Egypt govt resists mounting pressure & warns of crackdown
Thursday, 10 February 2011The Egyptian government resisted growing pressure on Thursday  from key ally the United States and from a still energetic popular  protest movement, that entered its 17th day, both demanding radical and  immediate political change.
     
Tens of thousands of Egyptian workers walked out in mass nationwide  strikes to demand wage increases and show support for the widening  revolt against President Hosni Mubarak's regime.
Growing concern among the business community and the wider population  about the economic impact of more than two weeks of disruption is adding  to strains facing the cabinet appointed 10 days ago by President Hosni  Mubarak to try to stave off the unprecedented challenge to his 30 years  of one-man rule.
   
The army -- which has provided Egypt's leaders for six decades --  continues to stand by, overseeing and praised by pro-democracy  demonstrators encamped in Cairo, while promising to help restore normal  life and maintain political stability.
Organizers  called for a new "protest of millions" for Friday similar to those that  have drawn the largest crowds so far. But in a change of tactic, they  want several protests across Cairo instead of only in Tahrir Square  downtown, said Khaled Abdel-Hamid, one of the youth organizers.  
  
According to Al Arabiya correspondent in Cairo, protesters at Tahrir  Square have set up various toilets in the square, a step showing that  protesters were planning to stay there for as long as it would take them  until they achieve their goals.
Medical staff at Cairo's largest hospital on Thursday staged a mass  walk-out, joining hundreds of thousands of Egyptians in demanding the  end of President Hosni Mubarak's 30-year rule.
             
Around 3,000 staff at the Qasr al-Aini teaching hospital marched out of  the building and were headed towards the lower house of parliament to  join several hundred protesters blockading the building, an AFP  correspondent said.
             
