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  • 8/2/2019 Live Blog- Egypt in Crisis, Day Six - World Watch - CBS News

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    C

    World Watch

    Live Blog: Egypt in Crisis, Day Six

    For the sixth straight day, protesters have taken to the streets of Cairo as President Hosni

    Mubarak refuses to step down and end his 30-year rule. Our blog covers the latest news coming

    out of Cairo.

    Day Five coverage of Egypt in Crisis

    Complete Coverage of Anger in the Arab World

    Opposition leader Mohamed ElBaradei waves to supporters in Tahrir Square on

    January 30, 2011 in Cairo, Egypt. Cairo remained in a state of flux and marchers

    continued to protest in the streets and defy curfew, demanding the resignation of

    Egyptian president Hosni Mubarek. As President Mubarak struggles to regain control

    after five days of protests he has appointed Omar Suleiman as vice-president. The

    present death toll stands at 100 and up to 2,000 people are thought to have been injured

    during the clashes which started last Tuesday. Overnight it was reported that thousands

    of inmates from the Wadi Naturn prison had escaped and that Egyptians were forming

    vigilante groups in order to protect their homes.

    (Credit: Peter Macdiarmid/Getty Images)

    January 30, 2011 7:06 AM

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    9:12 p.m. ET: Al Jazeera has been airing in depth reporting from the ground in Egypt with more

    reporters than any other international news organization. Now, however, Egyptian authorities have shut

    down the Qatar-based news network's Cairo bureau, Wired reports.

    "Regardless of the multiple attempts by the Egyptian authorities to deter and impede our reporting, Al

    Jazeera continues its comprehensive coverage of the landmark events unfolding in Egypt," Wadah

    Khanfar, Director General of Al Jazeera said in a statement.

    9:09 p.m. ET: The Wall Street Journal is reporting that Chinese authorities have blocked the word

    "Egypt" from searches on Twitter-like microblogging sites in an indication of concern among

    Communist Party leaders that the unrest there could encourage similar calls for political reform in

    China.

    9:00 p.m. ET: Palestinian police have blocked attempts to stage demonstrations against Hosni

    Mubarak in front of the Egyptian embassy in the West Bank, the New York Times reports. Ten days

    ago, Palestinian officials decided to block a similar attempt at demonstrating in favor of a popularmovement in front of the Tunisian embassy.

    5:01 p.m. ET: British Prime Minister David Cameron announced that he is joining President Barack

    Obama in calling for an "orderly transition" in Egypt, the Guardian reports. A statement from the PM's

    office reads:

    4:37 p.m. ET: PLAINS, Georgia (AP) - Former President Jimmy Carter said the political unrest and

    rioting in Egypt is an earth-shaking event and that President Hosni Mubarak probably will have to leave

    office.

    The former president, who brokered a peace agreement between Israel and Egypt in 1978, called the

    unrest the most profound situation in the Middle East since he left office in 1981.

    His comments to a Sunday school class he teaches at Maranatha Baptist Church in Plains were

    reported by The Columbus Ledger-Enquirer.

    Carter said that as Mubarak's 30-year rule has continued, the Egyptian leader has become more

    politically corrupt.

    3:22 p.m. ET: The U.S. Embassy in Cairo said it is arranging to begin flying Americans out of Egypt

    on Monday, the Associated Press reports.

    The announcement Sunday evening comes hours after the embassy advised Americans in Egypt to

    consider leaving the country as soon as possible. The statement said the State Department is making

    arrangements to provide those who want to leave with flights to "safehaven locations in Europe."

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    2:09 p.m. ET: The Egyptian government has extended the national curfew by an hour, from 3 p.m. to

    8 a.m., starting on Monday, Reuters is reporting.

    1:40 p.m. ET: Protesters at Tahrir Square have spelled "Down W/Mubarak" with their bodies, Al

    Jazeera reports. According to the same report, the primary demand among protesters remains the

    dissolution of the Mubarak government.

    1:24 p.m. ET: Egypt state TV today showed a broadcast of Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak

    meeting with the newly-appointed Vice President, Omar Suleiman, and Prime Minister, Ahmed Shafiq,

    the BBC reports.

    A broadcaster said the purpose of the meeting was to "set the priorities of the new government,"

    according to the BBC.

    1:15 p.m. ET: The Guardian is reporting that among the prisoners who escaped during mass jail

    breakouts last night were "hundreds of members of the banned Muslim Brotherhood, Egypt's leadingIslamist political party."

    1:03 p.m. ET: Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said he was "anxiously monitoring" the

    unrest in Egypt, according to the Associated Press.

