011 12:00 pm

you're welcome dog. :bigsmile

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Re: Live: Al Jazeera coverage of Egypt’s growing revolution

Postby JackRiddler » Sat Jul 30, 2011 1:51 pm

.

First big show of strength by religious factions.


http://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/30/world ... nted=print

July 29, 2011
Islamists Flood Square in Cairo in Show of Strength

By ANTHONY SHADID


CAIRO — Tens of thousands of Egyptian Islamists poured into Tahrir Square on Friday calling for a state bound by strict religious law and delivering a persuasive show of force in a turbulent country showing deep divisions and growing signs of polarization.

The shape of Egypt five months into its revolution remains distinctly undecided, and Islamists have long been the best organized political force in this religiously conservative country. Some activists speculated that their show of strength would serve as a wake-up call to the secular forces who helped to start the revolution but who remain divided, largely ineffectual and woefully unprepared for coming elections.

Others speculated that it might force groups to pick sides in a country where the glow of unity after President Hosni Mubarak’s fall in February has dimmed amid recriminations over the pace, style and substance of change.

“Islamic, Islamic,” went a popular chant. “Neither secular nor liberal.”

After days of negotiations between the rival factions, the demonstration Friday had been billed as a show of national unity, but adherents to a spectrum of religious movements — from the most puritan and conservative, known as Salafists, to the comparatively more moderate Muslim Brotherhood — vastly outnumbered other voices in a sun-drenched Tahrir Square. The numbers of Salafists, in particular, represented the most definitive declaration yet that they represent a formidable force in Egyptian politics, riding an ascent since the revolution that has surprised and unnerved many secular and liberal activists — and poses new challenges to the Muslim Brotherhood.

“It’s simple,” said Mohammed Awad, a 28-year-old accountant. “We’re stronger than any other force in the country, and we’ve made that clear on this day.”

Though the rally was peaceful, the few secular activists who attended contended they were silenced; some said they were escorted from the square. Most of them decided to boycott, in protest of the demonstration’s tone, ceding the square to the more religious.

After the clarion call of the Egyptian uprising, which overthrew Mr. Mubarak on Feb. 11, Egyptian politics have entered perhaps their most opaque moment yet. Divisions have deepened — between the military leadership that inherited power and secular activists who helped lead the revolution, between liberal and religious voices, and within the ranks of Islamists, liberals, leftists and others.

In a caldron of summer heat and deep uncertainty, clashes in the streets erupt, most recently last Saturday, when pro-army toughs attacked a protest march in the neighborhood of Abassiya.

Some activists were already calling Friday’s demonstration a turning point — a remarkable display of the Islamists’ ability to monopolize space, be it Tahrir Square, the streets or coming elections, and of their skill at organization and mobilization that, for secular activists, served as a bitter contrast to their own shortcomings.

Some scenes in Tahrir Square seemed a metaphor for their state of affairs.

“We’re showing today — to both the people and to the military leadership — that we’re the majority of the population,” said Haithem Adli, a 29-year-old resident, holding a banner that read in part, “Together on the path to heaven.” “That’s the reality. You simply have to look at the square today to see the reality on the ground.”

Mr. Adli’s estimation of the Salafists’ popularity was undoubtedly overstated, but more secular constituencies seemed taken aback by the size of the rally.

“They’ve come to show their muscles,” said Amr Hamza, a 25-year-old secular activist who has camped out in the square for weeks. With a hint of awe, he looked around the square, dominated by people in conservative dress. “There sure are a lot of them.”

Around a dozen liberal activists huddled in a tent they pitched in the square three weeks ago, their faces gloomy. Occasionally, they chanted, “The people want the fall of the field marshal,” a reference to Field Marshal Mohamed Hussein Tantawi, who leads the ruling body of 19 generals. But their slogans were soon drowned out.

“We will keep our ground,” said Salma Said, one of the activists in the tent, who promised to continue the sit-in. “They will leave by the afternoon, and we will continue.”

In terms of turnout, one of the largest since the revolution, the demonstration Friday evoked past scenes in Tahrir Square. But many of the similarities stopped there. Cries for national unity and co-existence between Christians and Muslims made way for familiar religious chants and demands that Egypt adhere to Islamic law, known as Shariah.

“Islamic law is above the Constitution,” one banner read.

Egyptian flags were for sale, but business was desultory. Ribbons that recalled a famous nationalist slogan of almost a century ago — “Religion is for God, and the nation is for everyone” — drew little attention from a crowd that seemed to think otherwise.

