CAIRO: Suez protesters continued on Wednesday their sit-in in the main El-Arbaein Square for the tenth consecutive day, saying they won’t leave until their demands were entirely met. Mass protests and sit-ins swept through the city since July 4 when a criminal court released on bail seven police officers charged with killing and injuring peaceful protesters in the first days of the January 25 uprising. Seven others are being tried in absentia. The trial was adjourned to September.
CAIRO: Protesters across Cairo erupted in anger following statements Tuesday morning
CAIRO - Egypt's Interior Ministry said on Wednesday more than 650 senior officers in the police would end their service, after protesters demanded swifter reforms of the force that is blamed for killing protesters. "The police force shares with the people feelings of pain and hope. People involved in security are ... keen to do their role in protecting the revolution and look forward for a future of democracy," said spokesman General Marwan Mostafa.
CAIRO: The Egyptian Supreme Judiciary Council decided Tuesday to move the trials of former regime figures and officers accused of killing of protesters to larger courts to allow for more public attendance, as well as air the trials live outside the courthouse.
CAIRO: A few thousand protesters continued their open sit-in in Cairo’s Tahrir Square on Monday, despite a power cut and several reported thefts. Blogger and activist Mahmoud Salem told Daily News Egypt that there were organized thefts reported all over Tahrir Square.
CAIRO: Protesters in Suez are calling for a million-man protest on Tuesday, echoing calls by Tahrir Square protesters, but also promising "surprising escalation measures not to be declared now," member of the Suez Revolution Youth Coalition Ahmed Abdel Gawad told Daily News Egypt Monday. "We are already protesting in front of the Suez Canal’s movement control office, El-Arbaeian Square and in front of the governorate building. We will escalate by blocking more streets and emptying the governorate building, in addition to a call on Tuesday for general civil disobedience," said Abdel Gawad.
CAIRO: In an emergency meeting with youth leaders, Prime Minister Essam Sharaf promised a complete Cabinet reshuffle by July 17 and a change of governors before July 25, according to Al-Ahram daily. Egypt’s interim PM also said he would resign if he is unable to meet these commitments.
CAIRO: Hundreds of protesters continued a sit-in in Tahrir Square for the third consecutive day demanding the resignation of the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces (SCAF) and Cabinet for “failing to achieve the revolution's objectives.” Protesters closed the entrances of the square and the Mugamma’ building (a government administrative complex) and said that they are considering all options, including civil disobedience, until their demands are met.
CAIRO: Military police on Sunday forcefully dispersed a sit-in by thousands of Suez protesters blocking the Suez-Ain Sokhna desert road, reportedly detaining a number of them, Suez Revolution Coalition member Ahmed Abdel-Gawad said. "The forces first fired in the air then clashed with protesters using electric shock prods when the protesters attempted to set up tents on the road," Abdel-Gawad told Daily News Egypt.
CAIRO: Egypt on Saturday appointed a new information minister, a controversial post that had been abolished after the uprising that toppled president Hosni Mubarak. Osama Heikal, former editor-in-chief of the liberal Al-Wafd party's newspaper, was sworn in on Saturday in front of Field Marshal Hussein Tantawi, the head of the military council that took power when Mubarak was ousted.
CAIRO: Tens of thousands of protesters poured into major squares in cities around Egypt on Friday, reasserting their stance that the revolution continues until demands are met and justice is served for the martyrs. Protesters packed Tahrir Square well into the evening on what was dubbed “Persistence Friday” or “Revolution First Friday,” calling for the fair and swift prosecution of those responsible for killing and injuring peaceful protesters.
CAIRO: The main source of legislation and the definitions of the concepts of freedom, equality and human rights emerged as the main points of difference in liberal and Salafi streams’ views of the upcoming constitution. In a debate organized Friday by Bridges Foundation, representatives of both streams disagreed on whether to apply Islamic Sharia or to have Sharia principles as the main source of the legislation in the constitution, and whether to have freedom defined by Islamic laws or by public interest.
CAIRO: Tens of thousands of Egyptians protested nationwide following Friday prayers parallel to a major demonstration in Cairo’s Tahrir Square dubbed “the Revolution First” and “The Friday of Persistence.” In Suez, thousands protested in the main El-Arbaein Square, including men, women and children from an array of backgrounds and political groups, demanding justice for the injured and the families of those killed during the early days of the January 25 uprising.
CAIRO: At a conference celebrating its recognition by the political parties committee, the Free Egyptians Party (FEP) launched a fierce criticism of the Muslim Brotherhood (MB) and its Freedom and Justice Party (FJP) accusing them of "political fraud, lack of political astuteness and helplessness.”
CAIRO - Driven by foreign selling, Egyptian stocks fell on Wednesday, ending a four-day losing streak as investors were gripped by panic on a loud explosion, traders said. Tension in the Red Sea port of Suez also boosted the bearish sentiment, they added.
BRUSSELS: It is too late for Egypt to invite European observers to monitor the parliamentary elections slated for September, a European Union official said.
CAIRO: An Egyptian court cleared three ministers from former President Hosni Mubarak's administration of graft on Tuesday, the first ruling to exonerate such senior officials since Egypt's popular uprising. Some of the defendants looked surprised when Judge Mohamed Fathi Sadek read the verdicts in the courtroom, which was filled mainly with their relatives and friends. Cheers of "Long live justice" erupted.
MANAMA - Egypt's Prime Minister Essam Sharaf arrived in Bahrain on Tuesday, coming from the United Arab Emirates to meet king Hamad Bin Eissa, the official Middle East News Agency (MENA) reported. The tour lasted for few hours. Sharaf-Hamad meeting focused on the latest developments in the region and the Arab world. The talks also focussed on ways of boosting relations between Egypt and Manama.
ABU DHABI: Egypt's prime minister signaled his country's parliamentary elections will be held in late September, during a visit to the United Arab Emirates on Monday. Some new political groups want the vote delayed, fearing the September date gives the upper hand to remnants of the disbanded former ruling party and the Muslim Brotherhood, which are better established and have greater resources.
CAIRO - Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood expelled five of its members for setting up a political party in defiance of the group's own Freedom and Justice party, a newspaper reported on Tuesday. The Brotherhood's Guidance Council decided to bar the five members of the movement's youth wing after they established the Egyptian Current party, Shorouk newspaper said.
CAIRO: The Suez Criminal Court released on bail 14 defendants charged with the murder and attempted murder of peaceful protesters, causing outrage on Monday among Suez residents who demanded justice for the martyrs. Bail was set at LE 10,000 for each defendant, including 10 police officers, and the case was adjourned to September 14.
Others
Activists take to the streets in downtown Cairo on Wednesday against a new protest law enforced with a string of arrests and the use teargas against crowds a day earlier