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EGYPT, TUNISIA AND MANY MORE--How the world powers manipulate the public opinion?

VERY IMPORTANT DEVELOPMENT


Mubarak’s Son Flees Egypt to London as Egypt Protests Continue for 3rd Day:

"It has been reported that Egyptian President Mubarak's son, Gamal Mubarak, has fled Egypt with his family to London on Tuesday as the country bracing for huge demonstrations planned for Friday.

Quoting a US-based Arab website, Akhbar al-Arab, the Wall Street Journal reported that Gamal Mubarak who is considered as his successor, has fled to Britain along with his family.

The plane with Gamal Mubarak, his wife and daughter on board left for London Tuesday from an airport in western Cairo.

Egyptian activists protested for a third day Thursday as social networking sites called for a mass rally in the capital Cairo after Friday prayers, keeping up the momentum of the country's largest anti-government protests in years.

All political and civil society organizations are expected to participate in the Friday’s rally aimed at ousting of longtime President Hosni Mubarak.

An Egyptian opposition figure Mohammed ElBaradei, a Nobel peace laureate and the country's top pro-democracy advocate, is expected to arrive in Cairo Thursday evening.

According to the Associated Press, ElBaradei told reporters at the airport in Vienna on his way back to Egypt that "the regime has not been listening."

ElBaradei urged the Egyptian regime to exercise restraint with protesters, saying they have been met with a good deal of violence which could lead to an "explosive situation."

Mubarak’s grip on power seems to be loosening as rumors spread that police and security forces in the city of Suez and other cities are no longer have a stomach to confront the revolting masses who are calling for justice and freedom.

Mubarak has been a astonish ally of the US and Israel for more than 30 years compromising in many ways Egypt’s own national interests.
Washington has already made it clear on Wednesday that it no longer support Mubarak’s regime which has served US interests for so long.

Meanwhile, Egypt's benchmark index recorded its biggest drop in over two years Thursday, plummeting more than 10 percent as anti-government protests rattled investor confidence.

The EGX30 index closed down 10.5 percent to 5,646.50 points, capping a two day slide that brought its year-to-date losses to almost 21 percent. The market had tumbled 6.25 percent just 15 minutes into the session before trading was temporarily suspended. But the pause seemed to cement investor fears, and the drop continuing with the market's resumption, reported the Associated Press on Thursday.

The day's drop built on a 6.1 percent decline on Wednesday — a plunge fueled by the massive anti-government protests that mirrored earlier demonstrations in Tunisia that led to the ouster of that country's president."

Mubarak’s Son Flees Egypt to London as Egypt Protests Continue for 3rd Day


There are multiple sources reporting this.
 
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SO GUYS:

WHOEVER is corrupt from any Muslim country (particularly) can flee to the U.S., London and holy Arabia.
 
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This is one way to create and secure your proxies.


ARE THEY, west and our own leaders, SINCERE TO THE PEOPLE?

Question remains dark and deep inside the cave of human mind.
 
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The words still echo everywhere, around me--

"I am William Wallace, go back to England and tell them that Scotland is free."

I hope someday, people will say--

"I am a Pakistani, tell feudal lords, west and arabis that Pakistan is free."
 
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Egypt protests are turning violent. The son of Egyptian President has left Egypt, as usual, like their Pakistani counterparts. His son is in London as per the latest news.

Just to keep in mind, Nawaz Sharif also went to Arabi dad, just like this.
Bhutto, Musharaf--just a few of them.

---------- Post added at 08:04 PM ---------- Previous post was at 08:03 PM ----------

This thread will be an eye opener...How international powers use their proxies and impose on us.

---------- Post added at 08:04 PM ---------- Previous post was at 08:04 PM ----------

Israel is trying to flex her muscle in Egypt.
 
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CNN just reported army on the street of Cairo .
 
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SO GUYS:

WHOEVER is corrupt from any Muslim country (particularly) can flee to the U.S., London and holy Arabia.

Because they are mostly rootless . their root and power lyes in western country .
 
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55311912.jpg
 
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Army are on the street after 30 years. seems mubaraks days are gonging to over.

violence is not the solution of any problem
how much time army will remain in the city
this is not the solution
 
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ElBaradei: The man to lead a 'free' Egypt?

(CNN) -- When thousands of angry protesters take to the streets of Egypt on Friday, one man many see as the country's next potential leader will be among them.