Crowds played on slogans made popular during the epic protests that culminated in February. Heard often then was a cry that soon became famous: “Hold your head up high, you’re Egyptian.” On Friday, “Muslim” was substituted for “Egyptian.” The chant that became the revolution’s anthem, “The people want to topple the regime,” changed on Friday to “The people want to apply God’s law.” The crowd itself seemed buoyed by the impressive show.

“If democracy is the voice of the majority and we as Islamists are the majority, why do they want to impose on us the views of minorities – the liberals and the secularists?” asked Mamhoud Nadi, a 26-year-old student. “That’s all I want to know.”

Egypt remains one of the most pious countries in the Middle East, and a moral conservatism held sway even under the ostensibly secular government of Mr. Mubarak. Salafists themselves were largely on the sidelines of Mr. Mubarak’s overthrow, but as elsewhere, new freedoms have given voice to long-repressed currents.

For a country in tumult, the Salafists’ calls for stability and piety — itself seen by many as an antidote to so many years of breathtaking corruption — have played well in the streets.

In past weeks, a growing divide has pitted protesters seeking far-reaching change against a military leadership that has stumbled but seems intent on maintaining a semblance of the status quo. Islamist groups, Salafists and others, have echoed the military’s calls for stability, and many secular activists see an emerging alliance between the two.

As the divide deepens, some wondered whether the Muslim Brotherhood, still the best-organized group in Egypt, would side with the more conservative forces or seek to act as a bridge to the liberal or secular forces. Some liberal activists said some elements in the Brotherhood had tried to mediate between the opposing sides until Friday morning, but failed.

“Some of the dividing lines have become clearer and there will be a lot more pressure at this point on the Brotherhood to clarify where they are,” said Michael Hanna, a fellow at the Century Foundation in New York, who attended the rally. “It puts some pressure on them to define who they are and where they stand in the political process.”

Heba Afify contributed reporting.

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Re: Live: Al Jazeera coverage of Egypt’s growing revolution

Postby beeline » Mon Aug 15, 2011 12:38 pm

Link

Posted on Mon, Aug. 15, 2011

Egyptian judge stops live Mubarak trial broadcasts
HAMZA HENDAWI and AYA BATRAWY

The Associated Press

CAIRO - Television cameras won't be allowed in the courtroom for the rest of ousted Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak's trial, the presiding judge ruled Monday.

Judge Ahmed Rifaat adjourned the trial until Sept. 5, when Mubarak, his former security chief and six other senior officials are scheduled to face charges of conspiring to kill protesters during the mass uprising that ousted them from power.

State TV cameras had been allowed in the courtroom for the first two hearings, but Rifaat said he decided to ban them before summoning witnesses.

"It is in protection of the general interest," Rifaat said.

The decision was met with suspicion by Ramadan Ahmed, the father of a 16-year-old protester who was killed during the uprising.

"This is not correct. How can I be reassured and feel the justice," said Ahmed, who was refused access to the courtroom. "I want to see justice realized before my eyes."

But lawyers in the courtroom applauded Rifaat's decision. More than 100 lawyers are representing the families of the victims, prompting bickering among them, and accusations that some were attending in order to get on television.

"This decision pleases most of the lawyers who are really working on the case, not those who want the TV appearance," said Gamal Eid, who represents a number of families of slain protesters and watched Monday's hearing from his office. "This will give us the right to some calm and concentration and turns it again into a legal case, not a show."

Eid said more effort is now needed to ensure family members are allowed into the courtroom.

The ailing, 83-year-old Mubarak arrived in a helicopter from a Cairo hospital where he has been held since his first court appearance Aug. 3. He was wheeled into the metal defendants' cage on a bed with his two sons, Gamal and Alaa, by his side. The sons are facing corruption charges.

The trial of Mubarak, who ruled with unquestioned power for 29 years, was one of the main demands of the protesters who forced him out of office Feb. 11. It came after weeks of protests and street pressure on the country's military rulers, who took charge after Mubarak stepped down.

After the session was adjourned, Mubarak's sons waved to supporters in the room before exiting the dock, pushing their father's stretcher. Mubarak was later escorted into a military ambulance and to his lockup in a hospital in a Cairo suburb.
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Re: Live: Al Jazeera coverage of Egypt’s growing revolution

Postby JackRiddler » Mon Aug 15, 2011 3:56 pm

.

