Monday, January 31, 2011

Another dictator is about to keel: Egypt's Mubarak on the brink, a warning for the Power-Clinger in Phnom Penh

Egypt's Mubarak on the brink; ElBaradei demands 'new era'

Mohammed ElBaradei joined a protest Sunday night and is seen as a leader of Egypt's pro-democracy uprising.

Sunday, 01.30.11
BY HANNAH ALLAM AND SHASHANK BENGALI
McClatchy News Service

CAIRO, Egypt -- Opposition figure Mohammed ElBaradei emerged from house arrest late Sunday to join throngs of protesters in central Cairo, echoing their demand that U.S.-allied President Hosni Mubarak resign and establishing himself as the face of Egypt's six-day pro-democracy uprising.

The dramatic nighttime appearance by ElBaradei -- the Nobel Peace Prize winner who returned to Egypt last week after the protests began -- suddenly placed him at the forefront of a leaderless grassroots revolt that's brought one of the Arab world's longest and most entrenched dictatorships to the brink of collapse.

As the banned Muslim Brotherhood and other Egyptian opposition groups said they'd support ElBaradei in negotiations over a possible new government, President Barack Obama called allies and expressed support for ``an orderly transition to a government that is responsive to the aspirations of the Egyptian people,'' according to a White House statement.

Mubarak's days appeared to be numbered, although the 82-year-old leader showed no obvious signs that he'd give up the office he's held for nearly three decades. F-16 fighter jets buzzed protesters in downtown Cairo in a show of intimidation, while news services reported that the Egyptian army was sending reinforcements and state television said that the police, who have been absent from the streets since Friday, would resume patrols.


Cairo remained an anxious battle zone: long lines at fuel pumps, markets plucked clean of bread and other staples, shops boarded up or looted, banks and restaurants shuttered. Neighborhood watch groups armed themselves against the marauding gangs that many Egyptians thought had been unleashed by the hated Interior Ministry to sow chaos. Dozens of prisoners had reportedly escaped or been let free from jails.

The U.S. Embassy was making arrangements to evacuate American citizens to ``safe haven locations in Europe'' starting Monday and authorized non-emergency staff and the relatives of diplomats to leave Egypt. The State Department urged Americans to ``consider leaving as soon as they can safely do so.''

The death toll in the protests rose to at least 150, according to Al Jazeera, the pan-Arab satellite network whose live broadcasts of Tahrir (''Liberation'') Square have provided the world with a front-row seat to the revolt -- and prompted authorities to close its Cairo bureau Sunday. The network continued to broadcast via satellite, however.

Yet tens of thousands of Egyptians defied fear and the third day of a nationwide curfew to mass again after nightfall in Tahrir Square. ElBaradei, the bookish former head of the United Nations nuclear watchdog agency, appeared about 7 p.m. and said through a bullhorn to a crowd that huddled around him: ``Today, each of us is a different Egyptian.''

``We have restored our rights, we have restored our freedoms. What have begun cannot be reversed,'' he said. ``We have a key demand: for the regime to step down and to start a new era.''

Just days ago, even after a similar uprising had toppled Tunisia's dictatorial leader, Zine el Abidine Ben Ali, a post-Mubarak scenario in Egypt was unthinkable. The majority of Egypt's roughly 80 million citizens have never known any other leader, and chronic complaints about political repression, low wages, corruption and nepotism -- he'd been grooming his son, Gamal, to succeed him -- had never seriously challenged a regime that enjoyed $1.5 billion in annual U.S. aid, most of it for the military.

On the streets of the capital Sunday, however, Egyptians had begun to refer to Mubarak as ``the ex-president.''

Opposition groups appeared to be coalescing around ElBaradei as the face of the uprising for now. He secured the backing of the largest opposition organization, the Muslim Brotherhood, an Islamist group that Mubarak had effectively banned, although many Egyptians criticize him as a latecomer who joined the protest movement after it began or say he doesn't represent ordinary citizens.

He and another prominent dissident, Ayman Nour, were named to a 10-member committee formed Sunday by the a loose grouping of opposition factions, including the Muslim Brotherhood, to negotiate with the regime and press for Mubarak's resignation.

``We are not negotiating with President Mubarak, since our key demand is to have him stepping down,'' Nour told Al Jazeera English. ``We will negotiate with the army . . . and we will also negotiate with other political parties in order to have a national reconciliation government.''

Nour denied that the committee was asking the army to stage a coup against Mubarak, saying it wanted the military to ``defend and safeguard the citizens.''

On Saturday, Mubarak named former intelligence chief Omar Suleiman as his first-ever vice president and Ahmed Shafiq, a former air force chief of staff, as the new prime minister, fueling speculation that he's preparing to hand over power to his closest allies.

The news did nothing to deter the protesters, who on Sunday continued to chant, ``Mubarak, you must leave.''

Speaking on CNN, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said, ``What we're trying to do is to help clear the air so that those who remain in power, starting with President Mubarak, with his new vice president, with the new prime minister, will begin a process of reaching out, of creating a dialogue that will bring in peaceful activists and representatives of civil society to . . . plan a way forward that will meet the legitimate grievances of the Egyptian people.''

Clinton's remarks showed that the Obama administration understands that Mubarak's time is running out, said Nader Hashemi of the University of Denver's Josef Korbel School of International Studies.

``There seems to be a shift in U.S. policy where the Egyptian people are given respect and their right to determine their future is finally being acknowledged by the American government,'' he said.

