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Wednesday, 26 January 2011

Thousands of Egyptians Demand End of Mubarak's 30-Year Rule

25/01/2011 Thousands of Egyptians demanded an end to President Hosni Mubarak's 30-year rule and clashed with police on Tuesday, in unprecedented protests inspired by the revolt that brought down Tunisia’s president.

"Down, down, Hosni Mubarak," chanted protesters in Cairo, where police fired teargas and used water cannon, and protesters hurled bottles and rocks at them.

In Alexandria protesters tore down a picture of Mubarak, 82, and one of his son, Gamal, who many Egyptians believe is being groomed for office when his father stands down.

Protesters in Cairo who joined the Web activists' call for action said: "Gamal, tell your father Egyptians hate you."

Egyptians have the same complaints that drove Tunisians onto the streets: surging food prices, poverty, unemployment and authoritarian rule that smothers public protests quickly and often brutally.

"Tunisia, Tunisia," protesters shouted in demonstrations across the country that may have drawn 20,000 or more people in Cairo and several other cities. It was hard to estimate numbers because demonstrations sprang up in different places.

Egyptian protests usually draw only a few hundred people. The large numbers and the fact that protests in several cities were coordinated in a way not seen before gave Tuesday's events a force unprecedented since Mubarak took office in 1981.

"What is happening today is a major warning to the system. It is both an extension of pent-up frustrations and continued protests. What is also new is that there are new generations who are using new tools," said analyst Nabil Abdel-Fattah. The protest could gather momentum unless the state swiftly addressed the demand for reform, he said.


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