Yeah, Mubarak's being tried... but so is Asmaa Mahfouz! For "slandering" the military! Egypt is still one overthrow of the Supreme Council away from a real revolution, I'm afraid. If you had to bet, it would be hard to bet against their fixing the elections to pick their own president, with the Brotherhood, and to form a conservative, if formally secular, and economically neoliberal republic.


http://english.ahram.org.eg/NewsContent ... rosec.aspx

Kefaya activist summoned by Egypt's military prosecution
Ahram Online, Monday 15 Aug 2011
Another activist called to court, without being given reasons


Kifaya member, Maha Abu-Bakr, has been summoned to appear in front of the military prosecution on Monday. Abu-Bakr says the reason remains unknown.

April 6 activist, Asmaa Mahfouz, was summoned by the military on Sunday facing accusations of insulting military council members and inciting violence against the military. Mahfouz was released on a bail of EGP 20,000.

Several others were summoned before the military but without consequences. Mahfouz was the first to receive accusations and to pay a bail.

Others arrested from demonstrations or sit-ins have, like Mahfouz, faced military trials and some have received prison sentences.

http://english.ahram.org.eg/News/18916.aspx






http://www.presstv.ir/detail/193995.html

Image

Egypt's activist arrest sparks protest
Mon Aug 15, 2011 2:31AM

Egyptian activists have gathered outside a military court to protest against the detention of a prominent activist and blogger charged with insulting the ruling junta and inciting violence.

The 26-year-old Asmaa Mahfouz was detained and interrogated for three hours on Sunday and released later in the day on a bail of $3,356, Reuters reported.

Protesters gathered outside the prosecutor's office in Cairo following Mahfouz's release, chanting "down, down with the rule of the military".

She is being questioned for "speaking inappropriately about the military council and for using defamatory and offensive insults against the council on Facebook and Twitter," the official MENA news agency said.

The head of the military judicial authority, Major General Mahmud Morsi, said there will be "no tolerance to insults directed at the armed forces."

After her release, Mahfouz told Egyptian newspaper Al-Masry Al-Youm that the allegations against her were baseless.

Mahfouz was one of the leaders of Egypt Revolution Youth Movement that revolted against the long-time autocracy of former ruler Hosni Mubarak who was overthrown in an 18-day uprising on February 11.

She appeared in an Internet video in January, calling on Egyptians to protest against Mubarak's regime on January 25.

Thousands of civilians have been tried in military courts since Mubarak's ouster.

MA/MB

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grab-bag of headlines:


Prominent Egypt activist charged
Herald Sun - ‎3 hours ago‎
EGYPT'S military prosecution has charged a prominent activist with slandering and inciting violence against the country's ruling generals through social networking sites, lawyers said. The charge, levied yesterday, was one of the most serious ...
Egypt activist to be tried for insulting military: lawyer
Reuters Africa - ‎8 hours ago‎
(Reuters) - Egypt's military prosecutors on Sunday ordered a prominent woman activist to be tried before a military court on charges of insulting the country's military rulers and incitement to violence, her lawyer said. ...
News of the Day From Across the Globe
San Francisco Chronicle - ‎9 hours ago‎
1 Deadly goring: A killer bull has claimed another victim after fatally goring a 29-year-old man during festivities in Spain's eastern Valencia region, an official said Sunday. The unidentified man died at a hospital in Xativa late Saturday, ...
Activist Asmaa Mahfouz released on bail
Ahram Online - ‎13 hours ago‎
Activist and former April 6 member Asmaa Mahfouz has been interrogated by military prosecution on Sunday and will remain in detention until a bail of LE20,000 ($3355) is paid. The date for Mahfouz's next session has is yet to be set. ...
Asmaa Mahfouz, Egyptian youth activist, is charged by military prosecutor
Washington Post - Leila Fadel, Ingy Hassieb - ‎16 hours ago‎
CAIRO — Asmaa Mahfouz sat in front of an Egyptian military prosecutor Sunday to face charges of inciting violence against the military and insulting the armed forces. She was charged, bail was set, and the case was referred to a ...





Actually, the best quote is here:


http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/mid ... print.html


Asmaa Mahfouz, Egyptian youth activist, is charged by military prosecutor
By Leila Fadel, Published: August 14

CAIRO — Asmaa Mahfouz sat in front of an Egyptian military prosecutor Sunday to face charges of inciting violence against the military and insulting the armed forces. She was charged, bail was set, and the case was referred to a military court.

