Mubarak pledge to step down dismissed as too slow

CAIRO, (Reuters) – Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak  said yesterday he would surrender power in September, angering  protesters who want an immediate end to his 30-year-rule.

The United States called for the transition of power to  begin straight away, stopping short of endorsing Mubarak’s plan  to stay in office for another six months.

“What is clear and what I indicated tonight to President  Mubarak is my belief that an orderly transition must be  meaningful, it must be peaceful and it must begin now,”  President Barack Obama said after speaking to him by phone.

In the streets of Cairo, protesters whose numbers swelled  above 1 million across Egypt yesterday, many renewed their  calls for the 82-year-old leader to quit.

“We will not leave! He will leave!” some chanted.

A leading reformist figure, retired diplomat Mohammed  ElBaradei, was quoted by CNN calling Mubarak’s move a “trick”.

Mubarak appealed over the heads of the urban demonstrators  to the wider nation of 80 million. The “noble youths” who had  begun protests, he said, had been exploited by men of violence.

Much may depend on the army, once Mubarak’s power base,  which appears to be trying to ensure a transition of power that  would maintain the influence of the armed forces.

Under evident pressure from Obama and the army as much as  from the crowds on the streets, Mubarak delivered a composed  10-minute televised statement.

To those demanding he flee the country in the manner of his  ousted Tunisian counterpart last month, Mubarak said: “This is  my country … and I will die on its soil.”

But he would not give up power just yet: “I say in all  honesty and regardless of the current situation that I did not  intend to nominate myself for a new presidential term,” he said.

“I will work in the remaining months of my term to take the  steps to ensure a peaceful transfer of power.”

SPEECH “INFLAMES OUR ANGER”

Many of those on the streets in defiance of a curfew doubted  his commitment to making the kind of sweeping democratic  constitutional changes which he has resisted since inheriting  the mantle of the ruling military establishment in 1981.

At Cairo’s Tahrir, or Liberation, Square, focus of protests  for a week, young professionals in their 20s were unimpressed.

“The speech is useless and only inflames our anger,” said  Shadi Morkos. “We will continue to protest.”

In Alexandria, the second city, troops in tanks fired shots  in the air to keep order after skirmishes between  anti-government and pro-Mubarak groups. But there was no sign  that the army was trying to halt anti-government protests.

It has said it will protect marchers and called their  demands “legitimate”.

But some analysts said tensions could rise even within the  army if Mubarak were to hang on too long, and if senior officers  were seen to be protecting a leader who had lost legitimacy.

“The longer this goes on, the more people will associate the  military top brass with Mubarak. That is very dangerous,” said  Faysal Itani, deputy head of Middle East and North Africa  Forecasting at Exclusive Analysis.

“It will put enormous strain on the security services.”

A British-based cleric from the Muslim Brotherhood, the  hitherto banned Islamist party which is the most organised   Egyptian opposition group, also said there could be conflict.

“It will add fuel to the fire. His speech will bring the  danger of conflict in the country. We were expecting him to be  stubborn, but not to that extent,” Kamel el-Helbawy said.

Yesterday’s demonstration was an emphatic rejection of  Mubarak’s appointment of a new vice president, Omar Suleiman,  and an offer to open a dialogue with the opposition.

Many protesters spoke of a new push on Friday, the Egyptian  weekend, to rally at Cairo’s presidential palace to dislodge  Mubarak: “This won’t fly any more,” said 35-year-old doctor  Ahmed Khalifa. “If Egyptians stay on the streets till Friday,  probably Mubarak’s next offer will be to step down right away.”

REGIONAL INSTABILITY

His departure would reconfigure the politics of the Middle  East, with implications from Israel to oil giant Saudi Arabia.

King Abdullah of Jordan replaced his prime minister yesterday after protests. Yemen and Sudan have also seen unrest.

Just four weeks since the death of Mohammed Bouazizi, the  Tunisian who set himself on fire to protest at oppression and  corruption, the wave of anger he set in motion has gathered  strength across the region.