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Re: Egypt is collapsing!
http://newsupdates.co.za/investors-f...ils-232074.htm
Investors flee Mideast bourses as Egypt boils
No discrimination among stocks as panic spreads across the board
FOREIGN STAFF 2011/01/31 06:24:56 AM
THE political turmoil in Egypt has rattled Middle Eastern bourses, with most taking a pounding when they opened after a weekend of violent protests.
Although Sunday is the beginning of the working week in the mostly Muslim country, the Egyptian stock market was closed to trade yesterday after sliding 16% last week. It will remain shut today as the protests, which have left 100 people dead, continue.
The protesters are calling for political and economic reform and the removal of President Hosni Mubarak, who has been in power for the past 30 years.
Demonstrations began in Egypt last Tuesday, inspired by an uprising that ousted Tunisian President Zine el Abidine Ben Ali on January 14. Anger has erupted with startling speed over the past two months in Yemen, the poorest nation on the Arabian peninsula, and Algeria. Like Egypt, both countries face rising food price inflation and chronic joblessness, particularly among the youth.
On Friday in Jordan, thousands of marchers demanded the resignation of Prime Minister Samir Rifai. In Sudan police beat and arrested students in Khartoum . The rapid spread underscored the fragility of systems used by some Arab regimes to stay in power since the 1980s.
The benchmark index for the main stock exchange in the regional financial hub Dubai went down 6,7% to 1504 points in midday trading yesterday.
Among the biggest losers are regional discount carrier Air Arabia and Emaar Properties, the developer of the world’s tallest building. Their shares are each down nearly 10%, the daily limit.
Saudi Arabia was the only major market open on Saturday, when it shed 6,4%. It recovered slightly, up 1,5% yesterday .
"International investors are fleeing Middle East stock markets with justified risk aversion across the board," said Mahdi Mattar, head of research at Abu Dhabi- based CAPM Investment, an investment banking company.
"Due to panic from local and international investors, there is no discrimination between stocks with exposure or nonexposure to Egypt, though we expect that in coming sessions."
Egypt failed to hold auctions for government treasury bills yesterday as lenders and the central bank were closed, said Mohamed Barakat, chairman of state-run Banque Misr, who is also the head of Egypt’s banking association.
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Re: Egypt is collapsing!
http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/...d_dest=Twitter
Egypt protest intensifies, Mubarak turns to army
By Sherine El Madany and Marwa Awad
CAIRO | Mon Jan 31, 2011 6:05am EST
(Reuters) - Protesters intensified their campaign on Monday to force Egypt's President Hosni Mubarak to quit as world leaders struggled to find a solution to a crisis that has torn up the Middle East political map.
Crowds flocked in the morning to Tahrir Square, which has become the focus of the uprising over poverty, corruption and unemployment, to join protesters who had camped out overnight in defiance of a curfew imposed by Mubarak.
Soldiers checked IDs but the crowd steadily grew, chanting "Down, down, Mubarak."
The uprising against Mubarak's 30-year-rule, now in its sixth day, unnerved global markets. Share prices fell across Asia on Monday morning, Brent oil hit a 28-month high, and Egypt's financial markets were closed for a second day in a row.
The mood between the troops and the protesters in the square remained generally relaxed, with people sharing food and standing by tanks daubed with anti-Mubarak graffiti.
The army appears to hold the key to Mubarak's fate but although the generals have held back from crushing the revolt, they have also not withdrawn support for Mubarak.
"The army has to choose between Egypt and Mubarak," read one banner in Tahrir Square.
The protests in the world's most populous Arab nation broke out last week when frustration over repression and the lack of democracy under Mubarak's rule boiled over.
More than 100 people were killed in clashes with security forces in scenes that overturned Egypt's standing as a stable country, promising emerging market and attractive tourist destination.
Mubarak, a close U.S. ally and a stalwart in Western policy toward the Middle East, responded by offering economic reform to address public anger at rising prices.
He also sacked his cabinet and appointed a vice president and new prime minister. Both, however, were military men and the moves have done nothing to appease a protest movement who want him and his associates from the old guard to be swept away.
WEST WAIT-AND-SEE
The United States, which has poured billions of dollars of aid into Egypt since Mubarak came to power, stopped short of saying openly that it wanted him out. President Barack Obama and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton instead urged reform and spoke about "an orderly transition."
A senior U.S. official, who declined to be identified, said the feeling among Obama's national security aides was that Mubarak's time had passed, but it was up to Egyptians to determine what happens next.
Washington has long seen Mubarak as a bulwark in the Middle East, first against communism then against militant Islam.
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Re: Egypt is collapsing!
http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Middle_East/MB01Ak03.html
The last trick up Mubarak's sleeve
By Victor Kotsev
AsiaTimes - Middle East
Feb 1, 2011
TEL AVIV - "Jimmy Carter will go down in American history as 'the president who lost Iran'," Israeli analyst Aluf Benn wrote on Sunday. "Barack Obama will be remembered as the president who 'lost' Turkey, Lebanon and Egypt, and during whose tenure America's alliances in the Middle East crumbled."
Comparing Obama and Carter is a common theme among Israeli analysts. While Benn qualifies his own comparison by pointing out that "unlike Carter, who preached human rights even when it hurt allies, Obama sat on the fence and exercised caution", there is a widespread perception in Israel that Obama is overly idealistic, doesn't understand the Middle East well, and his policies will bring about a disaster, both for the United States and for the Jewish state.
The fear behind this perception is that Muslim masses are not ready for democracy, and that if unleashed on their current autocratic rulers, they will create militant theocratic societies, as happened during the Iranian revolution of 1979. In fact, some analysts see Iran as benefiting and taking advantage of the events to expand its own influence.
Both assumptions can be disputed: for example, the Egyptian opposition has tried hard to distance itself from exclusively religious slogans, and has largely united behind the secular Mohamed ElBaradei. However, from a geopolitical point of view, the broader conclusion that Egypt is lost as an ally probably holds, at least in the short- and mid-term.
