Monday, January 31, 2011

Egypt, confrontation between police and protesters

Cairo, January 27 (Telam) .- Protesters clashed with police in Egypt in the third day of protests against Egyptian President Honi Mubarak, in office 30 years ago, on a day when opposition leader Mohammed El Baradei said the change in Egypt "is inevitable."
Clashes were reported in the demonstrations that occurred in the area of the Sinai peninsula, Islamillia and Suez.
Until now, mass protests began on Monday claimed the lives of four people (one of them police) in Suez and an officer and a protester in Cairo.
In turn, El Baradei Mubarak asked the government to understand "that the answer has to be political, not security, if you want to avoid violence."
Institutes former Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) United Nations also said that "change is inevitable", before boarding, in Austria-the plane that will take you to the African country bordering the Palestinian Gaza Strip.


Their arrival is announced 19 hours in Egypt (14 from Argentina.)

Meanwhile, the local prosecutor today charged 40 people for attempting to overthrow the Mubarak government.


Moreover, the Egyptian Stock Exchange today suspended their stock exchange as a result of the sharp decline that took the shares, and local security authorities said they are 1,000 detainees by the protests.
Yesterday, the Cairo government had banned demonstrations against Mubarak and threatened to suppress them, an issue that ends up happening.
Mena news agency said that transactions in the local stock market was initially suspended for half an hour from 11 to 11.30 local in order to "report to calm investors and operators."
Since opening, the stock market in Cairo today reported a fall of 6.2%.
The organizers of the protests called by text messages and Facebook to participate in new mass protests tomorrow, after noon prayers, said the news agency ANSA.
The riots in several Arab countries in Africa began 14 days ago, when a citizen of Tunisia were burned by the lack of jobs and started a few days of protests that brought down the Tunisian government of Ben Ali, who was in power for 23 years. (Telam).