    Netanyahu, addressing Egypt's political situation for the first time since protests broke out there six

    days ago, noted the peaceful relationship that Israel and Egypt have maintained over the last three

    decades, and emphasized that "our objective is to ensure that these ties be preserved."

    12:55 p.m. ET: Al Jazeera reports that tens of thousands of protesters in the Egyptian city of

    Mansoura have joined the call for President Mubarak to resign. Meanwhile, despite the evening curfew

    in Alexandria, protesters there continue to march.

    A protester, who said he was

    wounded during clashes with police in

    the previous days, weeps as he prays

    with other protesters in Tahrir square

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    in downtown Cairo, Egypt, Sunday,

    Jan. 30, 2011.

    (Credit: AP Photo/Lefteris Pitarakis)

    12:38 p.m. ET: The Associated Press is reporting that some police have returned the the streets of

    Cairo, almost two days after the city's longstanding police presence nearly vanished from sight.

    Meanwhile, Al Jazeera reports that the police are scheduled to return to Egyptian streets tomorrow.

    Security forces were partially replaced by the military during the police absence, and, in what appears

    to be an attempt to demonstrate military control, fighter jets swooped low over Cairo just before the

    late afternoon curfew today.

    12:21 p.m. ET: The Guardian is reporting that Egyptian television viewers are unable to watch

    ElBaradei's remarks, because Al Jazeera remains blocked in Egypt. According to the Guardian, state

    television is instead showing footage of security guards outside a government building.

    11:55 a.m. ET:Reuters reporting that ElBaradei tells crowds in central Cairo: "What we have begun

    cannot go back."

    11:41 a.m. ET: Opposition figure Dr. Mohamed ElBaradei reportedly heading to Tahrir Square in

    Cairo. Reports that he has arrived at Tahrir Square.

    11:05 a.m. ET:NYT's Tom Friedman on Meet the Press said that Egypt is in such a hole economically

    it needs to grow at China and India rates. He said the U.S. should focus or hope for a peaceful

    transition, consensual politics and that whatever government emerges it is dedicated to ushering Egypt

    into the 21st century. Mubarak has had three decades to make a transition....hard to see something

    positive coming out of Mubarak relationship going forward.

    Female anti-government protesters

    walk past an Egyptian Army tank at

    the demonstration in Tahrir square in

    downtown Cairo, Egypt, Sunday, Jan.

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    30, 2011.

    (Credit: AP Photo/Ben Curtis)

    10:40 a.m. ET:AP--Gaza Palestinian border official says Egypt has closed its border with the

    Hamas-ruled territory amid the raging turmoil in Egypt. Ghazi Hamad says he expects the closure to

    last several days.

    10:40 a.m. ET:Dr. Mohamed ElBaradei tells Bob Schieffer on Face the Nation that President

    Mubarak "absolutely has to leave."

    "He absolutely has to leave, Bob. This is not me. This is 85 million egyptians. Yesterday it was the call

    for him to leave. Today it's a call for him to put to trial. The american government cannot ask the

    egyptian people to believe that a dictator who has been in power for 30 years will be the one to

    implement democracy. I mean, this is really a farce. I mean people here could be poor but they're

    intelligent. And the first thing which will calm the situation is for Mubarak to leave. Leave with some

    dignity. Otherwise i fear that things will get bloody. You have to stop the life support to the dictator.

    You have to root for the people. You are losing credibility by the day. On the one hand you are talking

    about democracy, rule of law, you know, human rights. On the other hand, you are lending support to

    a dictator who has continued to repress his people. Today as i am sitting here in cairo, jets are flying

    over cairo. We are completely, you know, the internet... the entire internet is shut. The satellite

    television station is shut. Stuff is being looted. Buildings are ablaze. It is a lawless country. I don't see

    how could you wait, you know, for Mr. Mubarak to leave?"

    "I think once Mubarak is out, you will see that a lot of these demonstrations will go home. I can betyou that once he decides or announces or is forced to leave, all the demonstrations will go home. And

    then we are capable here of then running a transitional, smooth transitional peace."

    10:40 a.m. ET:Sec. of State Hillary Clinton on Face the Nation--We would like to encourage having

    the "voice of protest and civil society at table to design orderly transition to meet social and economic

    needs of people"....we want to see outcome of peaceful protest...to result in "true democracy, not a

    phony one."

    "This is an incredibly complex set of circumstances....let's begin to see meeting between governmentand members of civil society."

    10:35 a.m. ET: CBS News' Liz Palmer reports from Cairo, as Egyptian jet fighters scream past

    overhead. The jets are not having any impact on dispersing the crowds.

    10:30 a.m. ET: On CNN ElBaradei said that U.S. policy toward Egypt is "losing credibility," and that

    President Mubarak must make way for unity government. He advised him to leave "today."

