Sunday, January 30, 2011

Egypt Tense After Night Of Unrest

Quote from Al-Jazeera 30th January 2011

Protesters camp out overnight at Cairo's Tahrir Square, while ordinary citizens battle looters in their neighbourhoods.

Egyptians have woken up to another tense day following a night of turmoil, when looters roamed the streets in the absence of police who had melted away after being unable to cope with unprecedented anti-government protests.

Several key buildings in the capital, Cairo, continue to smoulder on Sunday morning, and thousands of protesters calling for the resignation of Hosni Mubarak, the Egyptian president, remain camped out in the city's Tahrir Square.

Main roads in the capital have now been blocked by military tanks and armoured personnel carriers.


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Reporting from Cairo in the early hours on Sunday, Al Jazeera's Jane Dutton said the Egyptian capital was "very, very quiet" as dawn broke.

"There is nobody on the streets. As we've seen over the last couple of days, the curfew certainly hasn't been effective, but taxis aren't going out, as there is nobody to pick up," she reported.

"The streets are very dirty, there is debris everywhere. The police have just disappeared. Any security at this stage is in the hands of the army."

The absence of police has given looters a free rein, forcing ordinary citizens to set up neighbourhood patrols.

"Vigilantes have been taking to the streets to try and prevent people from looting. We're hearing stories of widespread looting across many cities ... [the vigilantes] haven't been very effective," our correspondent added.

As lawlessness swept the country, 6,000 prisoners reportedly broke out of the Abu Aabel jail overnight on the outskirts of the capital, witnesses said.

According to Dina Magdi, an eyewitness, unidentified men on Sunday came out of the interior ministry compound in a car and dumped a body on a street. They then opened fire on people present in the area and fled. There were no immediate reports of casualties in that attack.

Sherine Tadros, Al Jazeera's correspondent in the city of Suez, said the city had witnessed a "completely chaotic night", but that the streets were quiet as day broke.

She reported that in the absence of police and military, people were "tak[ing] the law into their own hands", using "clubs, batons, sticks, machetes [and] knives" to protect their property.

Rawya Rageh, our correspondent in the port city of Alexandria, reported similar scenes, saying that people were particularly concerned about their personal safety and that of their property.

Amid the chaos, there were indications that protests seeking Mubarak's resignation would continue.

Dutton said that protesters are unlikely to stop demonstrating across the country, as they "want one thing, and one thing only: they want the leadership to go".

International pressure

Meanwhile, global powers have urged Mubarak to refrain from violence against unarmed protesters and to work to create conditions for free and fair elections.

IN VIDEO


Citizens are forming neighbourhood patrols
in several cities to protect their property

The US told Mubarak on Saturday that it was not enough simply to "reshuffle the deck" with a shake-up of his government and pressed him to make good on his promise of genuine reform.

"The Egyptian government can't reshuffle the deck and then stand pat," State Department spokesman PJ Crowley said in a message on Twitter after Mubarak fired his government but made clear he had no intention of stepping down.

"President Mubarak's words pledging reform must be followed by action," Crowley said, echoing Obama's appeal on Friday for Mubarak to embrace a new political dynamic.

In a statement released in Berlin on Saturday, the leaders of Britain, France and Germany said they were "deeply worried about the events in Egypt".

"We call on President Mubarak to renounce any violence against unarmed civilians and to recognise the demonstrators' peaceful rights," the joint statement said.

"We call on President Mubarak to begin a transformation process that should be reflected in a broadly based government, as well as free and fair elections."

The European trio appealed to Mubarak to respond to his people's grievances and take steps to improve the human rights situation in the country.

"We recognise the balanced role that President Mubarak has played for many years in the Middle East. We call on him to adopt the same moderate approach to the current situation in Egypt," the statement said.

"Human rights and democratic freedom must be fully recognised, including freedom of expression and assembly, and the free use of means of communication such as telephone and internet."

Key appointments

The international messages came hours after Mubarak appointed the country's head of intelligence to the post of vice-president, in a move said to be a reaction to days of anti-government protests in cities across the country.

The army has been deployed to maintain order in the
absence of security forces [Reuters]

Omar Suleiman, Egypt's chief spy, was sworn in on Saturday, marking the first time Mubarak has appointed a vice-president during his 30-year rule. Ahmad Shafiq, a former air force commander, was appointed prime minister.

The appointments, however, failed to satisfy protesters.

Tens of thousands of people continued to rally in the capital Cairo on Saturday, demanding an end to Mubarak's presidency.

Al Jazeera's Ayman Mohyeldin, reporting from the capital, said that soldiers deployed to central Cairo did not intervene in the protests.

Similar crowds gathered in the cities of Alexandria and Suez on Saturday, Al Jazeera's correspondents reported.

More than a 100 people have been killed in the violence since Friday.

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