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Egypt Unrest: Mubarak Steps Down!

Hosni Mubarak to step down

Bowing to eight days of protests, Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak announced Tuesday night that he will hand over power to an elected successor "in a constitutional way" when his term ends in September.

"My first responsibility now is to restore the stability and security of the homeland, to achieve a peaceful transition of power in an environment that will protect Egypt and Egyptians and which will allow for the responsibility to be given to whoever the people elect in the forthcoming elections," Mubarak in a televised address Tuesday night.

But the announcement rang flat in Cairo's Tahrir Square, where thousands of protesters erupted in chants of "Down with Mubarak" and "The people want the president to be judged" following his announcement. Some waved shoes in the air -- a deep insult in the Arab world -- and said they would continue their demonstrations until Mubarak quits outright.

"This is not enough," Mahmoud Safi, a lawyer taking part in the Cairo demonstrations, told CNN shortly before the announcement. "We have one request. We want him to leave our country now, immediately, not tomorrow."

And Mohamed ElBaradei, the Nobel Peace Prize winner who has become a leading opposition figure, said Mubarak's decision would only "extend the agony."

"Whoever gave him that advice gave him absolutely the wrong advice," ElBaradei said.

Mubarak has led Egypt for nearly 30 years since the 1981 assassination of his predecessor, Anwar Sadat, aided by an emergency decree that has allowed him to rule with an iron fist. But following demonstrations that have only grown in the past week, the 82-year-old former air force general told his people Tuesday night, "I have spent enough time serving Egypt."

"I will pursue the transfer of power in a way that will fulfill the people's demands, and that this new government will fulfill the people's demands and their hopes for political, economic and social progress," he said.

Tuesday's turnout in Cairo, Alexandria and other cities came despite efforts by the government to suspend rail service and cut off mobile phone and internet networks, and in spite of the mounting hardships facing Egyptians.

Banks and schools have been shuttered during the demonstrations, teller machine screens are dark and gas stations have run out of fuel. Long lines snaked around bakeries and supermarkets as shops began to ration how much food customers could buy.

Mubarak's announcement capped a day in which anti-government demonstrators stood shoulder-to-shoulder in Tahrir Square for a "march of millions." It comes less than three weeks after a wave of protests that forced Tunisia's longtime strongman to flee to Saudi Arabia in mid-January.

Protesters last week taunted, "Mubarak, Saudi Arabia is waiting for you." But despite calls for him to leave the country, the aging leader vowed Tuesday that "This dear country is my country ... and I will die on its land."

Opposition leader Ayman Nour called the speech "very depressing." Nour said Mubarak was already expected to step down at the end of his term -- but he is believed to be maneuvering to have his son, Gamal, succeed him.

"He did not at any point in his speech reject the possibility that his son could run for president," said Nour, who spent three years in prison after challenging Mubarak in Egypt's first multi-party presidential election in 2005. He said the protesters in Tahrir Square "are angrier than ever" after the address.

Mohammed Habib, deputy chairman of the officially banned Muslim Brotherhood, said Mubarak's speech built around emotional appeals to his decades of military service and the presidency.

"After 30 years during which corruption and diminishing the strategic role of Egypt in the region became the norm, I do not feel it is time to appeal for people's emotion," Habib said. "We should say 'thank you' to him, 'and get out.' "

But Arab League Secretary-General Amr Moussa, a former Egyptian foreign minister, said demonstrators should weigh what Mubarak has said before responding.

"I'm aware that there are certain currents in Egypt that will not see that as satisfactory and they need more," Moussa, a possible presidential contender himself, told CNN. But he added, "I believe that there is something new that has been offered."

In Washington, a U.S. official involved in the Obama administration's deliberations on Egypt said Mubarak's decision would be "a significant step in the right direction." The official said the White House has made clear "at the highest levels" that it wanted Mubarak to state that neither he nor his son would run for president.

In Cairo, the U.S. ambassador to Egypt, Margaret Scobey, met Tuesday with ElBaradei and will be speaking with leaders of other political movements, a senior State Department official said. The official cautioned that Scobey's talks with ElBaradei doesn't mean the United States favors him.

As in Tunisia, the protests have been fueled by economic woes, including a dramatic rise in the cost of living coupled with high unemployment. Despite the government's food subsidies, people are struggling, with an estimated 40 percent of the country living in poverty.

The majority of Egypt's population -- and the vast majority of its unemployed -- is under 30, and many protesters are young men looking for economic opportunities and a better life.

As the demonstrations grew, Mubarak sacked his cabinet and ordered newly appointed Vice President Omar Suleiman to hold talks on political reform with opposition leaders. And on Monday, the military -- the foundation of the modern Egyptian state -- announced it would not open fire on peaceful protesters.

"I think it's all over with once the army makes that announcement," said Juan Cole, a Middle East historian at the University of Michigan. Cole said he had expected the regime to endure the crisis with the support of the military, but he said the military appears to have "cut Mubarak loose."