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    10:05 a.m. ET:Al Jazerra reporting via Twitter--Egypt army has just told the crowd gathering at

    Tahrir Square that military will not go against the people; Helicopters flying over crowds in Tahrir

    Square- AJE correspondent says crowd cheers every time the helicopters come close.

    9:48 a.m. ET:Reuters reports that Shell is planning to evacuate international staff and families from

    Egypt on Sunday.

    9:14 a.m. ET: Secretary of State Hillary Clinton making the rounds of Sunday morning politics shows:

    No more "faux democracy" in Egypt; Egypt needs to respond to "legitimate aspirations" of its people to

    ensure long-term stability; Mubarak naming Suleiman vice president "is the beginning--the bare

    beginning--of what needs to happen"; "We are on the side of a democratic Egypt that provides both

    political and economic rights to its people."

    Sec. Clinton told Fox News: "We want to see an orderly transition so that no one fills a void, that there

    not be a void, that there be a well thought-out plan that will bring about a democratic participatory

    government."

    She told ABC News there have been no discussions regarding stopping aid to Egypt.

    9:04 a.m. ET: Reports of two fighter players flying low over Cairo. The military shows some force in

    the air, but how does it translate on the ground?

    8:53 a.m. ET:Reuters tweet--Arab TV channels quote Egypt's top Muslim Brotherhood figure Essam

    El-Eryan supporting ElBaradei to "negotiate with regime" #Egypt #news

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    8:45 a.m. ET: CBS News' Farhan Bokhari on the major political tsunami that could envelop Egypt and

    the region.

    "An unexpected turn of events is probably an understatement. Egypt is now witnessing a major political

    tsunami with consequences for its surrounding region," warns an Arab diplomat from a Middle Eastern

    country who served in Cairo until last August. Speaking to CBS News on condition of anonymity, the

    diplomat warned of "a variety of dangers" following a regime change in Egypt.

    "Going forward, he listed the emerging possibilities, ranging from "a significant rise of Islamic militants

    in Egypt who will take a harder line towards the U.S. and Israel," to "Egypt becoming a symbol of

    change for others to follow."

    Egyptian demonstrators use a shoe to hit a picture of President Hosni Mubarak during a

    protest at Tahrir Square in Cairo on January 30, 2011. Crowds of protesters began

    massing in central Cairo for a sixth day of angry revolt against Mubarak's regime amid

    increasing lawlessness, a rising death toll and a spate of jail breaks.

    (Credit: Mohammed Abed/AFP/Getty Images)

    8:30 a.m. ET: Gangs of armed men attacked at least four jails across Egypt before dawn Sunday,

    helping to free hundreds of Muslim militants and thousands of other inmates as police vanished from

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    the streets of Cairo and other cities.

    The army sent hundreds more troops and armored vehicles onto the streets of Cairo and other cities but

    appeared to be taking little action against gangs of young men with guns and large sticks who were

    smashing cars and robbing people. More

    8:25 a.m. ET: TheNYT reports on the Obama administration's difficult situation regarding the future

    of Egypt's leadership, and volatility that could result if Mubarak's government falls:

    7:50 a.m. ET: ABC News reported that a "senior administration official" said that President

    Mubarak needs to outline a "concrete process" for change in Egypt, including freedom of information,

    dialog with opposition groups and revocation of the 1967 emergency law that gives the government

    excessive power.

    7:32 a.m. ET:Nobel Peace Laureates have signed an appeal addressed to the Egyptian government

    and that will be forwarded to the Heads of State and Government of the United Nations Security

    Council.

    "The document, that among the first signatories see: the Solidarnosh leader and former Polish President

    Lech Walesa, Mairead Corrigan Maguire, Jody Williams and Betty Williams, strongly urges to Egyptian

    institutions to ensure that "safeguard the freedom and safety" of protesters at this time took to the

    streets of major cities in Egypt and the opposition leader and Nobel Peace Prize Mohamed El Baradei,

    arrested and released during manifestations of a few days ago."

    7:19 a.m. ET: CNN reported that the U.S. Embassy in Cairo is setting up flights on Monday forAmerican citizens who want to leave Egypt. From the Dept. of State: "U.S. citizens in Egypt who wish

    to depart that the Department of State is making arrangements to provide transportation to safehaven

    locations in Europe. Flights to evacuation points will begin departing Egypt on Monday, Jan. 31." An

    estimated 500 people are associated with the U.S. Embassy in Egypt.

    Turkey is sending flights to evacuate an estimated 750 of its citizens from Alexandria and Cairo.

