News
Tue. Jan 25, 2011
CAIRO, Jan 25 (Reuters) – Empowered
by current events in Tunisia, thousands of Egyptians demanded an end to
President Hosni Mubarak's 30-year rule and clashed with police in unprecedented
countrywide protests on Tuesday inspired by the revolt that brought down
Tunisia's president.
"Down, down, Hosni
Mubarak," chanted protesters in Cairo, where police fired teargas and used
water cannon, and protesters hurled bottles and rocks at them.
Some protesters were beaten hard by
police with sticks. Others, in a rare show of nerve against a huge national
security operation, chased police down side streets. Reuters TV footage showed
one policeman joining the demonstrators.
In Alexandria protesters tore down
a picture of Mubarak, 82, and one of his son, Gamal, who many Egyptians believe
is being groomed for office when his father stands down. Both deny this.
Protesters in Cairo who responded
to calls by web activists for action cried: "Gamal, tell your father
Egyptians hate you."
Egyptians have the same complaints
that drove Tunisians onto the streets: surging food prices, poverty,
unemployment and authoritarian rule that smothers public protests quickly and
often brutally. "Tunisia, Tunisia," protesters shouted.
The United States, a close ally of
Egypt and major aid donor, called for restraint from all sides to avoid
violence.
"Our assessment is that the
Egyptian government is stable and is looking for ways to respond to the
legitimate needs and interests of the Egyptian people," U.S. Secretary of
State Hillary Clinton told reporters in Washington.
The protests in Cairo and other
cities may have drawn 20,000 people or more, based on witnesses. An Interior
Ministry statement said more than 10,000 gathered in one central square in
Cairo alone, but did not give an overall number.
But it is hard to estimate because
protests were so spread out and state media gave only cursory mention of the
events.
"DAY OF WRATH"
Egyptian protests usually draw only
a few hundred people. The large numbers and the fact that protests across
several cities were coordinated in a way not seen before gave Tuesday's events
a force unprecedented since Mubarak took office in 1981.
"What is happening today is a
major warning to the system. It is both an extension of pent-up frustrations
and continued protests. What is also new is that there are new generations who
are using new tools," said analyst Nabil Abdel-Fattah.
The protest could gather momentum
unless the state swiftly addressed the demand for reform, he said.
With most formal opposition groups
fractured and toothless, web activists led the calls for Tuesday's
demonstrations, billed as a "Day of Wrath" against poverty and
repression.
By drawing demonstrators in such
numbers, online activists have shown their calls for political change can reach
a broad audience. Until now most of the rage has stayed on the Internet.
As night fell, police and
protesters in Cairo's central Tahrir square mingled and some shared food. Some
protesters showed no sign of quitting for the night.
Messages on Twitter and Facebook
read: "Tahrir protesters are not going home. They need food and blankets.
Roads are closed, so if you live nearby, please help."
Others called for more protests in
the days ahead.
Demonstrations took place in
Ismailia and Suez, both cities east of Cairo, and in other Nile Delta cities
like Mansoura and Tanta. Protesters also gathered in north Sinai.
"We are gathered here to
demand our rights. We can't live. Everything is expensive and there is
unemployment. We want prices to go down. This government is the reason for our
suffering," said Ibrahim, 33, in Mahalla el Kubra, the site of 2008 riots
over subsidised bread shortages and price rises.
ARRESTS
In Ismailia, protesters chanted:
"Where are you, freedom?" In Alexandria they shouted:
"Revolution, revolution, like a volcano against Mubarak the coward."
Medical and security sources said
46 people were injured. A security source said 15 people were detained in
Cairo. A group of lawyers said some 50 were detained across Egypt. Another
source said two police officers were injured in Suez when rocks were hurled.
Witnesses saw protesters dragged off by police.
The Interior Ministry said in a
statement that despite the provocative approach of some demonstrators
"they were allowed to organise peaceful protests". It blamed the
banned opposition Muslim Brotherhood for provoking some rioting.
The Brotherhood, seen as having
Egypt's biggest grassroots network, had not made an explicit call to join the
protest in the days leading up to it. But some members joined in.
The Interior Ministry earlier said
it would deal firmly with anyone breaking the law and said demonstrators could
face arrest. But Interior Minister Habib al-Adli had told a state newspaper he
welcomed stationary protests for short periods.
"We have orders not to clash
with them (protesters)," one security officer was heard to say, speaking
on a mobile phone earlier in the demonstration in Cairo before scuffles began.
Analysts had expected the
authorities to show a more tolerant attitude for fear of provoking the kind of
anger that drove Tunisians into weeks of unrest before the overthrow of
President Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali after 23 years in office.
Ben Ali fled to Saudi Arabia, and
some of the Cairo protesters chanted: "Oh Mubarak, Saudi Arabia awaits
you."
"I will go to the streets on
the 25th of January because this country is my country and I vow an oath that I
am ready and willing to die for its sake," wrote Mohamed M on a Facebook
group that called for protests and has 87,000 supporters.
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