The Cairo-born former head of the United Nations nuclear watchdog, Nobel Peace Prize winner Mohamed ElBaradei on Thursday returned to the country, despite death threats, to be with "his people."

"There was an edict against me a couple of weeks ago basically saying that my life should be dispensable because I am defying the rulers," ElBaradei told CNN on Tuesday.

He said he would have no official protection during his trip to Egypt, but felt the need to express solidarity with his people in person amid criticism he has kept a safe distance while all too subtly trying to encourage change.

"I have no security when I go to Egypt .... but, you know, you have to be with your people," ElBaradei said.


Thousands of protesters clashed with police on the country's streets on Tuesday and Wednesday as unrest in nearby Tunisia stirred simmering discontent with President Hosni Mubarak's 30-year regime.

In central Cairo, people were beaten with sticks and fists and demonstrators were dragged away as police fired tear gas into the crowd. At least four people were reported dead and dozens were injured as demonstrations flared up outside the capital in the port city of Suez and Sheikh Zwayd, an area close to Egypt's border with Gaza.

ElBaradei watched as the protests unfolded, posting messages of support on social networking site Twitter.

"We shall continue to exercise our right of peaceful demonstration and restore our freedom & dignity. Regime violence will backfire badly," he wrote Wednesday night.

But one user asked: "Where were you when people were being beaten and arrested?"

ElBaradei has yet to form a political party but hundreds of thousands of Egyptians have set up Facebook groups supporting his candidacy. One "Elbaradei for Presidency of Egypt_ 2011" counts more than 200,000 members.

Asked whether he would run for president, ElBaradei said: "Whether I run or not, that is totally irrelevant. And I made it very clear; I will not run under the present conditions, when the deck is stacked completely."

"The priority for me is to -- is to shift Egypt into a democracy, is to catch up with the 21st century, to get Egypt to be a modern and moderate society and respecting human rights, respecting the basic freedoms of the people."

ElBaradei began working in Egypt's diplomatic service in the early 1960s. In 1980 he joined U.N. and in 1997 he became head of the IAEA, taking on some of the world's most uncompromising regimes -- including Iraq, Iran and North Korea -- over their nuclear programs.

The list of his high-profile adversaries also includes former U.S. President George W. Bush. As storm clouds gathered over Iraq in 2002, ElBaradei was thrust into the center of controversy when he questioned the Bush administration's insistence that Saddam Hussein's Iraq was developing weapons of mass destruction.
We shall continue to exercise our right of peaceful demonstration and restore our freedom & dignity. Regime violence will backfire badly.


"We knew that Iraq at that time did not have nuclear weapons, we had to see whether they reconstituted their program; we had no shred of evidence that they did and I made that quite clear.

"Some people in the Bush administration did not like that and as we now know both in London and in the U.S. they had a hidden agenda, which is regime change," he said.

ElBaradei and the IAEA were awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in October 2005, in recognition of their efforts to prevent nuclear energy from being used for military purposes.

After three terms as the IAEA's director general, ElBaradei stepped down at the end of 2009. He was hoping to settle into a quiet retirement, but his return to Egypt during the week's unrest suggests that he is not content to sit and watch from the sidelines.

He said the Jasmine Revolution in Tunisia that saw the expulsion of long-term President Zine al-Abedine Ben Ali in mid-January had spurred action in Egypt.

"It sent a message everywhere to the Arab world that, to quote Barack Obama, 'Yes, we can,' you know, that it is doable. Then that we can be empowered as people to change a system that is ossified, that is completely repressive of our own basic rights."

Whether he is the man to do it remains to be seen. In an interview with CNN in August 2010, ElBaradei insisted he was "not the new pharaoh."

"The level of frustration, fear and desperation has created this illusion that one person can deliver," he said. "And this is really the major problem I am facing here, to get them to understand that you have to organize in grassroots fashion.

"Take charge of your own life, that is really the basic message I am sending to people."

This year many seem to be listening.
 
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As per the latest news the police have lost total control of Alexandria, practically there is no communication between the cops on the street and their commanders. And as I write this Suez is now under the control of the protesters.
 
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Curfew imposed in 3 major cities Cairo, Alexandria, Suez.
 
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As per the latest news the police have lost total control of Alexandria, practically there is no communication between the cops on the street and their commanders. And as I write this Suez is now under the control of the protesters.

The condition is getting worst:disagree:
 
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