The well-known youth activist, who became a symbol of heroism as a key organizer of the 18-day uprising that forced the resignation of President Hosni Mubarak, is the latest civilian caught up in a parallel justice system set up by the country’s interim military leadership.

While Mubarak, members of his family and other officials from his government are being tried in civilian courts, thousands of civilians are not afforded the same right.

More than 10,000 civilians have been tried and convicted in hasty military tribunals since the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces took control of the country after Mubarak’s ouster Feb. 11.

The charges against Mahfouz, 26, mark an escalation by the military leadership, which seems to be tiring of increased criticism and continued protests. In recent months, military officials have questioned several high-profile activists, such as Mahfouz, who have used social networking sites to mobilize anti-government demonstrations, but the activists have been released without being charged. The charges against Mahfouz come as Mubarak’s trial is expected to resume in a civilian court Monday. He is accused of ordering the killing of protesters and of corruption.

Mahfouz’s $3,340 bail — a steep sum for most Egyptians — was posted by supporters. Dozens more civilian protesters and activists are slated to appear before the military prosecutor Monday.

“The Mubarak trial is supposed to be about an end to the police state and a break with that abusive past,” said Heba Morayef, a Middle East and North Africa researcher at Human Rights Watch. “Yet, ironically, what you have in parallel is the military investing in a justice system that doesn’t respect fair trials for civilians.”

Morayef said the Mahfouz case, the military’s attacks this spring on a youth movement that played a key role in organizing the revolution and government accusations that civic groups were working for foreign nations are disturbing signs at a time when many in Egypt expected greater freedoms.

“I think we should all take this so seriously,” she said. “It’s not a good sign of things to come.”

Mahfouz was called in for questioning after she posted a comment on the social networking site Facebook. “If the judiciary doesn’t give us our rights, nobody should be surprised if militant groups appear and conduct a series of assassinations because there is no law and there is no judiciary,” she wrote.

The message was a commentary on the importance of the outcome of the trials of Mubarak, his security chief, his sons and other officials from his era. Last month, Mahfouz told an Arabic satellite television station that the military leadership was corrupt and allowed thugs to attack protesters. The military leadership accused her of inciting violence.


“She was expressing her fears that there could be violence if there is no justice in Egypt,” said her attorney, Hossam Eissa, who offered his legal services free. “We should stop these military inquisitions now. It’s not good for anybody.”

On Sunday morning, before she was questioned, Mahfouz told Eissa, “I can’t believe Habib al-Adli, the [former] minister of interior, is having a civilian judge to judge him and I am someone who went to Tahrir [Square] and made this revolution and I don’t have the same right,” he quoted her as saying.

Adli’s trial was adjourned to Sept. 5. He is accused of ordering the killing of unarmed protesters.

Egyptian activists have been pushing unsuccessfully for an end to the military trials, but the military rulers have said the courts are necessary to stop “thuggery” during these uncertain times.

“The Supreme Council of the Armed Forces reacts violently to things because the country is in such a state of chaos that they feel their reaction is the only way to re-stabilize things,” former judge Saeed Abdel Wahab said. “Nothing is new in post-revolution Egypt. The ones ruling Egypt now are the same as the ones who were ruling during Mubarak’s time. They are loyal to him still.”


Special correspondent Ingy Hassieb contributed to this report.


© The Washington Post Company

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Re: Live: Al Jazeera coverage of Egypt’s growing revolution

Postby JackRiddler » Mon Aug 15, 2011 4:01 pm


http://bikyamasr.com/39476/egypt-elbara ... crackdown/

Egypt: ElBaradei speaks out against military over activist’s crackdown
Joseph Mayton | 15 August 2011 | Comments (0)


Egypt's ElBaradei speaks out over activist's military trial.

CAIRO: Egypt’s leading politician and presidential frontrunner Mohamed ElBaradei lashed out against the military on Sunday night over the detention and planned military trial against activist Asmaa Mahfouz over comments she made on Twitter.

He said the military’s actions are not in line with the revolution’s aims and called on the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces (SCAF) to end the crackdown on Mahfouz and activists over statements they make on social media networks.

“Stop this farce immediately,” ElBaradei tweeted on Sunday.

Mahfouz, who was brought before a military tribunal for defamation and incitement of violence, and was questioned for 6 hours before being released on 20,000 Egyptian pounds ($3,357) bail.