Earlier Sunday, there was almost no police presence on the streets, and military tanks stayed parked in Tahrir Square and other key neighborhoods without confronting protesters. Authorities said that the nationwide curfew would be extended for a fourth day Monday, and would begin an hour earlier, at 3 p.m. Cairo time (7 a.m. in Washington).

As dusk fell over Cairo, two army tanks rolled through a residential neighborhood in Dokki, a middle-class western suburb where residents had armed themselves with kitchen knives the night before to guard against looters. The residents welcomed the tanks.

In the eastern port city of Suez, the scene of one of the biggest clashes of the revolt on Friday, streets remained strewn with rubble and the army was out in force, guarding the main government buildings, reported Joe Stork, the deputy director of the Middle East and North Africa at Human Rights Watch.

The group said that hospitals in Cairo and Alexandria needed blood donations.

Allam reported from Cairo, Bengali from Baghdad. McClatchy special correspondent Miret el Naggar in Cairo and Erika Bolstad and Jonathan S. Landay in Washington contributed to this article.

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

Cambodia is next. Hun sen, you can run but you can't hide. you can lie but you can't hide the truth.

Anonymous said...

Dear Dr. Hun Sen and Ten Thousands stars Dr. Hun Manet,

Why do you and your relatives give Kos Trol, sea and lands to Vietnam? Why? and Why?

Why do you and all of your relatives involve a lot of murder cases in Cambodia? Why? Why?

Why do you murder Cambodian K5, 1997 events and so on and so on with lost count? Why?

If you are so good why do you and your families murder Cambodians? Why? And Why?

If you are so good, why do above 90% Cambodians are so poor but you and your relatives are billionaires and millionaires? Why? Why?

Why do you try to kill people from telling the true? Why? Why?

What is the difference from Khmer Rough and you, Sir?

If you are so good why do you block KI from Cambodians?

If you are so good, why do you steal all Cambodian life such as well being, health, cut down Cambodians life expectancy as well? But you and your small group are eat well, sleep well, exercise well, have oversea doctors and best medical treatment from high class private doctors from oversea. Most Cambodians that have no money, your healthcare system left Cambodians patients to die in front of your hospital. Why? Why?

If you are so good why more than 6 millions Vietnamese are living permanently in Cambodia, right now? Why, Dr. Hen Sen? And Why

Everywhere, I walk in Cambodia I see Vietnamese speak Vietnamese every where, why? Why?

Don't you and your families scare of hell for eternity?

When you die can you bring all of your power and money with you?

Dr. Hun Sen and Dr. Big ass lady and his beloved Dr. Hun Manet Please don't put us in jail or kill us for this! We want to live like you and your families do!

Khmers victim of 1997 and K5

PS

If Dr. Hun Sen and Dr. Hun Manet remove the tablet it is show they are extremely coward and his star are just joy stars given by his daddy not by patriotism. Dr. Hun Manet is very coward as his daddy they only aim to kill innocent Cambodians that all. Dr. Hun SEn and Dr. ten stars Hun Manet are very great at bullying Cambodians and killing Cambodians but cowardly toward Thai and Viet.

CPP are not just corrupted, CPP are extremely corrupt. They are even sell the country such as Kos Trol, Seas, lands, Cambodian people, Cambodian health and well being, all resources in the Cambodia…with lost count. You name it!

Seriously where is the win win policy of Dr. Hun Sen represent? The country is getting smaller and smaller and shame by Dr. Hun Sen and Dr. Hun Manet and his families, his relatives and friends.

Anonymous said...

The Egyptian people uprising against the President Hosni Mubarak because they are suffering and feed up with oppression regime and it is also the consequence of the U.S. foreign policy in middle east region. For the last three decades, Hosni Mubarak has done everything to please the U.S. and keeps peace with Israel, but he did very little to improve his country even though, Egypt always gets more than one billion Dollar every year from American government.

It is really shamefull for the U.S. that always has a self-proclaimed that they are a champion of Human Rights and democracy, but in the Arab World, all America's ally are tyranny regimes. America has never cared about Human Rights and democracy, as long as those regimes pro-America and serve American interests, Hosni Mubarak and other leaders are often been America's good guys.

As for Cambodia, the anti- Cambodian government groups always pro-America. So, you guys must careful when you try to compare Cambodian government to the regimes in Arab world.

Khmer in Sydney CBD

Anonymous said...

Next will be Hun Xen.

Anonymous said...

keep dreaming.

Anonymous said...

Cambodians can have a dream to free their country from Hun Sen dictatorship.
They will have a dream to communicate amongst their million Khmer going out to protest and turn over Hun Sen regime to dust.
The real Khmer people have a true dream to push the evil monster Hun Sen to hell.
Wake up! Stand up!
Be united as whole to protest.

online backup dc area said...

Although our countries are enemies, I feel for you. Your country is going to be a Shia controlled state. Iran is smart and manipulative. They control AlJazeera - they managed to topple the government in Tunis - look at Aljazeera headlines - there is little about what is going on in Lebanon. They are conveniently promoting Wikileaks and creating a surge of Arab sentiment against Abu Mazzen hiding the moves made by Iran in Lebanon. At the same time Aljezeera is promoting the Muslim brotherhood in Egypt and Jordan. All for the objective of creating a greater Iran by controlling Lebanon. It is a done deal. The middle east is going to new places...