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VICTORY TO EGYPT! Mutabak TOASTED!

uncleyap

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http://abcnews.go.com/International...otesters-demand-resignation/story?id=12891572

Mubarak Steps Down as President


Military Vows to End Hated Emergency Law When Security Situation Improves



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By CHRISTIANE AMANPOUR, TERRY MORAN, NASSER ATTA, BRIAN HARTMAN and HUMA KHAN

CAIRO, Feb. 11,2011
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Egypt's embattled President Hosni Mubarak stepped down as president and the country's armed forces will take over the leadership of the country, vice president Omar Suleiman announced today.

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Watch: Resignation Refusal: World, Obama React to Mubarak


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Watch: Crisis in Cairo: Egyptian State TV Surrounded


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Watch: Israel, Jordan on Edge as Protests Spread












Mubarak left the presidential palace in Cairo today as protesters kept the pressure on the government to force Mubarak out of office.
Sources tell ABC News that the 82-year-old president has gone to an estate he owns in Sharm el-Sheikh, a resort town on the Red Sea about 250 miles from the protests in Cairo. Mubarak told ABC News last week he may eventually retire to the resort town, but vowed never to leave Egypt.
A senior Egyptian official told ABC News Mubarak's departure from the palace was intended to be symbolic, as well a visual withdrawal from the political process after having handed over most of his authority to Vice President Omar Suleiman. But the move does not preclude him from returning or inhibit his ability to oversee constitutional amendments, the official said.
In a sign that the regime may be shaky, Hossam Badrawi -- who was appointed head of the ruling party just days ago -- announced that he will resign from his post. Badrawi was widely cited by news outlets on Thursday as saying that Mubarak would step down, reports that turned out be false.
The military earlier today announced on state television that the regime's much hated emergency law will be lifted when the security situation allows -- echoing Mubarak's statement from Thursday -- and encouraged protesters to leave the streets and return to their homes.
Egypt's controversial emergency laws have been in place since the assassination of President Anwar Sadat in 1967 and give the government far-reaching powers at the expense of judicial review and civil liberties.
The army said it would make an important announcement soon.
But demonstrators were defiant, filling Tahrir Square for an 18th day to demand Mubarak's ouster. Thousands more marched toward the state television building, a prime new target for today's protests.
"It is important for the regime, not for the people, because they have been lying and spreading propaganda," one protester told ABC News, referring to the television building. "Once this building is down, the regime is down as well."
Others converged on the presidential palace, blocking roads leading up to the president's residence. The mood was largely peaceful and celebratory, yet determined, as soldiers and protesters cheered and waved at each other. There were no signs of pro-Mubarak demonstrators in the crowd, as had been the case earlier in the day.
The side streets around Tahrir, or Liberation, Square were packed as crowds streamed toward what has become the heart of these 18-day long anti-government demonstration. Instead of the rage felt Thursday night when Mubarak went on national television and said he would not leave office, there appeared to be a new energy and determination in the crowd.
The health ministry doubled the number of ambulances parked outside the square, and there was a mobile hospital present. But soldiers seemed relaxed, smiling at the crowds, and there was a collective commitment by protesters to keep the demonstrations non-violent.
Similar scenes played out in the port cities of Alexandria and Mansoura.
Wael Ghonim, a Google executive who has become the international face of protests since he was arrested by security forces in late Jan. 28, took to Al Arabiya television to speak for the demonstrators.
Saying the army should be the caretaker of the revolution, the 30-year-old said Egyptian people want true freedom of press and the right in establishing satellite channels and newspapers. He also demanded that Egyptians living abroad be given the right to vote, and that a transparent election be held in September.
The military is seemingly maintaining a neutral position, but also asking for people to return to normal life.
Though protesters are calling for Mubarak to resign from the presidency, there is no one opposition party poised to take over the reins of the country. And while several leaders -- including Nobel Laureate Muhammed ElBaradei and politician Ayman Nour -- have emerged in the spotlight, they don't have the kind of support base that is needed to take over the leadership. The fragmented Muslim Brotherhood also seems to be missing a viable leader that could win mass support.
The military isn't confronting protesters, but its statement today showed the country's most revered institution has put its support behind Mubarak.
The turmoil in Egypt, preceded by a similar uprising in Tunisia, has rocked the Arab world. Many are concerned about the government falling into the hands of the Muslim Brotherhood, an outlawed group, and the outbreak of violence.
"The role of the rest of the world is to tell them honestly but behind closed doors on secure lines, 'We are ready to be there beside you if you move concretely and coherently toward change. We respect your need to avoid it falling into the hands of extremists. We understand that you need some time," Israeli Defence Minister Ehud Barak told ABC News Thursday.





