• IP addresses are NOT logged in this forum so there's no point asking. Please note that this forum is full of homophobes, racists, lunatics, schizophrenics & absolute nut jobs with a smattering of geniuses, Chinese chauvinists, Moderate Muslims and last but not least a couple of "know-it-alls" constantly sprouting their dubious wisdom. If you believe that content generated by unsavory characters might cause you offense PLEASE LEAVE NOW! Sammyboy Admin and Staff are not responsible for your hurt feelings should you choose to read any of the content here.

    The OTHER forum is HERE so please stop asking.

HUAT AH! After Mutabak, Briyani backed now! soon will be our Prata!

flkyflky

Alfrescian
Loyal
Our Prata Nathan said he won't seek reelection long time ago, Cairo's Mutabak said the same yesterday, and today Yemen shared the same luck. :biggrin::biggrin::biggrin:

http://news.oneindia.in/2011/02/02/yemenpresident-wont-seekreelection-aid0127.html

Home » February 2, 2011 » International » Full Article
Yemen president won't seek reelection

Forex Trading Singapore www.XForex.com
Open account Today and Receive 25% Bonus on Your first Deposit.
Ads by Google

Deal with 70% Off
Get the Best Coupons & other Deals
for Your City. Save Up to 70% Today
www.GROUPON.sg/Singapore

Dating Chinese Girls
10000 Carefully Verified Chinese
Girls for Love and More. Free Join!
www.ChnLove.asia

Relevant Jobs
Companies are Hiring
Sign up Now to Get Right Job Alerts
Monster.com.sg
SANAA: Yemen's President Ali Abdullah Saleh said on Wednesday he will not seek his reelection in 2013, after thousands of protesters demanded his resignation, the state-run Saba news agency reported.

Buzz up!
"No to hereditary rule and no to life presidency," Saleh said after vowing not to inherit rule in Yemen to his son.


In a joint meeting of the Parliament and the Shura Council in Sanaa, which was boycotted by the opposition, President Saleh announced the "freezing of constitutional amendments" and called for a comprehensive national dialogue.

In addition, President Saleh, who has been in power since 1978, said the 27 April parliamentary elections would be postponed.

His announcement came after Yemen's opposition called on all its followers to participate in the countrywide protest expected to gather over one million protesters nationwide tomorrow.

Last Thursday, tens of thousands of people took to the streets of Yemen's capital Sanaa to protest economic policies and urge the ouster of the regime. In recent days, Yemen has witnessed mass protests, inspired by the revolution that forced Tunisia's President out of office.
 

flkyflky

Alfrescian
Loyal
Click URL below for video:

http://www.jpost.com/VideoArticles/Video/Article.aspx?id=206292


Mubarak: I won’t seek re-election; crowds retort: Go now!

By OREN KESSLER, MELANIE LIDMAN IN CAIRO AND AP
02/02/2011 01:11

Exit prompted by biggest-yet Cairo rally; Muslim Brotherhood: No negotiations with president or new VP.
Talkbacks (1)

Hosni Mubarak will not run for re-election in September, the beleaguered Egyptian president announced on Tuesday night in a message broadcast on Egyptian state television.

The 82-year-old leader said he hopes to oversee a “peaceful transfer of power” at the end of his current term.

RELATED:
ElBaradei: 'Mubarak must resign to prevent bloodshed'
Israeli critics open up on US ‘abandonment' of Mubarak

“These are difficult days,” Mubarak said at the beginning of the address. “What hurts our hearts the most is the fear which has overtaken most Egyptians, and the anxiety that has overtaken them over what will happen to them and their families, and the future and destiny of their country.

“In all sincerity, regardless of the current circumstances, I never intended to be a candidate for another term,” he added.

Mubarak lamented “incitement” by political groups he accused of “hijacking” Egypt’s government.

The announcement followed the largest-yet protest in Cairo, as more than 250,000 Egyptians piled into the capital’s main square earlier in the day in a stunning display of defiance against Mubarak’s regime.

“There are political forces that have rejected invitations for dialogue, holding onto private agendas and without concern for Egypt’s situation,” Mubarak said in his address. “In the next few months, the remainder of my current term, I will work hard to carry out all the necessary measures to transfer power.

“In the few months left in my presidency, I ask God to give me strength to do this, so I am able to complete my presidency in a way that satisfies you and satisfies God,” he said before concluding, “We have to ensure our dignity and our freedom, generation after generation. God bless our whole country, peace be with you.”

Angry protesters, however, demanded that the Egyptian leader step down immediately, not in September, come election time.