The SCAF is accusing Mahfouz of inciting people against the armed forces and calling for political assassinations through her Twitter and Facebook accounts.

Mahfouz will now be sent to a military tribunal where she could face a lengthy prison sentence. Rights activists in the country have strongly condemned putting civilians through military trials and say at least 1,000 civilians are behind bars due to these courts.

Tens of Mahfouz’s supporters and rights activists gathered in front of the military prosecutor’s office to protest the army’s move and chanted anti-SCAF slogans.

The security forces arrested a number activists from the gathering, including Nour Ayman Nour, presidential candidate Ayman Nour’s son, but released him soon after.

The SCAF released a statement saying they respect freedom of speech, but “some people take that freedom to the point of slander,” and asked people to read Mahfouz’s statements on her social networking accounts, without a direct quotation of what Mahfouz said.

Reports say this following tweet might be the one that the SCAF is referring to: “if the judiciary system didn’t give our rights, so no one gets upset if there are militant groups that preform assassination as long as there is no law and no legal system, no one gets mad.”

In April, an Egyptian military court sentenced Internet activist and blogger Maikel Nabil to three years in prison for criticizing the armed forces. He was arrested on March 28 for his blog posts critical of the army’s role during the massive protests across the country during the January 25 uprising that ousted President Hosni Mubarak.

Nabil, 26, was a prominent secular activist who gained notoriety for his movement on Facbeook called “No for the compulsory conscription.” He was the first blogger to be jailed since Mubarak’s regime fell on February 11.

** Manar Ammar contributed to this report.

BM

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Re: Live: Al Jazeera coverage of Egypt’s growing revolution

Postby Joe Hillshoist » Mon Aug 15, 2011 11:50 pm

Anyone heard from Alice?
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Re: Live: Al Jazeera coverage of Egypt’s growing revolution

Postby beeline » Tue Aug 16, 2011 11:31 am

Joe Hillshoist wrote:Anyone heard from Alice?


She checked out for a while (I think in this thread) maybe until September?
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Re: Live: Al Jazeera coverage of Egypt’s growing revolution

Postby Joe Hillshoist » Tue Aug 16, 2011 7:38 pm

Cheers. I was a bit worried about her seeing as the place is still abit hectic. (And the regime still hasn't really "fallen". PS - I'm glad someone has the manners to say they won't be in for a while. I just disappear.)
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Re: Live: Al Jazeera coverage of Egypt’s growing revolution

Postby Allegro » Tue Aug 16, 2011 8:20 pm

.
Actually, on July 7, Alice posted on the previous page of this thread.

AlicetheKurious wrote:It is ridiculous but true that I will be abroad and largely cut off even from news about Egypt just when the revolution is on the threshold of a new and probably decisive phase. Our trip was organized, booked and paid for long before the revolution began. My friends console me by saying that either I'll come back in time to participate directly, or to celebrate. I just wanted people to know why I won't be posting for the next couple of weeks. [REFER.]

U-hoo, Alice. :sun:
Art will be the last bastion when all else fades away.
~ Timothy White (b 1952), American rock music journalist
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Re: Live: Al Jazeera coverage of Egypt’s growing revolution

Postby JackRiddler » Thu Sep 08, 2011 8:58 pm


http://www.nytimes.com/2011/09/08/world ... ml?_r=3&hp

Image

September 7, 2011

Military Rulers Called to Testify in Mubarak Trial

By DAVID D. KIRKPATRICK and HEBA AFIFY

CAIRO — The judge presiding over the criminal trial of former President Hosni Mubarak on Wednesday ordered testimony from the top two officers in the ruling military council, sharpening doubts about whether the court is acting independently or is cooperating with the president’s former allies.

The trial has proved to be a soap opera, opening with dramatic images of the former president lying on a gurney behind bars in the prisoners’ dock, then descending into a confusion of questionable testimony.

On Monday, four senior police officers, who were testifying for the prosecution, contradicted previous statements that Mr. Mubarak had ordered the use of live ammunition against demonstrators. On Wednesday, a fifth officer, Mohamed Abdel Hamkim, reversed his statement that he had been provided with shotgun shells for use against protesters, and the prosecutor attempted without success to charge him with perjury.

By then, both the defense and prosecution had petitioned for the testimony of Egypt’s military rulers, though the courtroom responded with gasps. “I don’t want to hear a sound until I am done with reading the decisions,” the judge said, according to Reuters.