Should the protesters take power, even in the best-case scenario it will take time to forge new relationships on all levels. There is every indication that the new government would be reserved towards Egypt's former allies, and at worst, even animosity can be expected.
The Muslim Brotherhood, one of the main opposition forces (and possible coalition partner), has frequently threatened in the past to annul the peace treaty with Israel; for the first time since the start of the demonstrations, reports surfaced on Sunday that the protesters were turning their anger on the US and Israel.
Paradoxically, the American administration interfered mostly on the side of the protesters. It is impossible to verify reports that the US "backed Egypt uprising planners", but in the past few days, Obama put a lot of pressure on the Egyptian president to announce broad reforms, to allow freedom of expression and to unblock communications such as cellular phones, access to the Internet and social networking sites (Facebook, Twitter). The Americans even reportedly threatened to reduce their military aid for Egypt, currently around US$1.3 billion a year, if Mubarak failed to comply.
According to Foreign Policy blogger Marc Lynch, "the [US] administration ... is trying hard to protect the protestors from an escalation of violent repression, giving Mubarak just enough rope to hang himself, while carefully preparing to ensure that a transition will go in the direction of a more democratic successor." When Secretary of State Hillary Clinton announced on Sunday that "we want to see an orderly transition [in Egypt]… that will bring about a democratic participatory government," and Obama himself later supported her comments, their remarks only strengthened this impression.
This is why, should a new regime in Egypt turn against the US, Obama would get a lot of the blame. For the very same reason, should the regime survive - this currently remains a possibility - Egypt would prove to be a very unruly ally, to say the least. Mubarak is not known to tolerate betrayal, and this is how he will view the actions of his close ally.
The battle is far from over. In the words of The New York Times, "More than at perhaps any other point since the uprising began, the tumult Sunday seemed perched between two deepening narratives: a vision of impending anarchy offered by the government, and echoed by many Egyptian fearing chaos, against the perspective of protesters and many others that the uprising had become, as they described it in a list of demands posted in Liberation Square on Sunday, 'a popular revolution'."
After the police forces were overwhelmed on Friday and the army stepped in, the former disappeared from the streets of several major cities, and a period of lawlessness and looting set in. During attacks on several prisons, an unknown number of prisoners broke out. Looters attacked the Egyptian museum and damaged two mummies. "Thieves raped my daughter in front of my eyes, without showing mercy," a resident of Cairo, Said Mahmoud, told Ynet. Up to 60 rapes were reported, and many citizens organized neighborhood watch groups armed with clubs and knives.
These scenes, amplified by the state media, caused many to have second thoughts. Sunday's demonstrations were reported to be palpably smaller than those of the previous days. Still, a sizeable core group of protesters (estimated at 20,000 in Tahrir Square) persisted through the night, united around the figure of ElBaradei, and continued to call on Mubarak to step down. A fresh detachment of elite tank units was dispatched to the square, but did not fire on the crowd. The protesters distanced themselves from the atrocities, organized human chains to protect the museum, and blamed the looting and jailbreaks on instigation by the secret police.
It is possible that parts of Mubarak's security apparatus, with or without his consent, took part in instigating the chaos. This would echo what has happened in similar circumstances in countless other places, and, if executed stealthily, could damage the support base of the protesters. American think-tank Stratfor reports, "Egyptian plainclothes police allegedly were behind a number of the jailbreaks, robberies of major banks and the spread of attacks and break-ins in high-class neighborhoods."
According to Stratfor, there is a rivalry between the Egyptian army and police. The army is a symbol of national unity, and large parts of it sympathize with the protesters in varying degrees. During the last days, there were many instances of soldiers joining the rallies, and pictures circulate of protesters carrying junior officers on their shoulders.
The police, on the other hand, are widely perceived as an instrument of oppression. Even though it was overwhelmed on Friday, it is very well organized and diverse. Its sudden disappearance from the streets is by itself strange. Despite that it is hard to verify the reports - and unreasonable to blame all looting on the police - it seems that the regime anticipated the chaos and wanted the people to start missing the police a little.
If successful, this strategy could give Mubarak one last chance to turn the tide. On Sunday morning, he seemed broken down; the appointment of his confidante and intelligence chief General Omar Suleiman as vice president - a post that has been vacant for 30 years - was widely interpreted as a prelude to a transition of power. Chaos was rampant and rumors circulated that he had left Cairo. Even the American administration had apparently written him off.
However, Obama may possibly have jumped the gun. Mubarak is one of the world's oldest and most experienced leaders. While many described him as disconnected from reality, he was possibly laying low and waiting for the opportune moment to play his last remaining cards.
Stratfor also reports that on Monday, the police will be back in many places. This will be a crucial test for Mubarak's strategy. It will also be a test for the relationship between the army and the various forces of the Interior Ministry. We should also keep in mind the question how the appointment of a government dominated by the military might play into the internal intrigues.
As I argued in my previous story Days of rage in Egypt (Asia Times Online, January 28, 2011), another decisive factor is how well the protesters will be able to organize and rally around clearly-defined goals. Stratfor seems to believe they are not: "The demonstrators are deeply divided among themselves and thus far do not appear to have been able to generate the type of mass movement that toppled the Shah of Iran's regime in 1979."
The situation remains extremely volatile. Even if Mubarak survives the protests, he is reportedly very ill, and may well step down in the near future. What all this will mean for Egypt's foreign policy is unclear. Israeli analysts have speculated that Israel might need to revamp its operational doctrine and to beef up its forces in the south. In Stratfor's analysis:
If Egypt were to abrogate the Camp David Accords and over time reconstruct its military into an effective force, the existential threat to Israel that existed before the treaty was signed would re-emerge. This would not happen quickly, but Israel would have to deal with two realities. The first is that the Israeli military is not nearly large enough or strong enough to occupy and control Egypt. The second is that the development of Egypt's military would impose substantial costs on Israel and limit its room for maneuver.