Tuesday’s demonstration reflected a broad spectrum of Egyptian society, including young and old, urban poor and middle-class professionals. Protesters sang nationalist songs, danced, beat drums and chanted the anti-Mubarak slogan “Leave! Leave! Leave!” as military helicopters buzzed overhead.

Similar demonstrations erupted in at least five other cities, with tens of thousands rallying in Alexandria, Suez and Mansoura, north of Cairo, as well as in the southern province of Assiut and Luxor, the southern city where around 5,000 people protested outside an ancient Egyptian temple.

Mubarak reportedly spent the day holed up in his villa in the Red Sea resort town of Sharm e- Sheikh.

In the capital, the masses in Tahrir Square shouted and whistled as a giant banner was unfurled from a lamp post reading “Game over, Mubarak.”

Chants started spontaneously, then swept through the crowd, often led by young women or elderly religious men. Protesters, some with young children, pounded traditional Egyptian drums, while others divvied out food to help fortify their comrades.

“It makes me feel like an Egyptian for the first time in my life,” 23-year-old Sabrin said.

“I’m so proud to be an Egyptian – I hope today will be a great day in our history.”

“We are even more confident of ourselves today,” added Muhammad Nabil, a factory manager, “This regime is shaking. We feel it shaking and we will continue!”

Two mannequins representing Mubarak dangled from traffic lights. On their chests was written: “We want to put the murderous president on trial.” Their faces were scrawled with the Star of David, an allusion to many protesters’ feeling that Mubarak is a friend of Israel, still seen by most Egyptians as their country’s archenemy more than 30 years after the two nations signed a peace treaty.

Soldiers at checkpoints set up at the entrances of the square did nothing to stop the crowds from entering. The military promised on state television on Monday night that it would not fire on protesters, a sign that army support for Mubarak may have unraveled as momentum built for democracy.

Meanwhile on Tuesday, a senior official in the Muslim Brotherhood said the movement would not negotiate with Mubarak or his deputy Omar Suleiman.

“These are people we will not talk to,” Rashid Ayoumi, a senior official in the banned Islamist movement, told the German press agency DPA. Suleiman said late on Monday that he was seeking to open a dialogue with “all political parties.”

The movement to drive Mubarak out has been built on the work of online activists and 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 the Tunisia unrest took to the streets on January 25 and mounted a once-unimaginable series of protests across this nation of 80 million every day since.

With Mubarak’s hold on power in Egypt weakening, the world was forced to plan for the end of a regime that has maintained three decades of peace with Israel and has been a bulwark against Islamic militants. But under the stability was a barely hidden crumbling of society, mounting criticism of the regime’s human rights record and a widening gap between rich and poor, with 40 percent of the population living under or just above the poverty line set by the World Bank at $2 a day.

In an interview with Al-Arabiya television late on Monday, reform leader Mohamed ElBaradei rejected an offer by Suleiman for a dialogue on enacting constitutional reforms, saying there could be no negotiations until Mubarak leaves.

Suleiman’s offer and other gestures by the regime have fallen flat. The Obama administration roundly rejected Mubarak’s appointment on Monday afternoon of a new government that dropped his interior minister, who heads police forces and has been widely denounced by the protesters. State television on Tuesday ran a statement by the new prime minister, Ahmed Shafiq, pleading with the public to “give a chance” to his government.

The official death toll from the crisis stands at 97, with thousands injured, though reports from witnesses across the country indicated the actual toll is far higher.

Perhaps most startling was how peaceful protests have been in recent days, after the military replaced the police and adopted a policy of letting the demonstrations continue.

Troops and Soviet-era and newer US-made Abrams tanks stood at roads leading into Tahrir Square, a plaza overlooked by the headquarters of the Arab League, the campus of the American University in Cairo, the famed Egyptian Museum and the Mugammma, an enormous building housing departments of the notoriously corrupt and inefficient bureaucracy.
Protester volunteers wearing tags reading “The People’s Security” circulated through the crowds in the square, saying they were watching for government infiltrators who might instigate violence.

“We will throw out anyone who tries to create trouble,” one man announced over a loudspeaker. Other volunteers joined the soldiers at the checkpoints, searching bags of those entering for weapons. Organizers said the protesters would remain in the square and not try to march, to avoid frictions with the military.

The eclectic assortment of demonstrators represented in Tuesday’s rallies included students, online activists, grassroots organizers, old-school opposition politicians and the members of the Muslim Brotherhood.

