Mubarak backers assault Cairo protesters, 3 dead

CAIRO, (Reuters) – Backers of President Hosni Mubarak,  throwing petrol bombs, wielding sticks and charging on camels  and horses, attacked protesters in Cairo today after the  army told reformists demanding the president quit to go home.
Anti-Mubarak demonstrators hurled stones back and said the  attackers were police in plainclothes. The Interior Ministry  denied the accusation, and the Egyptian government rejected  international calls for Mubarak to end his 30-year rule now.

This apparent rebuff along with the appearance of Mubarak  supporters on Cairo’s streets and their clashes with protesters  — after days of relatively calm demonstrations — complicated  U.S. calculations for an orderly transition of power in Egypt.
In pointed comments, a senior U.S. official said it was  clear that “somebody loyal to Mubarak has unleashed these guys  to try to intimidate the protesters”.

Pro-government protesters (L) run for cover during clashes with anti-government protesters outside the National Museum near Tahrir square in Cairo early February 3, 2011. REUTERS/Yannis Behrakis

Troops and tanks stood by as the violence raged.
The emergence of Mubarak loyalists, whether ordinary  citizens or police, injected a new dynamic into the momentous  uprising in this most populous Arab nation of 80 million people.
The protests broke out last week as public frustration with  corruption, oppression and economic hardship under Mubarak  boiled over. At least 140 people are estimated to have been  killed so far and there have been protests across the country.
As night fell, Egyptian Vice President Omar Suleiman  urged the 2,000 demonstrators bedding down in Cairo’s central  Tahrir (Liberation) Square to leave and observe a curfew to  restore calm. Suleiman said the start of dialogue with the  reformists and opposition depended on an end to street protests.
But protesters barricaded the square against pro-Mubarak  supporters trying to penetrate the makeshift cordon, and also  conducted searches. There was sporadic gunfire, with blazes  caused by firebombs, and the atmosphere was tense.
“This place will turn into a slaughterhouse very soon if the  army does not intervene,” Ahmed Maher, who saw aggressive  pro-Mubarak supporters with swords and knives, told Reuters.
Officials said three people were killed in Wednesday’s  violence and a doctor at the scene said over 1,500 were injured.

STOP THE BLOODSHED
Reacting to the tumult in Egypt, a key ally, the White House  said it was vital for clashes to stop to ease a power handover.  “If any of the violence is instigated by the government it  should stop immediately,” spokesman Robert Gibbs said.
Opposition figurehead Mohamed ElBaradei, a Nobel Peace  laureate, called on the army to intervene to stop the violence  in Tahrir Square, the worst in the nine-day uprising against  Mubarak since protesters waged street battles last Friday.
Urging protesters to clear the streets, the armed forces  told them their demands had been heard. But some were determined  to occupy the square until Mubarak quits.
Khalil, a man in his 60s holding a stick, blamed Mubarak  supporters and undercover security men for the clashes. “We will  not leave,” he told Reuters. “Everybody stay put,” he added.
“I’m inspired by today’s events, however bloody and violent  they are, and I will stay with my brothers and sisters in Tahrir  until I either die or Mubarak leaves the country,” said medical  student Shaaban Metwalli, 22, as night closed in.
The crisis has alarmed the United States and other Western  governments who have regarded Mubarak as a bulwark of stability  in a volatile region, and has raised the prospect of unrest  spreading to other authoritarian Arab states.
Mubarak went on television on Tuesday to say he would not  stand in elections scheduled for September. This was not good  enough for the protesters, who demanded he leave the country.
President Barack Obama telephoned the 82-year-old to say  Washington wanted him to move faster on political transition.
“The message that the president delivered clearly to  President Mubarak was that the time for change has come,” Gibbs  said, adding: “Now means now.” Secretary of State Hillary  Clinton, in a call to Suleiman, underlined that U.S. position.
But Mubarak dug in his heels today. A Foreign  Ministry statement rejected U.S. and European calls for the  transition to start immediately, saying they aimed to “incite  the internal situation” in Egypt.
“This appears to be a clear rebuff to the Obama  administration and to the international community’s efforts to  try to help manage a peaceful transition from Mubarak to a new,  democratic Egypt,” said Robert Danin, a former senior U.S.  official now at the Council on Foreign Relations think tank.

ARMY ROLE CRUCIAL
The administration will want to see order restored without  compromising the standing of the Egyptian army, which it  supplies annually with about $1.3 billion in aid.
International backing for Mubarak, for three decades a  stalwart of the West’s Middle East policy, a key player in the  Middle East peace process and defence against the spread of  militant Islam, crumbled as he tried to ride out the crisis.
France, Germany and Britain also urged a speedy transition.
Some of the few words of encouragement for him have come  from oil giant Saudi Arabia, a country seen by many analysts as  vulnerable to a similar outbreak of discontent.
Israel, which signed a peace treaty with Egypt in 1979, is  also watching the situation in its western neighbour nervously,  weighing the possibility that Islamists hostile to the Jewish  state might gain a share of power in Cairo.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called today for  “bolstering Israel’s might” in response to turmoil n Egypt.
Troops made no attempt to intervene as opposing factions  clashed in Tahrir Square. Attackers brandished baseball bats and  iron bars and broke up pieces of paving stones to throw.
Earlier, pro-Mubarak youths were bussed into districts of  the capital. Thousands were involved in what escalated into  pitched battles. There was a horse and camel charge.
One of the riders, who wielded whips and sticks as they  galloped into the crowd was dragged from his mount and beaten.
Petrol bombs landed in the gardens of the Egyptian Museum.
An opposition coalition, which includes the Islamist Muslim  Brotherhood group, responded to the army warning to leave Tahrir  Square by calling for more protests. It said it would only  negotiate with Suleiman, a former intelligence chief appointed  by Mubarak at the weekend, once the president stepped down.
At the weekend, Mubarak reshuffled his cabinet and promised  reform but that was not enough for the pro-democracy movement.
One million people took to the streets of Egyptian cities on  Tuesday calling for him to step down. Many protesters spoke of a  new push on Friday, the Egyptian weekend, to rally at Cairo’s  presidential palace to dislodge Mubarak.
The uprising was inspired in part by a popular revolt in  Tunisia last month which overthrew long-ruling President Zine  al-Abidine Ben Ali. The mood is spreading across the region.
King Abdullah of Jordan replaced his prime minister on  Tuesday following protests there. Yemeni President Ali Abdullah  Saleh, an important U.S. ally in the fight against al Qaeda,  said today he would not seek to extend his presidency.