However, a close - and perhaps informal - short-term alliance between Egypt and Israel is not unconceivable under certain circumstances. If Mubarak survives, he and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu might well find themselves in the same boat of American allies that Obama has picked a fight with (Netanyahu has campaigned among world leaders to go easy on Mubarak, the Israeli Ha'aretz daily newspaper reported early on Monday). The two leaders would also have a common grudge against Hamas, which, according to reports, broke the Egyptian blockade of Gaza during the past days and attempted to form a new front against Mubarak.
Finally, it is important to keep in mind the Iranian standoff. It doesn't seem so far that Iran is directly involved in the tumult in Egypt. However, if Israel is threatened with a new, if hypothetical and removed in time, front in the south, would that draw resources away from the Iranian crisis, or would it make it more urgent? It is hard to answer this question right away, but clues will most likely emerge in the coming days and weeks.
Notes
1. Cairo: Anger starting to focus on Israel, US, the Jerusalem Post, 30 January 2011.
2. Report: US backed Egypt uprising planners, ynetnews.com, 29 January 2011.
Victor Kotsev is a journalist and political analyst based in Tel Aviv.
(Copyright 2011 Asia Times Online (Holdings) Ltd. All rights reserved. Please contact us about sales, syndication and republishing.)
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Re: Egypt is collapsing!
http://tweetgrid.com/search?q=%23egypt+%23jan25
StrangeTales: RT @carlesdijous: 1. Only a fool would seek to predict the course of the Tunisian and now the Egyptian revolutions. http://bit.ly/hkzgaA #Egypt #Jan25
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 09:46:33 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
elbblitz: #Egypt people fighting for democracy & freedom get killed and the world keeps ignoring the situation. Disgusting to know that! #jan25
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 09:46:33 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
AJArabic: المتظاهرون في مصر يدعون إلى مظاهرة مليونية غدا الثلاثاء #jan25 #Egypt #aljazeera
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 09:46:33 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
NadineToukan: growing list of people on group in #Egypt http://twitter.com/Christiversity/eg...ising-realtime pls grow and share #jan25
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 09:46:28 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
Oxenstierna_IRL: RT @telecomix: http://bit.ly/gyDOwk french article by @lemondefr on "circumvention of the blackout Web organized" #jan25 #egypt #fdn #telecomix
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 09:46:27 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
eyadqaes: تحية إكبار لطاقم الجزيرة ، تميز الجزيرة في التغطية ، هو من جهود رجال ونساء وطنيين يقودنها. #aljazeera #Egypt #25jan #jan25
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 09:46:25 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
Paulo_Archie_GP: RT @ReutersAero: #Egypt unrest doesn't bode well for #airline fuel bills http://tinyurl.com/69j3aje #Jan25
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 09:46:24 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
Paulo_Archie_GP: RT @ReutersAero: #Egypt unrest doesn't bode well for #airline fuel bills http://tinyurl.com/69j3aje #Jan25
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 09:46:24 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
Net_News_Global: RT @AmoonaE: Gawdat El-Malt denies he is Egypt's new finance minister #Jan25 #Egypt (Reuters) LOL enno ppl, some credibility plz, consult each other :D
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 09:46:24 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
anjabb: RT @andrewbonar: Everything ██is█████ ████ ████fine ███ █ ████ love. ████ █████ the ███ Egypt ███ ████ government ██ #jan25 #Egypt #censorship
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 09:46:23 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
YaserQ8: نحو مئة ألف متظاهر يتجمعون حاليا في ميدان التحرير وسط القاهرة /الجزيرة #kuwait #jan25 #egypt
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 09:46:23 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
saraIbrahim: RT @alarabiya_ar: وزير المالية يوسف غالي رفض الانضمام للحكومة الجديدة #alarabiya #egypt #cairo #jan25 #jan28 #Internet
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 09:46:23 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
maxijozami: RT @Jnoubiyeh: Israel supports the Hosni #Mubarak dictatorship by providing it with weapons to crack down on protesters. #Egypt #Jan25 http://bit.ly/gVmq4X
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 09:46:22 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
No_Ignorance: I posted 3 photos on Facebook in the album "#Egypt #Jan25 part 2" http://fb.me/S7FFTQpv
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 09:46:21 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
alarabiya_ar: وزير التجارة السابق رشيد محمد رشيد رفض الانضمام للحكومة الجديدة #alarabiya #egypt #cairo #jan25 #jan28 #Internet
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 09:46:21 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
hsb0: صورة مؤثرة | مواطن مصري يدعو الله في صلاته - ميدان التحرير, القاهره #egypt #cairo #jan25 #jan28 http://twitpic.com/3v50gl
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 09:46:20 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
GetALife_Q8: #jan25 #egypt ديني الإسلام وكذا وطني وولدت بأرض عربية حريتكم حددناها بثلاث بنود أصلية فوق الخازوق لكم علم والحفل بيوم الحرية
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 09:46:20 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
hany0009: RT @alarabiya_ar: وزير المالية يوسف غالي رفض الانضمام للحكومة الجديدة #alarabiya #egypt #cairo #jan25 #jan28 #Internet
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 09:46:19 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
EmptyNestExpat: RT @benjamingeer: ♻ @bencnn: Met stock broker: "The market has crashed, tourism collapsed, nothing's working. What more can Mubarak destroy?" #Egypt #Jan25
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 09:46:19 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
atefsaid: RT @hurriya: USA deploys troops to #Egypt, in anticipation of anti- Mubarak uprising http://bit.ly/flVVUi #Jan25 #Jan30
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 09:46:17 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
soraida_fae: อดีตรมว.พาณิชย์และอุตสาหกรรม ปฏิเสธเข้าร่วมรัฐบาลชุดใหม่ #Egypt #jan25
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 09:46:17 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
trishzanetti: RT @AJEnglish: Al Jazeera Audio Update 12 http://audioboo.fm/boos/266597-al-ja...udio-update-12 #aljazeera #jan25 #egypt
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 09:46:13 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
trishzanetti: RT @AJEnglish: Al Jazeera Audio Update 12 http://audioboo.fm/boos/266597-al-ja...udio-update-12 #aljazeera #jan25 #egypt
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 09:46:13 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
AbeerKhan: RT @bencnn: US citizen tells me: "I have new-found disrespect for US government, which just can't come out and say to Mubarak: GO! NOW!" #Egypt #Jan25
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 09:46:13 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
manolis: RT @salatatv: Εμφανίζεται ο Χάρος στον Μουμπάρακ. - «Ήρθε η ώρα να αποχαιρετήσεις τον αιγυπτιακό λαό» - «Γιατί, πού θα πάνε;» #Jan25 #egypt
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 09:46:13 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
cherylabdul: @lifeline4gaza WORLD CITIZENS LETS GO TO EGYPT AND RECLAIM RAFAH CROSSING http://j.mp/hIrPMI #8FEB #EGYPT #JAN25 #GAZA Plz RT
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Re: Egypt is collapsing!