It was unclear whether the two officers, Field Marshal Mohamed Hussein Tantawi and Gen. Sami Enan, had volunteered or would even agree to appear. Nor was it clear that the judge could require them to testify: the military council that is Egypt’s sole governing authority suspended the Constitution when it took power from Mr. Mubarak in the name of the revolution.

The judge, Ahmed Rafaat, also summoned Mr. Mubarak’s former intelligence chief and vice president, Omar Suleiman, who has disappeared from public view since the day in mid-February when he made the televised announcement that Mr. Mubarak was surrendering power.

Adding to suspicions that Mr. Mubarak might be acquitted of the most serious charges, the judge also stipulated that the three men would testify under the strictest secrecy. Not only did he order a closed session for their testimony, he placed news organizations under strict constraints about what they could report.

Mr. Mubarak is being tried on charges of corruption and of conspiring to order the killing of unarmed demonstrators in his final days in power. The three witnesses — especially Field Marshal Tantawi, the longtime defense minister, and Mr. Suleiman, the former president’s most trusted aide, were within the president’s inner circle at the time.

Both Field Marshal Tantawi and Mr. Suleiman were considered among Mr. Mubarak’s most loyal aides — and Mr. Suleiman has never broken with him — and it is unlikely that either is eager to incriminate him. The courtroom had veered toward chaos before the judge’s decision. And when the fifth prosecution witness reversed himself about the instructions to shoot protesters, a lawyer in the courtroom shouted, “You liar, you liar,” according to a Reuters reporter in the room. “You have been paid. This is the blood of your brother.”

Image

The prosecutors, holdovers from the Mubarak government, have come under increasing criticism for their witnesses’ self-defeating testimony.

Skeptics said Wednesday that they feared the secret testimony of Field Marshal Tantawi, Mr. Suleiman and others had been choreographed to set up an acquittal on the most serious charges. A military spokesman did not respond to calls seeking confirmation that Field Marshal Tantawi or General Enan would indeed testify. But lawyers for people killed during the protests called the judge’s decision a victory and said they relished the chance to question the few who knew the most.

“This will be a huge turning point in this case, and a lot of secrets will be revealed in these secret sessions,” said Amir Salem, a prominent civil rights lawyer representing some of the people killed during the protests. He speculated that “there will probably be conflicts between Tantawi and Mubarak; we will seek that.”

Field Marshal Tantawi is scheduled to testify on Sunday, followed by General Enan on Monday and Mr. Suleiman on Tuesday.

After each witness testifies, lawyers in the Wednesday hearing said, Mr. Mubarak will be offered a chance to comment.


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Re: Live: Al Jazeera coverage of Egypt’s growing revolution

Postby JackRiddler » Sat Sep 10, 2011 5:57 pm

.

Cross-post from seemslikeadream

Image
AP Photo 4 hours ago
A protester holds the Egyptian national flag as a fire rages outside the building housing the Israeli embassy in Cairo, Egypt, Friday, Sept. 9, 2011. Hundreds of Egyptian protesters, some swinging hammers and others using their bare hands, tore down parts of a graffiti-covered security wall outside the Israeli embassy in Cairo on Friday. Thousands elsewhere protested for the first time in a month against the country's military rulers.

Image
AP Photo 1 hour ago
Protesters carry a wounded man during clashes with the Egyptian security forces next to the building housing the Israeli Embassy in Cairo, Egypt, early Saturday, Sept. 10, 2011. Protesters broke into the embassy Friday and dumped documents out of the windows as hundreds more demonstrated outside, prompting the ambassador and his family to leave the country.

Image
AP Photo 2 hours ago
Protesters throw stones during clashes with the Egyptian security forces next to the building housing the Israeli Embassy in Cairo, Egypt, early Saturday, Sept. 10, 2011. Protesters broke into the embassy Friday and dumped documents out of the windows as hundreds more demonstrated outside, prompting the ambassador and his family to leave the country.

Image
AP Photo 9 hours ago
Egyptian military and policemen stand alert as hundreds of Egyptian activists demolish a concrete wall built around a building housing the Israeli embassy in Cairo, Egypt, to protect it against demonstrators, as they raise national and Palestinian flags Friday, Sept. 9, 2011. Israeli flag which they prepare to burn seen at left.

