Quote from sameeh55:
To all who read this;
Do not listen to these zionist liars who hate that the people arte chosing a leadership that is not a dictator and is not an israeli puppet.
Egypt is good!
There was some looting carried by the "Former" regimeâs secret police.
As we are speaking,
- each neighbourhood has created its own protection committee in absence of the police.
- each commercial or national installation is being protected by similar committees
- People are lining up across all of Egypt's hospitals to donate blood for the injured at the hand of the former regimeâs criminals
- The uprising was carried by liberal, nationalists and Leftists grass root movements.
- Brotherhood Muslims are nowhere to be found and if they are in these mass demonstrations, they are hidden
- the people and the army are in control of the situation and the government is in hiding
- opposition are talking of a transitional government to include every race, religious, political and ideological group for the purpose of amending the constitution and for calling for a new national elections.
The Egyptian and Tunisian people's civility came as a shock to the zionists and those who wish for this pride bug not to spread to other dictatorship.
And two years later...
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http://news.yahoo.com/egyptian-court-confirms-death-sentences-21-soccer-fans-081858458--sow.html
Egypt protesters torch buildings, target Suez Canal
PORT SAID, Egypt/CAIRO (Reuters) - Egyptian protesters torched buildings in Cairo and tried unsuccessfully to disrupt international shipping on the Suez Canal, as a court ruling on a deadly soccer riot stoked rage in a country beset by worsening security.
The ruling enraged residents of Port Said, at the northern entrance of the Suez Canal, by confirming the death sentences imposed on 21 local soccer fans for their role in the riot last year, when more than 70 people were killed.
Security sources said two people, a man in his 30s and a young boy, had died in Cairo from the effects of tear gas and rubber bullets. A total of 65 people were injured.
Saturday's protests and violence underlined how Islamist President Mohamed Mursi is struggling - two years after Mubarak's overthrow - to maintain law and order at a time of economic and political crisis.
Islamist groups and parties backing Mursi warned against a looming security breakdown and called on their followers to form popular protection committees to guard the streets and public property should police fail to do so.
...
Last Thursday, Bedouin gunmen briefly held the head of U.S. oil major ExxonMobil in Egypt and his wife. The Britons, who had been heading for a Sinai resort, were released unharmed.
General unrest is rife as Egypt's poor suffer badly from the economic crisis. Foreign currency reserves have slid to critically low levels and are now little more than a third of what they were in the last days of Mubarak.
The Egyptian pound has lost 14 percent against the dollar since the 2011 revolution and the budget deficit is soaring to unmanageable levels due to the cost of fuel and food subsidies.
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Also, I'll give you one guess as to what Syria is going to look like, two years after Assad is defeated.