Perhaps the most significant tensions among them are between young secular activists and the Muslim Brothers. The more secular are deeply suspicious that the Brotherhood aims to co-opt what they contend is a spontaneous, popular movement. American officials have suggested they have similar fears about the organization.

Hagai M. Segal, a lecturer in Middle Eastern Politics at New York University in London, told The Jerusalem Post by e-mail on Tuesday that a Muslim Brotherhood takeover could have disastrous implications for Israel.

Such an outcome, he said, would be the country’s “worst nightmare, a frightening deja vu of the events in Iran in 1979: then Israel’s key regional ally, Iran was overthrown and overnight became Israel’s key regional adversary and strategic threat, and this exact scenario is now feared in Egypt.”
 

flkyflky

Alfrescian
Loyal
http://voices.washingtonpost.com/posttech/2011/02/egypt_restores_internet_report.html

Posted at 10:16 AM ET, 02/ 2/2011
Egypt restores Internet as turmoil escalates
By Cecilia Kang

Egypt restored Internet access on Wednesday, after a one-week blackout for Web and cell phone users to try to stem civil unrest.

The nation was the second ever to completely shut its citizens off of the Internet. Burma made a similar move in 1997. As the turmoil accelerates, experts say, the move has failed to affect what began as a Web campaign but continued even after the government block.

As of about 11:29 a.m. Cairo time, all major Egyptian Internet service providers appeared to have reopened connection to their domestic customer networks in a global routing table, network expert Renesys Group said in a blog.

Web sites such as the Egyptian State Information Service have been restored. The Wall Street Journal reports that cell phone service MobiNil also is back up.

U.S. Web sites such as social network Facebook were available again to Egyptians.

"We're pleased that Internet service has been restored and the five million people who use Facebook in Egypt can continue using our service to connect, learn, and share," said Andrew Noyes, spokesman for Facebook.

The restoration comes as opposition groups and supporters of President Hosni Mubarak have clashed in street confrontations Wednesday. Mubarak said he would not seek reelection, but anti-government protesters have called for him to step down immediately.

"One of big questions is does it work for a government to shut off the network entirely? I think the answer is no," said John Palfrey, a co-director of Harvard University's Berkman Center for Internet & Society.

Alaa Abd El Fattah, an Egyptian activist and blogger in South Africa, said at first people organized on social media sites such as the Facebook page "We are Khaled Said." The page documented the brutal death of a Egyptian blogger who exposed police corruption. There, opposition groups organized initial demonstrations. But predicting a clampdown on networks, Fattah said that anti-government activists, many of whom were young and politically engaged for the first time, switched to proxy technology that would allow them to access the Internet without being identified. They used low-end Nokia phones with Opera browser, which automatically serves as a proxy for users. And they passed along demonstration plans with pamphlets and by word of mouth.

"This movement started online but continued through many other avenues," said Fattah.

Andrew McLaughlin, former White House deputy chief technology officer, said the shutdown shocked nations who had seen Egypt as a proponent of mobile and Internet technology. It serves as a key regional hub that operates several critical underwater fiber cable systems used for communications for many neighboring nations.

"The implications of shutting down the Internet are huge from an economic point of view," McLaughlin said. "The idea that transportation grid ground to halt, you couldn't access your bank or move money around and the entire communications systems was shut down is insane."

Rejoicing at being given a digital voice again, Egyptians burst back onto the Internet. On Twitter, human rights activist Dalia Ziada wrote that she had over 500 e-mails in her e-mail.

Numerous accounts on Twitter also show that social the networking site and others may still be blocked in Egypt. When the government began to target communications services, they first hit Twitter and Facebook on Jan. 25. Two days later, the Egyptian government, with an Internet adoption rate of about 30 percent, entirely shut down access. Cell phone services were blocked intermittently throughout the last week.

Reports from Twitter indicate that 3G, mobile Web and BlackBerry services are online again for some people.

Vodafone Egypt, which released a statement about restoring mobile phone service on Jan. 31, has not commented on its mobile Web service.

With the service restored, Egyptians began to give personal reports of clashes between Mubarak supporters and dissenters, which turned violent in Cairo's Tahrir Square.
egypt_returns.png
 

Ramseth

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
I think they'll be reporting LKY and SRN shall be seeking re-election (or re-walkover) by popular demand.
 

flkyflky

Alfrescian
Loyal
What is proven now by Egyptians?