http://twitter.com/AymanM
- Internet still down in #egypt, will continue to tweet via phone calls when possible #jan25 34 minutes ago via web
- More defiance on streets as protesters gather at Tahrir Square for 7th straight day #egypt #jan25 (via phone) 42 minutes ago via web
- #egypt million man march scheduled 4 tomorrow #feb1 to mark 1 week anniversary of #jan25 (via phone call) 44 minutes ago via web
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Re: Egypt is collapsing!
http://twitter.com/nolanjazeera
- No ATM's making life hard for all but at least we have credit cards. Most Egyptians use cash. Many feeling v much under siege #Egypt about 2 hours ago via Twitter for iPhone
- Food prices rising v quickly now. So too petrol & phone cards. But yet to find an ATM in Cairo that has any money left #Egypt about 2 hours ago via Twitter for iPhone
- Rumours circulating in military circles internet will come back on when people go home. So I guess we could be waiting a while then! #Egypt about 2 hours ago via Twitter for iPhone
- Soldiers guarding Cairo hotel where most media staying. Check passports of all who enter/leave. Military presence downtown increasing #Egypt about 2 hours ago via Twitter for iPhone
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Re: Egypt is collapsing!
http://twitter.com/AJELive
- concern grows over whereabouts of #egyptian blogger @ghonim who's been reported missing since Thursday's #protests: http://aje.me/dXuUkh 18 minutes ago via web
- Our producer confirms police have redeployed on the streets of Cairo in this audio report: http://aje.me/dXuUkh 37 minutes ago via web
- nolanjazeera AJE web team in #Cairo also doing a great job under trying circumstances. Check out their audio reports via Egypt page aljazeera.net/english about 3 hours ago via Twitter for iPhone Retweeted by AJELive and 57 others
- AlJazeera's @glcarlstrom reports Egypt state TV praises police saying they 'arrested 100s of fugitives' who 'escaped' prison ths week #jan25 about 4 hours ago via web
- RT @glcarlstrom Tahrir Sq closed this morning, barbed wire wrapped around the area; army officer told me it'll be shut all day/night #jan25 about 4 hours ago via web
- RT @evanchill Back up with internet this morning in Cairo. Heavy smog over the city, don't know if fires have anything to do with it #jan25 about 4 hours ago via web
- @nolanjazeera's story from a Cairo morgue was mentioned by govt security, who shut AJ down in #Egypt. Watch his report http://aje.me/fyalPF about 5 hours ago via web
- Here’s a little help if ambition ever drives you to one day hope to be a US gvt spokesperson | Al Jazeera Blogs http://aje.me/gViOQ6 #egypt about 5 hours ago via web
- melissakchan In US: Dish Network and DirecTV temporarily airing Al Jazeera. It can be found on channel 9410 on Dish Network and 375 on DirecTV. about 9 hours ago via Seesmic Desktop Retweeted by AJELive and 100+ others
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Re: Egypt is collapsing!
http://tweetgrid.com/search?q=%23egypt+%23jan25
EgypttheBrave: RT @AlyaaGad: Thought FaceBook kids were losers? Think again; because they are now poking history in the eye & blocking a whole government. #Jan25 #Egypt
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:01:50 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
phijazin: RT @bencnn: US citizens tell me: "I pay taxes to support this @#$(%? This is an outrage. We must stop writing cheques now!" #Egypt #Jan25
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:01:50 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
Ssirgany: Until police understands that people's lives are sacred & more valuable than the govt, nothing will change. #jan25 #egypt
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:01:48 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
pickinjava: Apologies .. old reality is of @Vodafone_group (#Egypt) #ITT (#Chile) aiding dictators #Jan25 http://bit.ly/fVTRcP
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:01:48 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
Ummorie: الطوفان قادم بعد تأخر دام أكثر١٤٠٠ سنة!! فهل يدخل العرب التاريخ من جديد؟! #Egypt #Jan25 #Feb1
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:01:48 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
HB_1_2011: MUBARAK DOWN, NEW CONSITUTION; TRIALS FOR NDP #egypt #mubarak #jan25
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:01:47 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
rqskye: RT @justimage: Reports of Cairo airport officials confiscating equipment (cameras) from arriving journalists #EGypt #jan25
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:01:45 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
jannagae: RT @tinalouiseUK: We speak one language - When WE THE PEOPLE cry out - For freedom, for truth #jan25 #tunisia #egypt #protest #mubarak #haiku
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:01:44 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
professorkim: RT @DemocracyNow: Tune in for special program on #Egypt: Live reports w DN! producer @sharifkouddous. Stream 8amEST: http://ow.ly/3MCV5 #jan25
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:01:44 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
gbrew: Undaunted by police, man leads protest in #Doha. #Egypt #Jan25 http://twitpic.com/3v4xni http://twitpic.com/3v4xak http://twitpic.com/3v4wsq
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:01:43 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
http://twitpic.com/show/thumb/3v4xni
too_oot: RT @Gawabaty: الشعب يريد اعدام الرئيس ! #Jan25 #Egypt
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:01:41 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
summersale7: RT @justimage: Reports of Cairo airport officials confiscating equipment (cameras) from arriving journalists #EGypt #jan25
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:01:39 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
Umm_Issa: More photo's from Egypt's protests http://tinyurl.com/682joxl #Jan25 #Egypt
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:01:39 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
Gender_Agenda: Al Jazeera English looking to interview UK based Egyptian bloggers. Any suggestions? #egypt #jan25 @RuwaydaMustafah @monaeltahawy
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:01:37 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
robocloser: the longer mobarak hangs on in #jan25 #egypt the more i can see him ending up like ceaucescu in romania ... @JRobertDuBois @khabarNYC
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:01:35 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