The United States is keenly watching developments in Egypt, one of its closest partners and allies in the region.

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Watch: Resignation Refusal: World, Obama React to Mubarak


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Watch: Crisis in Cairo: Egyptian State TV Surrounded


abc_gma_marquardt_110211_mc.jpg

Watch: Israel, Jordan on Edge as Protests Spread












Late Thursday, President Obama issued a stern written statement telling Mubarak he needs to do more to outline concrete steps for reform.
"The Egyptian people have been told that there was a transition of authority, but it is not yet clear that this transition is immediate, meaningful or sufficient," Obama said. "The Egyptian government must put forward a credible, concrete and unequivocal path toward genuine democracy, and they have not yet seized that opportunity."
Obama also pushed the Egyptian leadership to be clearer about its intentions and how it will address the demands of the Egyptian people.
"We therefore urge the Egyptian government to move swiftly to explain the changes that have been made, and to spell out in clear and unambiguous language the step-by-step process that will lead to democracy and the representative government that the Egyptian people seek," he said.
Hundreds of thousands of people gathered in Tahrir Square Thursday expecting to hear Mubarak say he was leaving, but were disappointed when the president only said he was transferring more powers to Vice President Omar Suleiman.
In an address directed to the youth of Egypt, Mubarak said he was pained by the deaths that have occurred since protests began on Jan. 25.
"The blood of the martyrs and the injured will not go in vain," he said. "I will not hesitate to fiercely punish those who are responsible. I will hold those in charge who have violated the rights of our youth with the harshest punishment stipulated in the law."
The United Nations and Human Rights Watch estimates that 300 people have been killed in Egypt's protests.
ABC News' Jim Sciutto contributed to this report.
 

uncleyap

Alfrescian
Loyal
The real LION of Egypt Roaring now! SG's fake Mal-Lion still mouth-watering as usual!

http://content.usatoday.com/communi...ion-offers-conditional-end-to-emergency-law/1

Live coverage: Mubarak resigns, hands power to the military

05:03 AM

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By Douglas Stanglin, USA TODAY
122 Comments