Image
AP Photo 9 hours ago
Egyptians demolish a concrete wall built around a building housing the Israeli Embassy in Cairo, Egypt, to protect it against demonstrators Friday, Sept. 9, 2011. Hundreds of Egyptian protesters tore down parts of a graffiti-covered security wall that had recently been put up near the entrance of the Israeli Embassy in Cairo. Egyptian security forces did not intervene as crowds climbed the embassy security wall, pummeled it with hammers and tore away large sections of the barrier.

Egypt declares state of alert in wake of attack on Israeli Embassy
From Mohamed Fadel Fahmy, For CNN
September 9, 2011 10:20 p.m. EDT


Giza, Egypt (CNN) -- Egypt declared a state of alert as the country's Cabinet prepared to meet in emergency session Saturday to discuss an attack on the Israeli Embassy, a government spokesman said.

Mohamed Hegazy, the spokesman for the prime minister, announced the alert and the canceling of police holidays after Egyptian protesters tore down a wall surrounding the building that houses the Israeli Embassy and entered its offices.

Once inside, the protesters threw papers bearing Hebrew from the windows and into the streets. The offices were empty because Friday is a weekend day in Egypt.

Police fired tear gas into the crowd and gunshots into the air outside the building, which is across the Nile River from Cairo. A police car in front of a nearby police headquarters was set afire.

Earlier, as demonstrators destroyed the wall that had protected the high-rise building, police and military forces took no action.

But 450 people were injured in clashes as protesters hurled bottles at police in back streets, the minister of health told MENA, Egypt's official news agency.

One man died of a heart attack after the protests, said Army Lieutenant Colonel Amr Imam.

Protesters cheered the demolition and chanted for the ouster of Israel's ambassador. The demonstrators were among thousands of Egyptians who took to the streets Friday.

Many protesters converged on Cairo's Tahrir Square to demand reforms in a turnout they had dubbed "correcting the path of the revolution." Egyptian state TV reported that hundreds of people attempted to raid the Interior Ministry and crowds of demonstrators gathered in front of the state TV building.

Israeli Foreign Ministry spokesman Yigal Palmor said about 3,000 protesters had torn apart the wall circling the embassy building.

An Egyptian commander at the embassy told CNN that security personnel had been ordered to avoid confrontations with protesters.

Police had been guarding the entrance to the building, which houses the embassy on the 12th floor and private dwellings on other floors.

The commander said the wall had been erected recently to protect the residents, not the Israeli Embassy.

Since the ouster in February of President Hosni Mubarak, many Egyptians have called for the end of diplomatic relations with the Jewish state. The two nations signed a peace treaty in 1979.

Egyptians have been angry about the killing of five Egyptian police officers by Israeli soldiers last month when Israel went after militants who had attacked civilians near the Israeli-Egyptian border.

Meanwhile, protesters at Tahrir Square criticized the performance of the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces and the government in the wake of Mubarak's ouster.

The Interior Ministry had announced Thursday the square would be cleared of police and soldiers for 24 hours to allow for a smooth protest. It said its forces would intervene if government or public property were destroyed.

"We cleared the square to avoid any confrontations, but we expect violence within the groups and hope thugs don't take advantage of the situation," said Lt. Col. Amr Imam, Armed Forces spokesman.

Protesters want the abolishment of military tribunals, the establishment of minimum and maximum wages, permission for Egyptians abroad to vote in the coming elections and the announcement of dates for those elections.

They are also calling for the removal of former ruling party members from banks, schools, universities and government institutions.

Mubarak is charged with ordering the killing of protesters to quash the uprising that ultimately ended his 30-year rule. In addition, he faces corruption charges. He has pleaded not guilty to the charges.


Saturday, September 10, 2011 - 01:46 GMT+3 - Egypt
Israeli Defence Minister Ehud Barak called US Defense Secretary Leon Panetta early Saturday to request help protecting their embassy in Cairo,hours after Egyptian protestors attacked the building.

A statement from Barak's office said he had called Panetta and President Barack Obama's Middle East advisor Dennis Ross.

The statement also said that Barak had also discussed the incident with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Israeli defence chiefs, though it gave no further details of the conversations.

On Friday evening protesters stormed the building housing the embassy, tearing down the Israeli flag and throwing diplomatic documents including some marked "confidential" down into the streets below .

Barak's statement made no mention of any actual physical breach of the embassy.