Sanazolo: RT @AJArabic: المتظاهرون في مصر يدعون إلى مظاهرة مليونية غدا الثلاثاء #jan25 #Egypt #aljazeera
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:01:35 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
kris1too: RT @justimage: Reports of Cairo airport officials confiscating equipment (cameras) from arriving journalists #EGypt #jan25
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:01:35 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
netuuk: '이집트 민주화 운동을 보다가' http://netuuk.g3.cc/entry/egypt #egypt #jan25
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:01:33 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
NadineToukan: RT @tololy: #Egypt #Jan25 protesters name next Friday "Departure Day" for Mubarak. People are determined to oust the tyrant. #ArabProtest #fb
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:01:31 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
shoufkeef: العربية: كريديه سويس يتوقع ارتفاع سعر النفط بسبب أزمة مصر #EGYPT #JAN25 #ALMATRAFI
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:01:31 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
omanizer_muscat: كل ما اصحى من النوم ، اركض افتح التلفزيون ، اقول : ليكون سقط مبارك وما لحقت أهني وأبارك . بس مبارك لسه موجود والله موجود #egypt #jan25
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:01:31 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
Kawachi_Maru: Re: International Business Times: Blocked in #Egypt, Twitter speaks on freedom of expression - http://bit.ly/gSpjjo #Jan25
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:01:30 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
Muschelschloss: Unruhen in Ägypten: Mubaraks Gegner rüsten zum Super-Dienstag http://bit.ly/eS6yFq #Jan25 #Egypt
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:01:30 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
omassain: Je vous conseille de suivre @DailyNewsEgypt #jan25 #egypt
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:01:30 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
bigrooster: RT @FBtv_dot_tk: #Egypt #Jan25 > 03. A protester reaches out as a soldier holds a child during a... http://tinyurl.com/48swfeb
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:01:30 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
Shoruk_K: Thousands slept overnight in Tahrir Sq #jan25 #egypt
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:01:30 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
Lahcenhaddad: RT @stefanct: @ArabRevolution @alaa @ioerror why only there? lets make that global! 2:00 PM UTC in front of the embassies etc.? #jan25 #Egypt
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:01:29 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
Ryb3ck: RT C0d3Fr0sty: General Mahmoud Wagdy, head of the Prison's Authority Now Interior Minister of #Egypt - http://bit.ly/fHgQ13 #Mubarak #Jan25
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:01:29 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
trishzanetti: RT @manal officer on the street asking people to go home, was stripped & left on street in his underwear #Egypt #jan25 #pharaoh
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:01:28 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
HADarabi: RT @AlyaaGad: الثورة الايرانية عمرها من عمر حكم مبارك:٧٥٪من الايرانيين ولدوا في عهدها.ثاني سبب للموت في ايران هو الانتحار.الحل هو العلمانية #Egypt #Jan25
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:01:28 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
cherylabdul: RT @ummhajarforpal: @SultanAlQassemi emergency! anyone know way get from Port said to Cairo airport? Please MSG #egypt #jan25
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Re: Egypt is collapsing!
http://tweetgrid.com/search?q=%23egypt+%23jan25
wanlovecom: RT @tulsathit: RT @Dany_k: A must see video of the Police Vs. Protestors on the Bridge: http://youtu.be/dBtYLBQPRGQ #egypt #jan25
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:03:32 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
fluutekies: RT @GolamAbiNawas: did u call #vodafone & #orange today & protest about their collaboration with the #dictatorship in #Egypt? #jan25 http://twitpic.com/3v54p9
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:03:31 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
fluutekies: RT @GolamAbiNawas: did u call #vodafone & #orange today & protest about their collaboration with the #dictatorship in #Egypt? #jan25 http://twitpic.com/3v54p9
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:03:31 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
winnie_bravo: BREAKING: Hillary will hold a meeting with ALL ambassadors in the US. Largest meeting in history #egypt #jan25 #pharaoh
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:03:31 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
Jamalhs: رغم خلافنا معهم، لكن حركة الأخوان وشبانها أثبتوا أنهم على مستوى راق من المسؤولية والتضحية والايثار، فتحية لجهودهم #Egypt #jan25 #Islamic
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:03:29 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
onlyforegypt: RT @justimage: Reports of Cairo airport officials confiscating equipment (cameras) from arriving journalists #EGypt #jan25
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:03:25 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
mohammadrizvi: Egypt Update: The Suez governor has also fled, according to the trade unionist - unconfirmed!! #Egypt #jan25
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:03:24 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
sarahbadr: RT @justimage Reports of Cairo airport officials confiscating equipment (cameras) from arriving journalists. #egypt #jan25
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:03:24 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
MacBerry: RT @Anon_VV: Everything ██is█████ ████ ████fine ███ █ ████ love. ████ █████ the ███ Egypt ███ ████ government ██ #jan25 #Egypt #censorship
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:03:24 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
Anon_Lobo: RT @NiceBastard: Missing Person's List on Google Docs #jan25 #egypt http://t.co/VQvLXYY
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:03:22 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
PrinceofRazors: RT @Ssirgany: Until police understands that people's lives are sacred & more valuable than the govt, nothing will change. #jan25 #egypt
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:03:20 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
plothenomad: MUST SEE! #EGYPT REVOLUTION 2011! PROTESTERS VS POLICE! http://bit.ly/eBoBkX #Egypt #Mubarak #Jan25 PASS ON!!
