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Cairo: Egyptian protesters clashes with riot police at Cairo's landmark Tahrir Square on November 19, 2011, as Egyptian police fired rubber bullets and tear gas to break up a sit-in among whose organisers were people injured during the Arab Spring which overthrew veteran president Hosni Mubarak. (AFP Photo / Khaled Desouki) 19.11.2011, 21:49 2 comments

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Clashes between Egyptian riot police and rock-hurling protesters in Cairo's Tahrir Square continue Sunday. Military police, backed by armored vehicles, launched a new assault, using clouds of tear gas, rubber bullets and batons to disperse the crowd.

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Religious riots test mettle of Egyptian regime

Egypt’s ruling military body has promised a speedy investigation into Sunday’s violence that left 26 dead and over 300 injured as authorities seek to contain social tensions that could derail the increasingly unstable country’s democratic transition.

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Smoke billows from burning cars as clashes erupted between Egyptian Coptic Christians and security forces in Cairo during a protest against the attack on a church in southern Egypt in October 9, 2011 (AFP Photo / Mohammed Hossam) 10.10.2011, 02:14 6 comments

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Mint Western munition killing Cairo protesters

Published: 20 November, 2011, 22:13

Egypt, Cairo: Egyptian protesters point to the "Made in USA" tag on a tear gas canister during clashes with riot police at Cairo's landmark Tahrir Square on November 20, 2011 (AFP Photo / Khaled Desouki)

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TAGS: Arms, Military, Scandal, Africa, Middle East, Protest, Politics, Bill Dod


Egyptian political activist Ahmed Salah does not expect a swift reaction by the West on the latest events in Cairo’s Tahrir Square, as he says these countries have supplied the army regime with the means of oppression.

­“I am not expecting a quick reaction from the West. We can see that all the ammunition used against us is either American, or Israeli, or, actually, Italian, whether it’s the tear-gas canisters or the bullets,” he told RT. “All the ammunition that they have received is [from] 2011. It’s post-revolution, presumably.”

Now, he says, this very ammunition is used to empower the government by killing civilians and suppressing the revolution.

“I don’t know what can be the excuse for giving the armed forces and the security this type of ammunition. That’s why we have thousands of injured,” he said. “They don’t care about the injured. They’ve just stormed a hospital a while ago with tear gas and everything in an attempt to retake the square. The whole world had probably seen on television how they were setting property on fire – vehicles, motorbikes and shops, like they did last night – in order to [blame] us and the revolution that we are the ones doing the sabotage.”

Ahmed Salah particularly pointed out that the present dramatic events taking place on Tahrir Square should be regarded as the very same revolution that had toppled the country’s former president Hosni Mubarak.

“We were cheated into believing that the revolution was over, we succeeded, we managed to overthrow the Mubarak regime. This was all wrong,” he said. “The Mubarak regime is still in power. It is fighting back. The same corrupt regime is out there, only cheating us, the population and the world, into believing that they are going to start this transition towards democracy, while everything they are doing was to conspire [about staying] in power.”

The clashes in Cairo’s iconic Tahrir Square have been ongoing since Friday. The violence began when riot police attacked around 200 peaceful demonstrators, who had camped out in the square overnight in order to commemorate protesters killed in the February uprising. The violence comes nine days before Egypt's first elections since the ousting of President Mubarak.

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An image grab taken from a video released by the Zintan Media Centre on November 20, 2011 shows Seif al-Islam, the captured son of killed Libyan leader Moamer Kadhafi, making a statement in Zintan following his arrest (AFP Photo) 20.11.2011, 20:03 6 comments

­Saif keeping: No ICC for Gaddafi Jr. No NTC either?

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Libyan conflict
Egypt, Cairo : Egyptian anti-government protesters belonging to the Muslim Brotherhood movement and their children sit in Cairo's Tahrir square on February 12, 2011. (AFP Photo / Patrick Baz) 21.11.2011, 04:15 5 comments

‘Sharia Law – potential outcome of Cairo revolution’

There’s growing belief among some commentators that the Muslim Brotherhood may be behind the new protests in Cairo. Jerusalem Post author and correspondent Yaakov Lappin says that there is a chance that Islamists could eventually take power in Egypt.

Arab world protests
Mahlknecht November 21, 2011, 18:01
+2

This is a very interesting article! ...just when the "axis of evil" (usa-israel-uk) was instructing the MSM to use the myth of the "iranian" connection!

Nay Lin Maung November 21, 2011, 05:40
+1

Truth needs to find out what happened in the Egypt.

 

 

 

Robert November 21, 2011, 03:51
0

YES!Finally something that wasn't outsourced to China!