    7:00 a.m. ET: Egyptian authorities revoked Al Jazeera Network's licence to broadcast from Egypt,

    and is going to shut down its Cairo bureau:

    "The information minister [Anas al-Fikki] ordered ... suspension of operations of Al Jazeera, cancelling

    of its licences and withdrawing accreditation to all its staff as of today," a statement on the official

    Mena news agency said on Sunday.

    Al Jazeera statement on the closure of Cairo bureau:

    3:01 a.m. ET: Reports on Twitter are circulating to the effect that Egypt is withdrawing Al Jazeera's

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    press credentials.. Al Jazeera's Dan Nolan wrote in a tweet that Al Jazeera's licenses was being pulled.

    He then added: "Don't worry we'll still report what's happening in #Egypt no matter what new

    restrictions they put on us."

    2:55 a.m. ET: Is the U.S. making a mistake by taking a too balanced position between the

    demonstrators and the Mubarak regime? That's the opinion of Carnegie Endowment's Marina Ottoway.

    In apiece she published today, Ottoway said the Obama administration was making a mistake by beingtoo tepid. "Messages are circulating on the Internet to the effect that the United States is once again

    supporting authoritarianism. Washington must get off the fence and choose whether it wants to support

    democracy, and thus be on the side of Arab publics enraged by decades of repression, or whether it

    wants to continue supporting regimes that have been repressive for decades in the name of ill-defined

    strategic interests. It cannot do both." The same theme was echoed by demonstrators on Saturday.

    2:40 a.m. ET: More on the reported jailbreaks overnight. Officials are telling the AP that the prisoners

    escaped from at least four jails after starting fires and clashing with guards.

    2:25 a.m. ET: The Associated Press is reporting that Egypt has closed its border with the Gaza Strip.

    2:18 a.m. ET: Egyptian military forces have begun patrolling the streets of Sharm el-Sheikh, the

    popular Egyptian resort village on the southern tip of the Red Sea, according to Al Jazeera. That has

    sparked rumors concerning the whereabouts of President Mubarak.

    2:05 a.m. ET: A Facebook user named Leil-Zahra Mortada has compiled some amazing photos of

    women participating in the Egypt demonstrations:

    (Credit: Leil-Zahra Mortada )

    1:49 a.m. ET: An army presence reported in Suez, but no sign of the local police.

    1:22 a.m. ET: Army tanks in Cairo have set up a roadblock on a road leading to Tahrir Square, the

    scene of mass demonstrations the last several days.

    1:14 a.m. ET: Saturday Night Live did a send-up of Hosni Mubarak with Fred Armisen impersonating

    Egypt's embattled president:

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    "[My people] love me. They are upset because the internet is down."

    "I'm willing to take the following steps to show I'm willing to change. Number 1: I'm firing my cabinet.

    Number 2, I'm hiring a new cabinet, made up of members of my fired cabinet."

    12:50 a.m. ET: As dawn broke in Cairo, reports circulated that several thousand inmates escaped from

    prisons during the night. Clearly, the situation remains chaotic and information is fragmentary. Egypt's

    stock exchange and banks are expected to remain shut on Sunday.

    Photo of Cairo just as the evening

    curfew lifted.

    (Credit: Al Jazeera TV)

    12:36 a.m. ET: Morning has broken in Egypt. The evening curfew will be lifted in less than 25

    minutes.More than one hundred people have died during the last 24 hours.

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    Egyptians carry the body of a protester covered by Egypt's flag who was killed during

    the clashes with anti-riot police in Cairo Jan. 29, 2011.

    (Credit: AP Photo)

    (CBS News Correspondent Mark Strassmann reports on the developments that happened during the

    ifth day of demonstrations in Egypt.)

    Pictures of Cairo Unrest

    Anger in the Arab World

    10:04 p.m. France, U.K. and Germany release a joint statement on Egypt, calling for Mubarak to avoid

    violence and implement promised social reform.

    8:33 p.m. While the U.S. government monitors the situation in Egypt, David Botti, an American

    freelance journalist in Cairo, noticed two small examples of American intervention andpostedpictures

    of them to his Twitter account.

    A canister used by Egyptian police

    against demonstrators says it was

    made in the United States.

    (Credit: David Botti)

    In one photo (far left), a canister fired at demonstrators was manufactured in the United States. In the

    other photo (left), a man uses a McDonald's sign as a shield during a demonstration.

    7:59 p.m. ET On the "CBS Evening News", Correspondent Elizabeth Palmer reports from Cairo

    how housewives, students and senior citizens joined with students to unite against a common enemy -

    President Hosni Mubarak, the former fighter pilot who rigged elections to keep a lockhold on power for

    30 years.

    Don't Miss This

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    Day in Pictures

    Day in Pictures

    Bahrain Protest Violence

    Mubarak leaves Cairo

    Day in Pictures

    Day in Pictures

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