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:03:20 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
OM77: وقف الخلق: أغنية أم كلثوم في برومو الجزيرة - أنا إن قدر الإله مماتي لا ترى الشرق يرفع الرأس بعدي http://t.co/UY37rEo #egypt #jan25
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:03:20 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
onlyforegypt: RT @Ssirgany: Until police understands that people's lives are sacred & more valuable than the govt, nothing will change. #jan25 #egypt
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:03:17 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
Dina_R: RT @JassimQ: وزير الداخلية الجديداللواء محمود وجدي كان مساعد الوزير لقطاع السجون وكان يتم تعذيب السجناء تحت عينه وتهريب المرضي عنهم بإشرافه #Jan25 #Egypt
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:03:14 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
UKguy4justice: RT @bencnn: Hearing TE Data, main Egyptian internet service provider, will maintain internet interruption for at least another week. #Jan25 #Egypt
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:03:12 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
elrefaei: RT @Ssirgany: Until police understands that people's lives are sacred & more valuable than the govt, nothing will change. #jan25 #egypt
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:03:11 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
EANewsFeed: #Egypt LiveBlog: How "Old Guard" & Young On-Line Activists Planned Last Friday's Protests http://tinyurl.com/69npbu8 #Jan25 #sidibouzid
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:03:10 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
Christiversity: And still more people are following my inside #egypt list! Thanks so much guys, think I'll give you all a shoutout :) #jan25
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:03:10 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
nrodovsky: .@France24 reports that police are slowly returning to streets of #Cairo #Egypt #Jan25
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:03:09 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
gatodabruxa: RT @TheTruthNetwork: ♻ PHOTO #Egypt Revolts #Jan25 > 03. A protester reaches out as a soldier holds a child during a demonstration in... http://fb.me/UphG64QQ
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:03:09 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
undercoverman: RT @ioerror: The people of Egypt want the world to know about this: http://www.twitlonger.com/show/8fflmc #egypt #jan25 #suez #cairo
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:03:08 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
noushin: RT @shabbirh: This is the story from the #Cairo morgue that got #AJE banned in #Egypt http://bit.ly/hl2Ow4 #jan25
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:03:08 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
Shoruk_K: This is just a new military regime, Wagdy (interior minister) was a former general. #jan25 #egypt
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:03:08 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
1fleetingglimps: RT @Ssirgany: Until police understands that people's lives are sacred & more valuable than the govt, nothing will change. #jan25 #egypt
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:03:06 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
SundayGuardian: How the #Jan25 protests in #Egypt have given the world lessons in the importance of the internet & new media http://bit.ly/e8pqrq @misskaul
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Re: Egypt is collapsing!
Al Jazeera now saying that protestors are calling for a nationwide strike
http://english.aljazeera.net/watch_now/
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Re: Egypt is collapsing!
AJE - Heavy military presence across the Egyptian capital on Monday amid unrest
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Re: Egypt is collapsing!
AJE
- Mahmoud Wagdi named as Interior Minister
- Banks & Businesses close
- Government are evacuating tourists
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Re: Egypt is collapsing!
Mahmoud Wagdi is know in Egypt as having an Iron Fist against any kind of protests.
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Re: Egypt is collapsing!
Five Al Jazeera journalists arrested in the egyptian capital Cairo
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Re: Egypt is collapsing!
http://tweetgrid.com/search?q=%23egypt+%23jan25
kigo: RT @stbwien: 5 JOURNALISTS FROM AL-JAZEERA ENGLISH HAVE BEEN ARRESTED! #egypt #jan25
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:15:55 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
mflakah: RT @nolanjazeera: Arrested by military #jan25 #Egypt
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:15:55 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
shaima2: RT @nolanjazeera: 4 soldiers entered room took our camera. Wr ae under military arrest #Egypt #jan25
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:15:52 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
ysalah: RT @nolanjazeera: 4 soldiers entered room took our camera. Wr ae under military arrest #Egypt #jan25
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:15:51 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
eqcco: RT @jrug: Tahrir Sq like a family picnic. More women now, babies. Everyone offering us food. 1000s here #Cairo #jan25 #Egypt
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:15:51 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
barrysmit: RT @nolanjazeera: 4 soldiers entered room took our camera. Wr ae under military arrest #Egypt #jan25
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:15:51 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
azadessa: RT @davidpoort: Five #aljazeera journalists arrested in Cairo #jan25 #egypt
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:15:51 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
GrogsGamut: RT @nolanjazeera: 4 soldiers entered room took our camera. Wr ae under military arrest #Egypt #jan25
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:15:50 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
eniedowski: RT @nolanjazeera: 4 soldiers entered room took our camera. Wr ae under military arrest #Egypt #jan25
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:15:50 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
b9AcE: RT @nolanjazeera: 4 soldiers entered room took our camera. Wr ae under military arrest #Egypt #jan25
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:15:49 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
KonWomyn: RT @nolanjazeera: 4 soldiers entered room took our camera. Wr ae under military arrest #Egypt #jan25
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:15:48 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
porrporr: Wie man/frau kommuniziert, wenn die Regierung das Internet abdrehthttp://bit.ly/e8ukbA #egypt #jan25
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:15:48 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
pincampana2: RT @nolanjazeera: 4 soldiers entered room took our camera. Wr ae under military arrest #Egypt #jan25
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Re: Egypt is collapsing!
