REVOLUTION!! EGYPT, TUNISIA, YEMEN!! DETROIT???

 

People take over streets, torch government buildings in Cairo

BREAKING NEWS: DEMONSTRATE AT DEARBORN CITY HALL TODAY, SAT. JAN. 29 AT 2 PM WITH LOCAL SUPPORTERS OF EGYPTIAN UPRISING

Regional ruling party headquarters is torched amid renewed protests, as death toll from unrest crosses 90.

Jan. 29, 2011

http://english.aljazeera.net

Go to Al Jazeera link above for ongoing coverage of revolutions in Egypt, Tunisia and now Yemen. Live streaming coverage, along with numerous stories, photos and videoes are available.

Also go to http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hzrbySzggWM to watch video from Real News citing continuing U.S. support for Hosni Mubarak’s regime.

Commentary from VOD’s Greg Thrasher after Al Jazeera article.

Tens of thousands of people in the Egyptian capital Cairo have gathered on the streets, in continued protests demanding an end to Hosni Mubaraks’s 30-year presidency.

Egyptian people defy world-wide austerity measures

The demonstrations continue in defiance of an extended curfew on Saturday, which state television reported will be in place from 4pm to 8am local time.

A military presence also remains, but Al Jazeera’s Ayman Mohyeldin said that soldiers deployed to Tahrir Square in Cairo are not intervening in the protests.

“Some of the soldiers here have said that the only way for peace to come to the streets of Cairo is for Mubarak to step down,” he said.

Similar crowds were gathering in the cities of Alexandria and Suez, Al Jazeera’s correspondents reported.

Reports have also emerged that protesters attempted to storm the interior ministry in Cairo, and that the military have been trying to prevent police from shooting at protesters.

All photos from Al-Jazeera

Fears of looting have also risen, and the army on Saturday warned local residents to “protect their property and possessions”.

The Egyptian cabinet have formally resigned in response to the protests, and Ahmed Ezz, a businessman and senior figure in the ruling National Democratic Party (NDP) has resigned from his post as chairman of the Planning and Budget Committee.

Protesters ransacked and burned one of his company’s main offices in Mohandiseen, an area of Cairo.

State media reported on Saturday that some protesters held up posters with a cross marked over the face of Ezz, who is chairman of Ezz Steel.

Overnight protests were also held on Friday in cities across the country, in what has been viewed as unprecedented anger on the part of the Egyptian people.

In Alexandria, Al Jazeera’s Rawya Rageh reported that scores of marchers were calling on Hosni Mubarak to step down.

“They are calling for regime change, not cabinet change,” Rageh said.

She said that they were blocking traffic and shouting “Illegitimate, illegitimate!”

Protester outside mosque in Cairo

The Reuters news agency reported that police had fired live ammunition at protesters, but there is no independent confirmation of that report.

 In Suez, Al Jazeera’s Jamal ElShayyal reported that 1,000-2,000 protesters had gathered, and that the military was not confronting them.

ElShayyal quoted a military officer as saying that troops would “not fire a single bullet on Egyptians”.

The officer also said the only solution to the current unrest was “for Mubarak to leave”.

ElShayyal said that 1,700 public workers in Suez had gone on an indefinite strike seeking Mubarak’s resignation.

The latest protests reflected popular discontent with Mubarak’s midnight address, where he announced that he was dismissing his government but remaining in power.

U.S., world banks behind uprising

The several hundred protesters in Tahrir Square demonstrated in full view of the army, which had been deployed in the city to quell the popular unrest sweeping the Middle East’s most populous Muslim country since January 25.

They repeatedly shouted that their intentions were peaceful.

According to the Associated Press, the road leading from Tahrir Square to the parliament and cabinet buildings has been blocked by the military.

Al Jazeera’s Jane Dutton, reporting from Cairo, said the normally bustling city looked more like a warzone early on Saturday morning.

Tanks have been patrolling the streets of the capital since early in the morning, and a statement from the Egyptian armed forces asked citizens to respect the curfew and to avoid congregating in large groups.

An extended curfew has now been ordered by the military, running from 4pm to 8am local time, in Cairo and other major cities.

State television is also reporting that all school and university exams have been postponed.

Rising death toll

Tunisian revolution was victorious

Cities across Egypt witnessed unprecedented protests on Friday, with tens of thousands of protesters taking to the streets after noon prayers calling for an end to Mubarak’s 30-year rule.

The number of people killed in protests is reported to be in the scores, with at least 23 deaths confirmed in Alexandria, and at least 27 confirmed in Suez, with a further 22 deaths in Cairo.

Al Jazeera’s Rageh in Alexandria said that the bodies of 23 protesters had been received at the local morgue, some of them brutally disfigured.

 
 

She added that human rights activists had reported that a further 13 bodies were present at the general hospital.

ElShayyal, our correspondent in Suez confirmed 27 bodies were received at the morgue in Suez, while Dan Nolan, our correspondent in Cairo, confirmed that 22 bodies were present at a morgue in Cairo.

More than 1,000 were also wounded in Friday’s violent protests, which occurred in Cairo and Suez, in addition to Alexandria.

Dutton, in Cairo, said the number of the people on the streets “increased after president Hosni Mubarak’s speech shortly after midnight”.

Poor re-distribute wealth from stores

Regarding the situation in the capital on Saturday morning, she said “there is broken glass everywhere … a lot of the burnt out shells of the police cars have been removed but you are aware that there were hours and hours of skirmishes on the streets of the capital city [last night]”.

The ruling NDP headquarters in the capital is still ablaze, more than 12 hours after it was set alight by protesters.