Shouting the revolt's signature chant "The people want the end of the  regime," the staff were also joined by other medics from around the  country.
The Obama administration is trying to keep pressure on Egypt's leaders.  White House spokesman Robert Gibbs said Egypt's government had not even  met a minimum threshold of reforms demanded by its people and warned  that massive protests will continue until changes are made.
Nationwide strikes
Thousands of workers went on  strike Wednesday across Egypt, adding a new dimension to the uprising as  public rage turned to the vast wealth President Mubarak's family  reportedly amassed while close to half the country struggled near the  poverty line.
Protests calling for Mubarak's ouster have been spreading since Tuesday  outside of Cairo's Tahrir Square, where demonstrators have been  concentrated for the past two weeks. On Wednesday, protesters also  gathered at parliament, the Cabinet and the Health Ministry buildings,  all a few blocks from the square, and blocked Prime Minister Ahmed  Shafiq from his office.
Strikes erupted in a breadth of sectors — among railway and bus workers,  state electricity staff and service technicians at the Suez Canal, in  factories manufacturing textiles, steel and beverages and at least one  hospital.
In one of the flashpoints of unrest Wednesday, some 8,000 protesters,  mainly farmers, set barricades of flaming palm trees in the southern  province of Assiut. They blocked the main highway and railway to Cairo  to complain of bread shortages. They then drove off the governor by  pelting his van with stones.
Hundreds of slum dwellers in the Suez Canal city of Port Said set fire  to part of the governor's headquarters in anger over lack of housing.
Workers "were motivated to strike when they heard about how many  billions the Mubarak family was worth," said Kamal Abbas, a labor  leader. "They said: 'How much longer should we be silent?'"
Egyptians have been infuriated by newspaper reports that the Mubarak  family has amassed billions, and perhaps tens of billions of dollars in  wealth while, according to the World Bank, about 40 percent of the  country's 80 million people live below or near the poverty line of $2 a  day. The family's true net worth is not known.
"O Mubarak, tell us where you get 70 billion dollars," dozens of protesters chanted in front of the Health Ministry.
Civil disobedience "very dangerous"
For the first time,  protesters were forcefully urging labor strikes despite a warning by  Vice President Omar Suleiman that calls for civil disobedience are "very  dangerous for society and we can't put up with this at all."
His warnings of a possible "coup" Tuesday were taken by protesters as a  veiled threat to impose martial law — which would be a dramatic  escalation in the standoff. But instead of backing off, they promised  more huge protests on Friday.
"He is threatening to impose martial law, which means everybody in the  square will be smashed," said Abdul-Rahman Samir, a spokesman for a  coalition of the five main youth groups behind protests in Tahrir  Square. "But what would he do with the rest of the 70 million Egyptians  who will follow us afterward," he said according to AP.
Suleiman is creating "a disastrous scenario," Samir said. "We are  striking and we will protest and we will not negotiate until Mubarak  steps down. Whoever wants to threaten us, then let them do so," he  added.
The protesters filling streets of Cairo and other cities since Jan. 25  have already posed the greatest challenge to the president's  authoritarian rule since he came to power 30 years ago. They have  wrought promises of sweeping concessions and reforms, a new Cabinet and a  purge of the ruling party leadership, but Mubarak refuses their demands  that he step down before September elections.
U.S.-based Human Rights Watch has said about 300 people have been killed  since the protests began, but it is still compiling a final toll;  whereas Egyptian authorities put the number at 150.
Labor discontent
The strikes broke out across  Egypt as many companies reopened for the first time since night curfews  were imposed almost two weeks ago. Not all the strikers were responding  directly to the protesters' calls, but the movement's success and its  denunciations of the increasing poverty under Mubarak's rule resonated  and reignited labor discontent that has broken out frequently in recent  years.
The farmers in Assiut voiced their support for the Tahrir movement,  witnesses said, as did the Port Said protesters, who set up a tent camp  in the city's main Martyrs Square similar to the Cairo camp.
In Cairo, hundreds of state electricity workers stood in front of the  South Cairo Electricity company, demanding the ouster of its director.  Public transport workers at five of the city's roughly 17 garages also  called strikes, demanding Mubarak's overthrow, and vowed that buses  would be halted Thursday. It was not clear if they represented the  entire bus system for this city of 18 million.
Dozens of state museum workers demanding higher wages staged a protest  in front of the Supreme Council of Antiquities, crowding around  antiquities chief Zahi Hawass when he came to talk to them.
Several hundred workers also demonstrated at a silk factory and a fuel  coke plant in Cairo's industrial suburb of Helwan, demanding better pay  and work conditions.
In the desert oasis town of Kharja, southwest of Cairo, five protesters  have been killed in two days of rioting, security officials said. Police  opened fire Tuesday on hundreds who set a courthouse on fire and  attacked a police station, demanding the removal of the provincial  security chief.
The army was forced to secure several government buildings and prisons,  and on Wednesday the security chief was dismissed, security officials  said. They spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not  authorized to talk to the media. 
"We're not getting our rights"
In the city of Suez, strikes  entered a second day on Wednesday. Some 5,000 workers at various state  companies — including textile workers, medicine bottle manufacturers,  sanitation workers and a firm involved in repairs for ships on the Suez  Canal — held separate strikes and protests at their factories.
Traffic at the Suez Canal, a vital international waterway and a top revenue earner for Egypt, was not affected.
"We're not getting our rights," said Ahmed Tantawi, a Public Works  employee in Suez. He said workers provide 24-hour service and are  exposed to health risks but get only an extra $1.50 a month in hardship  compensation. He said there are employees who have worked their entire  lives in the department and will retire with a salary equivalent to $200  a month.
In Tahrir Square about 10,000 massed again on Wednesday, the day after a  crowd of about a quarter-million proved that they had not lost momentum  even as Mubarak clings to power. Visitors snapped pictures and took  videos while vendors sold nuts, popcorn, Egyptian flags, sandwiches and  drinks.
Suleiman, a close confident of the president, rejected any "end to the  regime" including an immediate departure for Mubarak, who says he will  serve out the rest of his term until September elections.
Suleiman suggested Egypt was not ready for democracy, and said a  government-formed panel of judges, dominated by Mubarak loyalists, would  push ahead with recommending its own constitutional amendments to be  put to a referendum. Those statements further deepened protesters'  skepticism over his intentions.
Still, authorities continued to try to project an image of normalcy.  Egypt's most famous tourist attraction, the Pyramids of Giza, reopened  to tourists on Wednesday after a 12-day closure. But few came to visit —  tens of thousands of foreigners have fled Egypt amid the chaos, taking  with them an important facet of the nation's economy. 
 
 
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