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Re: Egypt is collapsing!
http://tweetgrid.com/search?q=%23egypt+%23jan25
nolanjazeera: Unsure if arrested or about to be deported. 6 of us held at army checkpoint outside Hilton hotel. Equipment seized too. #Egypt #jan25
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:23:54 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
Olaf_HB: latest news : a currently unconfirmed number of al jazeera #journalists incl. @nolanjazeera are under #military #arrest now ! #jan25 #egypt
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:23:54 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
MORGANPALMER: RT @nytjim: RT @fieldproducer: RT @nolanjazeera 4 soldiers entered room took our camera. Wr ae under military arrest #Egypt #jan25
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:23:53 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
crisnadruz: RT @stanleyburburin: AJEnglish Correspondentes da Al Jazeera no #Egypt foram presos pelos militares. Assista ao vivo: http://aje.me/ajelive #tahrir #cairo #jan25
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:23:52 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
EmpowerShadab: RT @mjaincs47: [abcdefghijklmnop] RT @cfarivar: Please note: #egypt on this link .See more http://bit.ly/e0BlHC #jan25 #jan#26 (via @telecomix) #reaction
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:23:52 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
hypervocal: RT @nolanjazeera: 4 soldiers entered room took our camera. Wr ae under military arrest #Egypt #jan25
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:23:52 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
abedshaheen: RT @_BiGsAm_: RT @AmoonaE: 4 soldiers entered the room and took our camera. We are under military arrest. #Egypt #jan25 (via @nolanjazeera)
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:23:50 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
yabuyaishbak: RT @octavianasr: Still can't independently confirm "information" about #Mubarak stepping down. Keeping an eye on #Egypt State TV. #Jan25
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:23:50 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
Metztli_IT: ♺ @nolanjazeera: 4 soldiers entered room took our camera. Wr ae [6 reporters] under military arrest [ http://ub0.cc/Mn/k7 ] #Egypt #jan25
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:23:50 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
kakouik: RT ++++++“@rzabaneh: URGENT on #Egypt #Jan25: Egyptian security detains FIVE of @AJEnglish journalists in Cairo.”
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:23:50 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
asiahkelley: RT @bencnn: US citizen tells me: "I have new-found disrespect for US government, which just can't come out and say to Mubarak: GO! NOW!" #Egypt #Jan25
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:23:50 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
ZaTLa_CoRpS: RT @taniabranigan: RT @fieldproducer: RT @nolanjazeera 4 soldiers entered room took our camera. Wr ae under military arrest #Egypt #jan25
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:23:49 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
beandev: RT @stand4haq: Tahrir Sq like a family picnic. More women now, babies. Everyone offering us food. 1000s here #Cairo #jan25 #Egypt Via @jrug
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:23:49 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
FeliceYolanda: RT @maxijozami: Libertad a los 5 periodistas de #AlJazeera detenidos en #Egipto, abajo Mubarak! #Egypt #jan25 @AJELive @nolanjazeera
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:23:49 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
JNewsLondon: RT @nytjim: RT @fieldproducer: RT @nolanjazeera 4 soldiers entered room took our camera. Wr ae under military arrest #Egypt #jan25
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:23:48 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
mutairy: RT @AJArabic: قوات عسكرية تلقي القبض على ٥ من صحفيي قناة الجزيرة الإنجليزية في العاصمة المصرية #jan25 #Egypt #aljazeera
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:23:48 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
ClaireBerlinski: RT @AymanM: #aljazeera staff arrested in Cairo, signal interrupted #Egypt #jan25
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:23:47 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
7AmDa: RT @ammr: 3 found, 11 still missing, please help find missing ppl http://bit.ly/ghonim @ghonim is still missing :( #jan25 #egypt
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:23:47 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
FlotillaGo: RT @AmoonaE: 6 AJE journos have been arrested, not the entire team. Still have some of team out on the streets. http://aje.me/ajelive #egypt #jan25
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:23:46 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
chanadbh: RT @nolanjazeera: 4 soldiers entered room took our camera. Wr ae under military arrest #Egypt #jan25
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:23:46 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
andybrantford: RT @AymanM: #aljazeera staff arrested in Cairo, signal interrupted #Egypt #jan25
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:23:46 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
Nienkemper: @CineversityTV perskaarten zijn ongeldig verklaard #Jan25 #Egypt #Egypte
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:23:45 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
Nienkemper: @CineversityTV perskaarten zijn ongeldig verklaard #Jan25 #Egypt #Egypte
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:23:45 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
luesunday23: “RT @turimunthe: #aljazeera staff arrested in Cairo, signal interrupted #Egypt #jan25 (via @AymanM)”
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:23:45 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
NailaWaked: RT @ArabRevolution: BREAKING: Egyptians from different provinces start travelling to Cairo for the 1 million people march tomorrow. AlJazeera #jan25 #Egypt
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:23:44 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
amnistiaespana: RT @jpmlynch: Large crowds of anti-Mubarak protestors heaading for Tahrir Sq. #Jan25 #Egypt
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:23:44 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
MGo33: RT @nolanjazeera: 4 soldiers entered room took our camera. Wr ae under military arrest #Egypt #jan25
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:23:41 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
ahmsmd: RT @ajtalk: وزير الداخلية الجديد إتهم بقضيه رشوة في بدايه حياته وكان مهدد بالفصل من الداخلية, ومعروف عنه سوء السمعه #jan25 #jan28 #egypt #cairo #mubarak
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:23:41 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
StevenJBoland: RT @nolanjazeera: 4 soldiers entered room took our camera. Wr ae under military arrest #Egypt #jan25
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:23:40 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
Anon_Lobo: RT @bencnn: US citizen tells me: "I have new-found disrespect for US government, which just can't come out and say to Mubarak: GO! NOW!" #Egypt #Jan25
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:23:40 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
AbilYasir: RT @shahrzadmo: 6 people have been arrested, not the entire team. We still have some of our team out on the streets #egypt #jan25 v @ajenglish
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:23:39 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
ziadt: RT @nolanjazeera: 4 soldiers entered room took our camera. Wr ae under military arrest #Egypt #jan25
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:23:38 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
HebaF: أنا ان قـدّر الإلـه مماتي ، لاترى الشرق يرفع الرأس بعدي #Egypt #Tahrir #jan25
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:23:38 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
andizottmann: RT @nolanjazeera: 4 soldiers entered room took our camera. Wr ae under military arrest #Egypt #jan25
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:23:37 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
CelizMurray: @Joelcpj > "4 soldiers entered room took our camera. Wr ae under military arrest #Egypt #jan25" @nolanjazeera #jan25
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:23:36 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
tipobyte: RT @stanleyburburin: Reuters FLASH - 5 dos jornalistas da Al Jazeera foram presos no #Egypt #jan25
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:23:36 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
alilouhicham: RT @alarabiya_ar: أ ف ب: سائح سويسري يقول إنه تعرض للتعذيب من قبل الشركة في مصر لمدة 4 أيام #alarabiya #egypt #cairo #jan25 #jan28 #Internet
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:23:36 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
alilouhicham: RT @alarabiya_ar: أ ف ب: سائح سويسري يقول إنه تعرض للتعذيب من قبل الشركة في مصر لمدة 4 أيام #alarabiya #egypt #cairo #jan25 #jan28 #Internet
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:23:36 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
khadijapatel: RT @azadessa: one more! now six #AlJazeeraJournalists arrested in Cairo #egypt #mubarak #jan25
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:23:35 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
Maestro_Abraham: RT @stand4haq: Tahrir Sq like a family picnic. More women now, babies. Everyone offering us food. 1000s here #Cairo #jan25 #Egypt Via @jrug
segunda-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2011 10:23:35 [Reply] [ReTweet] [Favorite]
ALuizCosta: RT @bencnn: Hearing TE Data, main Egyptian internet service provider, will maintain internet interruption for at least another week. #Jan25 #Egypt
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Re: Egypt is collapsing!
