Egypt unrest rages on, biggest protests planned

CAIRO, (Reuters) – Activists geared up for the  biggest protests yet today to end Egyptian President Hosni  Mubarak’s three-decade rule, while demonstrators fought security  forces into the early morning hours in the eastern city of Suez.

Emboldened by this month’s revolt that toppled the  authoritarian leader of Tunisia, Egyptians have staged mass  protests since Tuesday in an unprecedented outburst of anger  against Mubarak’s strong-handed rule.

“This is a revolution,” one 16-year-old protester said in  Suez late yesterday. “Every day we’re coming back here.”
Nobel Peace Prize winner Mohamed ElBaradei, who returned to  Egypt from Vienna yesterday, has called for Mubarak to resign  and said he would join the protests today.
Internet and mobile phone text messaging services appeared  to be partially disabled, working only sporadically across the  country. The government has denied disrupting communications  networks, which demonstrators have used to organise.

Egyptian anti-government protesters attack a riot police car at the port city in Suez, about 134 km (83 miles) east of Cairo east of Cairo yesterday. REUTERS/Mohamed Abd El-Ghany

A page on Facebook social networking site listed more than  30 mosques and churches where protesters were expected gather.
“Egypt’s Muslims and Christians will go out to fight against  corruption, unemployment and oppression and absence of freedom,”  the page said, adding more than 70,000 had signed up online.

In Suez, which has been ground zero for some of the most  violent demonstrations, police fired tear gas at protesters who  hurled stones and petrol bombs into the early hours of Friday.  Fires burned in the street, filling the air with smoke.

The city fire station was ablaze. Waves of protesters  charged towards a police station deep into the night.  Demonstrators dragged away their wounded comrades into alleys.      At another rally near Giza on the outskirts of Cairo, police  used tear gas to break up hundreds of protesters late at night.  Cairo, normally vibrant on a Thursday night ahead of the  weekend, was largely deserted, with shops and restaurants shut.

Anti-government protesters clash with police in downtown Cairo on Tuesday. REUTERS/Mohamed Abd El-Ghany

Security forces shot dead a protester in the north of the  Sinai region yesterday, bringing the death toll to five.
Video images obtained by Reuters showed the man among a  small group of protesters some distance from the security forces  when he suddenly collapsed with a gunshot wound and was dragged  away by other demonstrators. The video circulated widely on the  Internet, galvanising anger.

At least eight senior officials of the Muslim Brotherhood  opposition group were arrested overnight. A security source said  authorities had ordered a crackdown on the group.
The Brotherhood has kept a low profile during the protests,  although of its supporters were expected to join demonstrations  today. The government has accused the group of planning to  exploit the youth protests for its “hidden agendas”, while the  Brotherhood says it is being used as a scapegoat.

ElBaradei and other opposition figures say the government  exploits the Islamist opposition to justify authoritarianism.
The United States is Egypt’s close ally and major donor, and  has tread carefully over unrest in a country it considers a  bulwark of Middle East stability.
In his first comments on the unrest, President Barack Obama  avoided signs of abandoning Mubarak but made clear he  sympathised with demonstrators.
“…I’ve always said to him that making sure that they are  moving forward on reform — political reform, economic reform —  is absolutely critical to the long-term well-being of Egypt,”  Obama said in comments broadcast on the YouTube website.

“You can see these pent-up frustrations that are being  displayed on the streets.”

FRUSTRATED

As in many other countries across the Middle East, Egyptians  are frustrated over surging prices, unemployment and an  authoritarian government that tolerates little dissent.
Many of them are young. Two thirds of Egypt’s 80 million  people are below the age of 30, and many of them have no jobs.  About 40 percent of Egyptians live on less than a $2 a day.

Facebook, Twitter and other social media have been key tools  in drumming up support for protests, advising of locations and  even giving tips on how to avoid arrest or cope with tear gas.

“Friday will be the day that we emerge victorious over the  tyrants and the despots that have governed for too long,” user  Abo Mostafa wrote on Twitter.
The government has urged Egyptians to act with restraint today but says it guarantees freedom of expression.
Safwat Sherif, secretary-general of the ruling National  Democratic Party, told reporters:

“We hope that tomorrow’s Friday prayers and its rituals  happen in a quiet way that upholds the value of such rituals …  and that no one jeopardises the safety of citizens or subjects  them to something they do not want.”

ElBaradei, 68, a former head of the U.N. nuclear watchdog  who has campaigned for change in his native country since last  year, said suggestions that Egypt’s government was the only  bulwark against Islamist extremism were “obviously bogus”.

He told reporters at Cairo’s airport he would take part in  Friday’s protests, but added: “I wish we did not have to go out  on the streets to press the regime to act.”