Shibley Telhami, a University of Maryland professor and Brookings Institution analyst, said the military may have anchored the government -- but, "At some point, they are going to have to make a decision about protecting the institution beyond the man."

And Fouad Ajami, a Johns Hopkins University professor and Hoover Institution analyst, said Mubarak's invocation of his years of service was "almost pathetic."

"I believe the crowd was discovering its power as Mubarak was discovering his own weakness and the vulnerability of his own regime," Ajami said. Now, "No one believes his promises, and now no one really believes his threats."

The demonstrations had turned ugly last Friday, when thousands of riot and plainclothes police used brutal force to crack down on people on the streets.

Unconfirmed reports suggest up to 300 people may have been killed during the protests, U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay said Tuesday. Human Rights Watch has reported 80 deaths from two hospitals in Cairo, 36 in Alexandria and 13 in Suez.

CNN has not been able to independently confirm the death toll. But since the weekend, the army has replaced police as the enforcers of security, and the gatherings have been largely peaceful.

In recent days, protests inspired by the Tunisian outcome have spread to Algeria, Yemen, Jordan and Sudan. Calls for political reform prompted Jordan's King Abdullah II Tuesday to dismiss his government and appoint a new prime minister, and a Facebook page urged similar demonstrations in Syria.

John Entelis, director of Middle East studies at New York's Fordham University, said the Arab world is facing a "wave" of unrest sparked by the Tunisian revolt.

"If it were not for Tunisia, none of this would be happening at this time or in this way," Entelis said.

Hosni Mubarak announces stepdown | Breaking News
 
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The kind of power the Saudis have and don't know and ever know how to release it. Unless provoked. Currently it manifested only in the form of public beheading. :azn:

"Public beheadings" are followed by "despot beheading" and that's the lesson of the Tunisian and Egyptian Revolution.
 
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"Public beheadings" are followed by "despot beheading" and that's the lesson of the Tunisian and Egyptian Revolution.

You are sure in for a bumpy ride. Unless you are driving a Nissan, I would not recommend it.
The likely event that ensues would be the world might be witnessing at a happy picture with the King really enjoys acompany of Armadinejad
 
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You are sure in for a bumpy ride. Unless you are driving a Nissan, I would not recommend it.
The likely event that ensues would be the world might be witnessing at a happy picture with the King really enjoys acompany of Armadinejad

"Bumpy ride" for what? Your statement is absolutely opaque! Learn to use language before giving your opinion on a forum.
 
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This despot is shameless, he is not wanted for a single day and the bastard cannot see that. This is how the american and isreali friends are.
 
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This shameless despot still want to linge till September..any respectable leader would not want to clinge for a day where people don't accept him.
 
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Go home, army tells Egyptian protesters

A spokesman for Egypt's Army urged protesters on Wednesday to end demonstrations and return home, saying it was for the sake of stability of the country.

The address was made on state television, as thousands of protesters were again streaming in the late morning to Tahrir Sqaure in central Cairo, to protest against President Hosni Mubarak.

Late Tuesday, Mubarak said he would step down, but only at the end of his term in September.

Meanwhile, pro-government rallies were also planned for Cairo.

Go home, army tells Egyptian protesters - The Times of India
 
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Egyptian military calls for end to demonstrations

Egyptian military called on Wednesday for an end to more than a week of demonstrations against President Hosni Mubarak, throwing its support behind his embattled regime hours after he defiantly rejected demands to step down immediately and said he would serve out his term in office.

The declaration was a clear shift in the stand of the army, which gave a tacit endorsement to the movement on Monday by saying it would not use force against protesters, and that they had legitimate demands.

The emboldened protesters brought more than 250,000 people into Cairo's main square on Tuesday to demand Mubarak leave within days.

The president responded before midnight with a statement pledging to serve seven more months in office and "die on Egyptian soil."

Representatives of his National Democratic Party immediately began making public statements trying to project the image of the regime as Egypt's sole path back to stability and security after the disruption of normal life caused by eight days of protests, and a wave of looting and arson that gripped the country over the weekend after the government pulled police from the street.

The army's message to the demonstrators had a more conciliatory tone, appealing to young protesters to stand down "out of love for Egypt."

"You have started coming out to express your demands and you are the ones capable of returning normal life to Egypt," military spokesman Ismail Etman said in an address on state television.

"Your message has arrived, your demands have become known."

Immediately after his statement, state television ran a scrolling message reading: "The armed forces call on the protesters to go home for the sake of bringing back stability."

Internet service also began returning to Egypt after days of an unprecedented cutoff by the government, and state TV said authorities were easing a nighttime curfew, which now runs from 5pm to 7am instead of 3pm to 8am.

Several thousand pro-Mubarak demonstrators were rallying in support of him in Cairo. Some expressed fears of continuing shortages of food and other necessities if protesters in Tahrir Square didn't end demonstrations.