US President Barack Obama on Friday called on Egypt to protect Israel's embassy from demonstrators in Cairo, as he spoke by telephone to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, officials in Washington said. - AFP




Bloomberg
Egypt Declares State of Emergency After Israeli Embassy Struck
September 10, 2011, 5:22 PM EDT

By Mariam Fam and Nadeem Hamid

Sept. 11 (Bloomberg) -- Egypt’s ruling military council declared a state of emergency to restore order after protesters attacked the Israeli embassy in Cairo. Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told his nation last night that the incident had damaged “the fabric of peace” between the two countries while declaring his commitment to the 32-year alliance.

Egyptian commandos rescued embassy security personnel and civil security forces dispersed protesters gathered outside the embassy for a second day. One person outside the embassy died of a heart attack and 448 people were injured in both incidents, Egypt’s state-run Nile News said. At least two people died in the embassy protests, the BBC reported, citing unidentified officials.

“The fact that the Egyptian authorities acted decisively to bring about the release of our people is commendable and deserves thanks,” Netanyahu said in a televised address from his office in Jerusalem. “At the same time, the Egyptians cannot ignore the heavy damage done to the fabric of peace with Israel and this extreme violation of international norms.”

U.S. President Barack Obama called on Egypt’s government “to honor its international obligations to safeguard the security of the Israeli embassy,” the White House said in a statement Sept. 9. Egypt’s state television reported that the Israeli ambassador went to the Cairo airport to return to Israel.

Increasing Tensions

Since the February ouster of President Hosni Mubarak, an ally of the U.S. and Israel, there have been increasing calls by many Egyptians for ending the peace treaty between Egypt and Israel. Tensions between the countries escalated as violence on their border flared in August, when militants opened fire on cars and buses near the southern Israeli city of Eilat. At least three Egyptian police officers died in the ensuing Israeli military response.

Egyptian Prime Minister Essam Sharaf called a Cabinet crisis group meeting after the incident at the embassy, state television reported. In a televised address yesterday, Information Minister Osama Heikal said the government would apply “all provisions” of emergency law to ensure safety, Agence France-Presse reported.

At least 17 people linked to the embassy incident have been arrested, Al Jazeera television reported, citing an unidentified security official.

Tear Gas

Demonstrators threw stones and tossed tear-gas canisters back at the security forces, mixing chants against Egypt’s ruling military council with denunciations of Israel, said Hatem Abdel Moneim Talima, an assistant professor at the American University in Cairo, who went to the embassy Friday and stayed until early yesterday.

“I have never seen that much tear gas used before, not even at the height of the revolution,” Talima said.

All Israeli diplomatic staff in Cairo are safe after Egyptian commandos rescued them, Netanyahu said. Embassy personnel have been returned to Israel, he said, and “our diplomatic delegate in Cairo will continue to represent Israel until the ambassador’s return.”

In a Sept. 9 telephone call with Netanyahu, Obama expressed his concern about events at the embassy and reviewed what the U.S. was doing to help resolve the situation “without further violence,” the White House said in its statement.

Praise for Obama

In his televised address, Netanyahu said Obama had told him “‘I’ll do everything I can.’”

“He did it,” Netanyahu said. “We owe him a special thanks.”

Israel’s consul will stay in Cairo to take care of embassy affairs, Al Arabiya television reported yesterday.

“What happened is a disaster,” Emad Gad, who heads the Israel studies program at the Al-Ahram Center for Political and Strategic Studies in Cairo, said in a telephone interview. “Israel will use this to make Egypt look like it’s incapable of providing security.”

The Islamic Hamas movement, which controls the coastal Gaza Strip, said on Aug. 22 that an informal agreement was reached with Israel to end violence that escalated after Aug. 18 attacks near the Red Sea resort of Eilat left eight Israelis dead. At least 14 Palestinians were killed in Israeli strikes following that incident, and one Israeli was killed in a rocket attack.

--With assistance from Calev Ben-David in Jerusalem, Jonathan Ferziger in Tel Aviv and Kate Andersen Brower in Washington. Editors: Walid El-Gabry, Leslie Hoffecker

To contact the reporters on this story: Mariam Fam in Cairo at mfam1@bloomberg.net; Nadeem Hamid in Washington at nhamid3@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Paul Tighe at ptighe@bloomberg.net

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Of course, the new military regime has yet to end the 30-year Mubarak state of emergency!

.
We meet at the borders of our being, we dream something of each others reality. - Harvey of R.I.

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