11 Recommend

Update at 11:15 a.m. ET: Egyptian opposition leader Mohamed ElBaradei, reacting to the resignation of President Hosni Mubarak, says: "This is the greatest day of my life. The country has been liberated."
Update at 11:08 a.m. ET: Hundreds of thousands of demonstrators erupted in jubilation in Tahrir Square as vice president Omar Suleiman announces that President Mubarak has resigned and called on the army to "run the affairs of the country."
Update at 11:05 a.m. ET: Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak has resigne.d Vice President Omar Suleiman said in a brief televised statement. His statement in full: "Hosni Mubarak has waived the office of presidency and told the army to run the affairs of the country. "
Update at 11:03 a.m. ET: Hossam Badrawi, who was recently appointed general secretary of the NDP, resigns saying Egypt needs new parties, Al-Jazeera reports.
Update at 10:42 a.m. ET:Reuters quotes a U.S. official as describing Mubarak's departure from Cairo as a "positive first step."
Update at 10:16 a.m. ET:Al-Jazeera TV reports that one person has died and 20 injured when a police station in north Sinai town of El-Arish came under small arms fire during protests.
Update at 10:08 am. ET: Reuters, quoting witnesses, reports 1,000 protesters in the north Sinai town of El-Arish have exchanged gunfire and tossed firebombs at a police station.
Update at 10:04 am. ET: Crowds move in large numbers from Tahrir Square in Cairo to the presidential palace ahead of an "urgent and important" statement from the presidency. Thousands of other have gathered outside Egypt state TV.
Update at 9:51 am. ET: Al-Jazeera reports that two helicopters have arrived at the presidential palace ahead of a statement by the presidency. Tens of thousands of protesters have surrounded the building in a peaceful demonstration.
Update at 9:36 am. ET: Egypt state tv says to expect a statement shortly from the presidential palace, Reuters reports.
Update at 9:14 am. ET:The Associated Press quotes a local official in the Red Sea resort of Sharm el-Sheikh as confirming that President Mubarak is there.
Update at 8:39 am. ET: Denmark's prime minister has become the first European Union leader to publicly urge President Hosni Mubarak to step down. "Mubarak is history, Mubarak must step down," Lars Loekke Rasmussen said Friday in Copenhagen, the Associated Presss reports.
Update at 8:23 am. ET: President Mubarak and his family have left Cairo and are now in his Red Sea residence in Sharm el-Sheikh, CBS News, NBC and Al-Arabiya TV report.
Update at 8 am. ET:Egypt's military is supporting President Mubarak's plans for a transfer of power, but is not preventing hundreds of thousands of protesters to demonstrate in Tahrir Square in Cairo and to gather outside both the presidential palace and the building housing Egypt state TV, the Associated Press reports.
Update at 8 am. ET: Al Jazeera TV reports that the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces is preparing to issue its third statement in two days regarding the transfer of power.
Update at 6:38 am. ET: Opposition leader Mohamed ElBaradei, a Nobel laureate, says in a statement on Twitter that the "entire nation is on the streets." "Only way out is for regime to go," he tweets. "People power can't be crushed. We shall prevail. Still hope army can join"http://i.usatoday.net/communitymanager/_photos/on-deadline/2011/02/11/Cairox-large.jpg
Egyptian anti-goverment demonstrators flood Cairo's landmark Tahrir Square early today.


CAPTION
By Pedro Ugarte, AFP/Getty Images



Update at 6:18 am. ET: In Cairo, thousands of demonstrators are blocking access to the building housing state TV, Al-Jazeera reports, keeping some employees and guests from reaching the station. Al-Arabiya TV quotes witnesses in the Egyptian city of Suez as saying protesters there have seized control of some governmental buildings.
Update at 6:14 am. ET:Protesters at Cairo's Tahrir Square have finished Friday prayers, but it is unclear whether they will continue their demonstration there or march to other locations.
As thousands of protesters keep up their call for the ouster of President Hosni Mubarak, Egypt's Supreme Council of Armed Forces issues cautious statement promising free and fair presidential elections later this year and a conditional lifting of emergency law.
It did not specific a date for elections.
The statement also endorses Mubarak's transfer of power to his vice president and promises the lifting of the 30-year-old emergency laws "as soon as current circumstances end."
It is the second statement from the council within 24 hours as the stalemate continues in Egypt for the 18th day.
The statement, in effect, endorses the plan for transfer of power as presented Thursday by Mubarak in a national speech. In it, he announced the transfer of all presidential powers to his new vice president, Omar Suleiman, and the guarantee of free and fair elections in September.
The statement angered hundreds of thousands of protesters in Tahrir Square. They vowed to continue their effort to force Mubarak from office.
Opposition leader Mohamed ElBaradei, a Nobel laureate, issued a statement afterward on Twitter, calling on the military to take over power: "Egypt will explode. Army must save the country now."
The Obama administration says the voice of the Egyptian people "must be heard" and calls on the government to clarify its plans for a transition to democracy.
 

singveld

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Lee regime would take another generation to fall at least, maybe last even longer. Dun be so happy.
 

uncleyap

Alfrescian
Loyal
Lee regime would take another generation to fall at least, maybe last even longer. Dun be so happy.


You overestimated them and you overestimated this red dot. It is not going to sustain and float any much longer.:eek: LEEgime don't go soon enough Pee Sai sink!
 

uncleyap

Alfrescian
Loyal
I hope the military arrest him before he fled like Thug-Sin and seize his corrupt funds ASAP, does LEEgime launder $ for him? :rolleyes::rolleyes::rolleyes::eek::wink:
 

Harry Lee

Alfrescian
Loyal
11 Feb was also the day the Shah of Iran got deposed and power fell into the hands of the Islamic Ayathollahs

Muslim Brotherhood will take over in Egypt also.... just watch....