"I want the people in Tahrir Square to understand that Mubarak gave his word that he will give them the country to them through elections, peacefully, now they have no reason for demonstrations," said Ali Mahmoud, 52, who identified himself as middle-class worker from Menoufia, a Nile Delta province north of Cairo.

The presence of significant numbers of pro- and anti-Mubarak forces on the streets raised the danger of clashes. Already early Wednesday after Mubarak spoke, the Mediterranean city of Alexandria saw fighting erupt between several hundred protesters and government supporters early Wednesday, Al-Jazeera television footage showed.

Ahmed Abdel Hamid, representing The Revolutionary Committee, one of several youth groups that organized the protests, said that the regime was going all out to pressure people to stop protesting.

"Starting with the emotional speech of Mubarak, to the closure of banks, the shortage of food and commodities and deployment of thugs to intimidate people, these are all means to put pressure on the people"

The movement against Mubarak is fueled by deep frustration with an autocratic regime blamed for ignoring the needs of the poor and allowing corruption and official abuse to run rampant.

After years of tight state control, protesters emboldened by unrest in Tunisia took to the streets on Jan. 25 and mounted a once-unimaginable series of protests across this nation of 80 million.

In his 10-minute address, Mubarak appeared somber but spoke firmly and without an air of defeat. He insisted that even if the protests demanding his ouster had never broken out, he would not have sought a sixth term in September.

He said he would serve out the rest of his term working "to accomplish the necessary steps for the peaceful transfer of power."

He said he will carry out amendments to rules on presidential elections.

Mubarak, a former air force commander, vowed not to flee the country.

"This is my dear homeland," he said.

"I have lived in it, I fought for it and defended its soil, sovereignty and interests. On its soil I will die. History will judge me and all of us."

The step came after heavy pressure from his top ally, the United States.

Soon after Mubarak's address, President Barack Obama said at the White House that he had spoken with Mubarak and "he recognizes that the status quo is not sustainable and a change must take place."

Obama said he told Mubarak that an orderly transition must be meaningful and peaceful, must begin now and must include opposition parties.

Earlier, a visiting Obama envoy - former ambassador to Egypt Frank Wisner, who is a friend of the Egyptian president - met with Mubarak and made clear to him that it is the US "view that his tenure as president is coming to a close," according to an administration official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because of the delicacy of the ongoing diplomacy.

The United States has been struggling to find a way to ease Mubarak out of office while maintaining stability in Egypt, a key ally in the Mideast that has a 30-year-old peace treaty with Israel and has been a bulwark against Islamic militancy.

Mubarak would be the second Arab leader pushed from office by a popular uprising in the history of the modern Middle East, following the ouster last month of the president of Tunisia - another North African nation.

On Wednesday morning in the capital, long lines formed at gas stations and bakeries. Fresh vegetables have all but vanished from Cairo, with farm producers from surrounding areas unable to ferry their goods to the city of 18 million people.

Some cars in Cairo had small papers stuck on their windscreen declaring 'Yes to Mubarak."

On the edge of Tahrir Square , protesters from the two camps were engaged in heated arguments over whether continued protests were beneficial after Mubarak promised reforms and declared his intention not to run again.

Egyptian military calls for end to demonstrations - Hindustan Times
 
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Good mature behavior by Egyptian Army, did not harm the protesters but alternately back the ruler in order to maintain the Law and Order.
 
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I think it was very wise to see this from the Army. Egyptian army have handled the whole situation really well so far.
 
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Its very commendable of the egyptian military. A change of power must be purely political......not like in pakistan where the military dictates national policy.

dude if you dont know PAK ARMY or you are an indian full of hate toward pak army just STFUM .when these political dogs try to do some thing which harm the national security pak army dictate them .its not your business you are unaware how pak army send home mushy and how pak army finish long march how pak army work in floods and earth quake how pak army restore peace not in Pakistan but 14 counters also.how pak army work in recent many political crisis . look at home were your generals are corrupt and looted billions of dollars and rape the women not only in india but in UN missions also. .:tdown::tdown::tdown::tdown:
 
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dude if you dont know PAK ARMY or you are an indian full of hate toward pak army just STFUM .when these political dogs try to do some thing which harm the national security pak army dictate them .its not your business you are unaware how pak army send home mushy and how pak army finish long march how pak army work in floods and earth quake how pak army restore peace not in Pakistan but 14 counters also.how pak army work in recent many political crisis . look at home were your generals are corrupt and looted billions of dollars and rape the women not only in india but in UN missions also. .:tdown::tdown::tdown::tdown:

Ahem. Let's be mature and not start Pak army versus Indian army debate here :cheers:
 
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Very weird situation in Egypt . what army is want now that mubarak to continue until he died or finish his this term ? power is so addictive nobody wants to loose it even if ones feet is in grave at the age of 82 .
 
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