1. Cut Internet and news = everyone goes to the street instead of staying at home.

2. Tanks = No use! If opposition can rally the people they can also rally the armed soldiers.

Especially in SGP if our oppositions can rally the Singaporean people then WE ARE THE SAF ourselves. There is no difference in our political position weather we wear civilian or SAF uniform. If we will go out the the street against LKY, then all the more we will welcome the issue of weapons into our hands. Problems can be settled fastest.
 

flkyflky

Alfrescian
Loyal
I think they'll be reporting LKY and SRN shall be seeking re-election (or re-walkover) by popular demand.

You tell me weather you prefer to protest as a civilian or draw arms? I now you were mata.:biggrin: Can wear helmet and shield and carry baton to protest or not?:rolleyes::rolleyes:
 

Ramseth

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
You tell me weather you prefer to protest as a civilian or draw arms? I now you were mata.:biggrin: Can wear helmet and shield and carry baton to protest or not?:rolleyes::rolleyes:

Can, same for soldiers too, but usually ranking Colonel or Superintendent or above makes the call. In Singapore's case, practically all of them are their scholars; very unlikely. NCOs and junior officers won't have the power to organise and command that, whether in Singapore or elsewhere.
 

flkyflky

Alfrescian
Loyal
Can, same for soldiers too, but usually ranking Colonel or Superintendent or above makes the call. In Singapore's case, practically all of them are their scholars; very unlikely. NCOs and junior officers won't have the power to organise and command that, whether in Singapore or elsewhere.

Superintendent & Colonel all becomes nothing when you are prepared to take down govt. Their ranks are too tiny to be worried. We start fixing from BG onwards.:biggrin:
You pull rank I pull trigger.:wink::wink:
 

Ramseth

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Superintendent & Colonel all becomes nothing when you are prepared to take down govt. Their ranks are too tiny to be worried. We start fixing from BG onwards.:biggrin:
You pull rank I pull trigger.:wink::wink:

You're right. Should be at least BG or AC and above. Singapore ranks since 1990s are usually one rank up on foreign equivalents, i.e. a Singapore Sgt. is only a foreign Cpl. equivalent, and so on.
 

matamafia

Alfrescian
Loyal
Now they had to Lan Lan turn on the Internet. Stop pissing off the people. Soon the civil servants will all switch side. Mubarak's hardcore supporters will be finished off in 2 days.:biggrin:
 

matamafia

Alfrescian
Loyal
Now they had to Lan Lan turn on the Internet. Stop pissing off the people. Soon the civil servants will all switch side. Mubarak's hardcore supporters will be finished off in 2 days.:biggrin:

http://www.montrealgazette.com/business/Egypt+restores+Internet+service/4213750/story.html

Egypt restores Internet service


By Tiffany Hsu, Los Angeles Times February 2, 2011 8:02 PM



* Story
* Photos ( 1 )


Pro-government protesters (L) clash with anti-government protesters outside the National Museum near Tahrir square in Cairo, early Feb. 3, 2011.

Pro-government protesters (L) clash with anti-government protesters outside the National Museum near Tahrir square in Cairo, early Feb. 3, 2011.
Photograph by: Yannis Behrakis, Reuters

LOS ANGELES — The Internet is apparently available again in Egypt after the country cut access to the Web for a week amid mass unrest.

After a long stretch of inactivity, RIPE NCC, which tracks Web traffic, recorded a sudden lurch in Egyptian Internet use starting just after 11 a.m. Thursday in Cairo.

A similar tracking organization, the Renesys Group, wrote in a blog post that access was restored to websites such as the Egyptian Stock Exchange, Commercial International Bank of Egypt and the U.S. Embassy in Cairo.

The group also said that Facebook and Twitter were back up inside the country, adding that "no traffic blocks are in place . . . no funny business. For now."

Facebook said in a statement, "We're pleased that Internet service has been restored and the 5 million people who use Facebook in Egypt can continue using our service to connect, learn, and share."

Many of the initial protests against Egypt's government were organized online, through Facebook groups and other social networking sites. Although the country's president, Hosni Mubarak, has said he will not seek re-election after decades in power, demonstrators continued to clash Wednesday.

Twitter was quickly awash in messages from Egypt after it was restored. Some of the messages asked for donations and medical supplies at hospitals.

Meanwhile, the international group of activist hackers known as Anonymous spent the day trying to bring down Egyptian government websites.

The group, which recently attacked the websites of companies it considered opponents of WikiLeaks, targeted the Egyptian Ministry of Information's portal as well as the Ministry of Communications and Information Technology's site.

"Welcome back to the Internet, #Egypt. Well, except http://www.moiegypt.gov.eg — you stay down," Anonymous wrote in a Twitter message Wednesday morning.
© Copyright (c) Los Angeles Times
 
Top