Non-Muslims will be farked..... Churches will be burnt..... converts will be executed......

How can you rejoice?:eek:
 

uncleyap

Alfrescian
Loyal
11 Feb was also the day the Shah of Iran got deposed and power fell into the hands of the Islamic Ayathollahs

Muslim Brotherhood will take over in Egypt also.... just watch....

Non-Muslims will be farked..... Churches will be burnt..... converts will be executed......

How can you rejoice?:eek:


Can not have the cake and eat it. :wink:

Ooops! I meant can not have the Roti Mutabak and eat it! :wink:
 

uncleyap

Alfrescian
Loyal
http://www.cbc.ca/world/story/2011/02/11/egypt-mubarak-future.html

Egypt's Mubarak resigns

Last Updated: Friday, February 11, 2011 | 11:26 AM ET Comments56Recommend23

CBC News


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Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak has resigned. (Associated Press) Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak has resigned on the 18th day of anti-government protests, and handed over power to the military.
The historic announcement was made live on state TV by Vice-President Omar Suleiman at about 6 p.m. local time Friday.
"In these difficult circumstances that the country is passing through, President Hosni Mubarak has decided to leave the position of the presidency," Suleiman said in a five-minute address translated into English. "He has commissioned the armed forces council to direct the issues of the state."
The announcement elicited wild cheers from protesters — hundreds of thousands of whom had deluged squares in at least three major cities Friday, and marched on presidential palaces and the state TV building, key symbols of the authoritarian regime.
Protesters jumped up and down in Cairo's Tahrir Square, chanting, "Egypt is free!," "God is great," "The people have brought down the regime."
Ahead of the announcement Friday, Mubarak had flown to his palace in the Red Sea resort of Sharm el-Sheikh where he often lives and works during the winter. The resort is about 400 kilometres outside of Cairo.
Mubarak's statement came a day after he announced on state television that he would not step down but instead hand over some of his powers to Suleiman.
More to come
 

uncleyap

Alfrescian
Loyal
Late! The bastard had fled! Capture his cronies ASAP!

http://news.xinhuanet.com/world/2011-02/11/c_121066920.htm


<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" width="660"><tbody><tr><td class="txt18" align="center" height="66" width="644">埃及总统穆巴拉克离开首都开罗
</td> </tr> <tr> <td align="center" height="22"> 2011年02月11日 22:05:40  来源: 新华网 【字号 留言打印关闭 </td> </tr> <tr bgcolor="#000000"> <td align="center">
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[FONT=仿宋_GB2312]据外电2月11日报道,埃及总统穆巴拉克和他的家人已经离开首都开罗。
这是穆巴拉克2009年7月15日在埃及红海海滨城市沙姆沙伊赫出席第15届不结盟运动首脑会议的资料照片。新华社记者张宁摄
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…………………………………………………………………   新华网开罗2月11日电(记者冯康 朱俊清)总部设在阿联酋迪拜的阿拉伯电视台11日报道,埃及总统穆巴拉克及其家人已离开首都开罗,抵达位于埃及西奈半岛的红海海滨旅游城市沙姆沙伊赫。
  此前,开罗郊外一座空军基地的消息人士向新华社记者透露,穆巴拉克及其家人“极有可能”已经离开开罗。
  穆巴拉克10日晚发表电视讲话,宣布根据宪法将部分权力移交给副总统苏莱曼,他本人不会辞去总统职务。他还在讲话中重申自己不会离开埃及,而是“将死在埃及的土地上”。
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uncleyap

Alfrescian
Loyal
I hope the bastard's plane crashed as he flee - like Lin Biao of PRC, as he fled PRC, no survivor.
 