The Egyptian army said it had been able to secure the neighbouring museum of antiquities from the threat of fire and looting, averting the possible loss of thousands of priceless artefacts.

Armoured personnel carriers remain stationed around the British and US embassies, as well as at the state television station.

Some mobile phone networks resumed service in the capital on Saturday, after being shut down by authorities on Friday. Internet services remain cut, and landline usage limited.

Authorities had blocked internet, mobile phone and SMS services in order to disrupt planned demonstrations.

‘Mobs’ and ‘criminals’

Maged Reda Boutros, a member of the ruling National Democratic Party, told Al Jazeera that the political regime in Egypt was “admitting” that it was not meeting the expectations of the people, and that was why the cabinet was resigning.

Ousted Tunisian President Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali

“It shows a response to the demands of the people,” he said.

He alleged that the protests have been taken over by “mobs” from the “lower part of the society”, who are now engaged in “burning, looting and shooting”.

“Now it has turned from a noble cause to a criminal cause,” he said, saying that most of those involved in the protests were criminals.

He said that half of those killed are members of the security forces, who died while acting in self defence.

“People should wait and see what’s going to happen. But if they continue doing protests and letting those criminals loose in a large city of 17 million people … we cannot play with the stability of the country.”

Mohamed ElBaradei, a leading opposition figure, told Al Jazeera that protests would continue until the president steps down. He also stressed that the political “system” will have to change in Egypt before the country can move forward.

He termed president Mubarak’s speech “disappointing”, and called on him to resig. The former head of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) also expressed “disappointment” with the US reaction to the protests, though he did stress that any change would have to come from “inside Egypt”.

He said that Mubarak should put in place an interim government that would arrange free and fair elections.

ElBaradei added that he was not aware of his reported house arrest.

Friday’s demonstrations involving tens of thousands of people were the biggest and bloodiest in four consecutive days of protests against Mubarak’s government.

 

Greg Thrasher, contributing editor VOD

AMERICA’S POOR IN THE STREETS

By Greg Thrasher 
 
Our government has a long and ugly legacy of influencing our domestic media in all kinds of areas from accurate data about the rates of crime, cancer, wealth, poverty to the truth about the existence of UFO’s and related usual phenomena. The massive scope of technology also lends itself to the government ease in influencing media accounts and information. The barrier between truth and fiction is the most important question in the media and it is a question that no longer is under the privy of media corporations.

Our government has secretly spied on civil rights leaders and invoked national security themes to get our media outlets to partner with them on the creation and development of propaganda and disinformation. Our media outlets have partnered with the government on all types of filtered news that is reported to the American public.  On many occasions this interference with the free flow of information, data and knowledge has been welcomed by our political parties and our leaders in both the private and public sector. 

MLK Day in Detroit at Martin Luther King HS Jan. 17

When the news accounts involve foreign affairs and military concerns the injection and excuse of national security surfaces, which provides cover and rationales for our government’s control, filtering and manipulation of news and information. The events in Tunisia & Egypt scare the ruling class in America, from concerns about the economic fallout to the notion that America’s poor will parrot the protests of those in the streets of Tunis & Cairo.
 
It is to longer a secret or a conspiracy in the modern world many governments engaged in propaganda and information for a number of reasons.  It is not a far-fetched fiction that those in the ruling class and our political parties fear the possibility that America’s poor will take to the streets and engage in an American regime change.
 
The poor and underclass here in America share the same misfortunes , poverty, hopelessness and impotency as those in the streets of Tunisia and Egypt. The plight of the poor is a universal condition and international boundaries are not relevant nor a barrier to those suffering common fates and realities. There is hunger and homelessness right here in Detroit, whose streets share the visuals of any third world country. 

Families of striking prisoners in Georgia protest retaliatory beatings

It is therefore incumbent to understand how close to the edge our nation is to a civil war right here on Main Street in America, from foreclosures to high unemployment to educational systems that fail our inner city youth to prisons and jails which warehouse large proportions of America’s population.
 
These are perilous times for the entire world the events in the streets of foreign nations matter here in streets of America as well. The importance of news outlets like Voice of Detroit should not be overlooked and under-appreciated.

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4 Responses to REVOLUTION!! EGYPT, TUNISIA, YEMEN!! DETROIT???

  1. Hi! I’ve been reading your web site for a long time now and finally
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  2. Angela Algarin says:

    This column is bullshit and propaganda that will not get anyone anywhere. The purpose is to incite people to violence which will incur marshall law where they live. We have passed the point of your “hate the ruling class” agenda. Obama is President and there are many minorities representing all colors and all walks of life. What you call news is incidiary rhetoric that will push minorities and anyone who follows your lead back 50 years. If there is hunger there are foodstamps and food pantry’s. If there are homeless, much of it is self imposed by those who may be mentally ill and need medical help. Some families enjoy the benefits provided by this government and also enjoy outside income as well. There are black scholarships, black colleges and black sororities. Doctors, lawyers, administrative professionals, blue collar workers, democrats, republicans and teachers are only the tip of the iceberg that fill America with their experience and skills today. Your column is created to push your personal agenda of hatred and manipulation. Like I said. It’s bullshit.

    • We the People of Detroit - "Mrs. Monica" says:

      BRAVO to the Dynomo Mrs. Diane and the Great Greg Thrasher for speaking truth to POWER! It is so wonderful to have real jounalist writing and report for the PEOPLE! To those that would put their heads in the sand and want to believe that because we have a black man in the White House and because a few of us can live in a penthouse that we should not advocate for those in the poor house! My grandmother always says that if you don’t get opposition then you must not be doing anything worth while! “I Love Detroit – I Am Detroit”!

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