http://twitter.com/nolanjazeera
- Unsure if arrested or about to be deported. 6 of us held at army checkpoint outside Hilton hotel. Equipment seized too. #Egypt #jan25 3 minutes ago via Twitter for iPhone
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Re: Egypt is collapsing!
http://af.reuters.com/article/energy...7CV08K20110131
Ships unable to get navy escorts, some supplies at Egypt's Suez port
Mon Jan 31, 2011 5:31am GMT
By Randy Fabi
SINGAPORE, Jan 31 (Reuters) - Vessels at Egypt's port of Suez are unable to pick-up military escorts for protection through the pirate-prone Gulf of Aden due to the unrest in the country, a senior industry official said on Monday.
Ships have been travelling through the Suez Canal, the main passageway for Europe's crude oil and imported goods, as usual with no reports of delays or cancellations.
Operations at the port have slowed, however, as anti-government protests have kept supplies and some staff from reaching the docks.
"No ships have been delayed, but there have been no immigration or customs officials to clear security teams for shipments for the past two days," said a senior coordinator with a shipping firm operating in Suez, who wished not to be named.
"Crew changes for ships have also stopped and some provisions, like food and water, were not reaching the port," he added.
Suez has jumped into the world's radar as the scene of clashes between government forces and protesters demanding the removal of President Hosni Mubarak, who has ruled Egypt for three decades.
Half of all vessels that travel through the Suez Canal stop at the port city to re-supply, refuel, change crew and pick-up security escorts, the company official said.
More than 34,000 vessels passed through the canal in 2009, of which nearly 2,700 were oil tankers carrying some 29 million tonnes of oil, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration.
Ships were now docking at ports in nearby countries, like Turkey and the United Arab Emirates, to obtain military escorts and supplies.
The maritime industry has become increasingly reliant on military escorts for protection against Somali pirates when travelling through the Gulf of Aden via the Suez Canal.
Global pirate attacks hit a seven-year high in 2010 and a record number of crew were taken hostage, with Somali pirates accounting for 49 of the 52 ships seized, the International Maritime Bureau watchdog said this month.
(Reporting by Randy Fabi; Editing by Ed Lane)
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Re: Egypt is collapsing!
http://www.trust.org/alertnet/news/d...lood-protests/
Dozens detained in Saudi Arabia over flood protests
28 Jan 2011
Source: reuters // Reuters
* Protesters gathered after Friday prayers
* Some Jeddah streets remain flooded, electricity cut off
JEDDAH, Jan 28 (Reuters) - Saudi authorities detained dozens of demonstrators on Friday in Jeddah who gathered to protest against poor infrastructure after deadly floods swept through Saudi Arabia's second biggest city, police and witnesses said.
Some Jeddah streets remained submerged on Friday, and electricity was still out in low-lying parts of the city two days after torrential rains caused flooding that killed at least four people and swept away cars.
The protest came after mass messages sent over BlackBerry smartphones called for popular action in response to the flood, an unusual move in the Gulf Arab state at a time of spreading anti-government unrest across the Arab world.
Protesters gathered for about 15 minutes after Friday prayers on a main Jeddah shopping street and shouted 'God is Greatest' before authorities broke up the protest and detained participants, a witness who works in a nearby shop told Reuters.
One police officer said around 30 protesters were detained and police were pursuing others who fled to a nearby building. Another officer put the number held at around 50.
"They took them all. They were protesting. There were about 30 people. There are still some people hiding in that building over there. The police are looking for them and trying to arrest them," a police officer at a station near the protest said.
About 12 police cars surrounded the building where protesters were hiding, and 30 more blocked off the street near where the protest happened.
A mass message sent via BlackBerry Messenger on Thursday urged Jeddah residents to join a demonstration on Saturday over the floods, while another urged all government and private sector employees to hold a general strike next week. But Friday's protest had been unexpected.
"No work for the full week until they find a solution to the roads of Jeddah," the message said. It was not known who sent the messages.
The call for action in the top oil exporter, where public protest is not tolerated, comes as open defiance of authoritarian rulers spreads, with protests in Egypt and Yemen inspired by unrest which toppled Tunisia's president this month.
The government has said it will give all assistance to victims of floods. On Wednesday, King Abdullah, who is resting in Morocco after back operations in New York, ordered rescue operations to be stepped up, warning officials not to delay his orders, state media said.
The last time the port city was flooded, in 2009, 120 people were killed, triggering rare debate about management of public funds and infrastructure defects in one of the world's richest countries and an investigation into the problems.
Jeddah residents said the floods were four metres deep in some places in the Red Sea port of four million inhabitants, and some reported being stranded for hours when waters rose.
(Reporting by Asma Alsharif; Writing by Cynthia Johnston; editing by Myra MacDonald)