HongKanSeng

Alfrescian
Loyal
http://edition.cnn.com/2011/WORLD/africa/02/11/egypt.mubarak.reaction/

Cairo protesters erupt in celebration
By the CNN Wire Staff
February 11, 2011 -- Updated 1627 GMT (0027 HKT)
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
Demonstrators are jubilant at Mubarak's decision
"Freedom!" some protesters chant
Cairo, Egypt (CNN) -- Demonstrations that began with quiet determination on the Internet more than three weeks ago erupted into riotous jubilation Friday evening, moments after Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak announced he would step aside.
Protesters swarmed army tanks that had been deployed to keep order, banged drums, blew whistles and frantically waved the Egyptian flag in celebration. They danced in circles and chanted.
Two men dropped to their knees and began to pray as soon as the news was announced.
"Freedom!" crowds chanted outside the white carved walls of the presidential palace.
"God is Great" they shouted in Tahrir Square.
The reaction was quick to pour in across some of the same social networking sites that Egyptians used to help organize the historic protests.
"Egypt -- you are a shining light," one Twitter user posted in congratulations.
 

Whats4

Alfrescian
Loyal
11 Feb was also the day the Shah of Iran got deposed and power fell into the hands of the Islamic Ayathollahs

Muslim Brotherhood will take over in Egypt also.... just watch....

Non-Muslims will be farked..... Churches will be burnt..... converts will be executed......

How can you rejoice?:eek:

dun think that cb yap would care as its not his head would roll. he doen't care much about consequences.
 

uncleyap

Alfrescian
Loyal
dun think that cb yap would care as its not his head would roll. he doen't care much about consequences.

It all depends on who is on which side you know...

Unless you are so naive to happily think that EVERYONE can be on the same side altogether....:rolleyes::rolleyes::cool: You will care for only those who are on the SAME SIDE instead of those on the opposite site, and so will i...:wink: Any surprise? :wink::wink:
 

Whats4

Alfrescian
Loyal
It all depends on who is on which side you know...

Unless you are so naive to happily think that EVERYONE can be on the same side altogether....:rolleyes::rolleyes::cool: You will care for only those who are on the SAME SIDE instead of those on the opposite site, and so will i...:wink: Any surprise? :wink::wink:

yeah still showing u know best and always right mentality again. dun disgrace yourself.
 

Papsmearer

Alfrescian (InfP) - Comp
Generous Asset
I hope the military arrest him before he fled like Thug-Sin and seize his corrupt funds ASAP, does LEEgime launder $ for him? :rolleyes::rolleyes::rolleyes::eek::wink:

What do you call a Lee dominated company who helps sets up dummy corporations to buy Thaksin's company for $5 billion and avoid all Thai taxes for Thaksin? I call it money laundering.
 

halsey02

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
I hope the bastard's plane crashed as he flee - like Lin Biao of PRC, as he fled PRC, no survivor.

Donot be so smug about all these, if you do not really understand the situation in Egypt. Mubarak hate him or love him, was the balance in the middles east. The world will see much more turmoil, now that the radicals & religious fanatics takes over. This will soon spread to other populus nations of the same leanings & we are living in the 'sea' full of such people.

Removong Mubarack, is the begining of a nightmare , not only for the Egyptian people but all the people living on planet earth.:mad:
 

GoldenDragon

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Donot be so smug about all these, if you do not really understand the situation in Egypt. Mubarak hate him or love him, was the balance in the middles east. The world will see much more turmoil, now that the radicals & religious fanatics takes over. This will soon spread to other populus nations of the same leanings & we are living in the 'sea' full of such people.

Removong Mubarack, is the begining of a nightmare , not only for the Egyptian people but all the people living on planet earth.:mad:

A person whose size of the brain is smaller than his own pesai will never understand anything. Middle Eastern politics is a subject he will never be able to comprehend.
 

myo539

Alfrescian
Loyal
11 Feb was also the day the Shah of Iran got deposed and power fell into the hands of the Islamic Ayathollahs

Muslim Brotherhood will take over in Egypt also.... just watch....

Non-Muslims will be farked..... Churches will be burnt..... converts will be executed......

How can you rejoice?:eek:

If LeeRegime goes, UncleYap will have no where else to go - unless he is willing to potong his bawah and call himself Abdullah Yap.
 
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