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US-Educated Idiot Morsi flees as angry crowd storms Cairo palace in clash with riot police…rats are leaving the ship? he he he

By , December 6, 2012 12:48 am

US-Educated Idiot Morsi flees as angry crowd storms Cairo palace in clash with riot police…rats are leaving the ship? he he he
By: Bulov on: 06.12.2012 [02:49 ] (41 reads)

US-Educated Idiot Morsi flees as angry crowd storms Cairo palace in clash with riot police…rats are leaving the ship?
http://rt.com/news/cairo-egypt-protest-teargas-269/

Published: 04 December, 2012, 20:22
Edited: 05 December, 2012, 05:45

Anti-Mursi protesters barricade a road during clashes with riot police in front of the presidential palace in Cairo, December 4, 2012. (Reuters / Amr Dalsh)
(4.6Mb) embed video

Egyptian riot police have fired tear gas at protesters demonstrating against President Mohamed Morsi near the presidential palace in Cairo. At least 18 people have been injured in the clashes, which forced Morsi flee his residence.

Presidential sources say Morsi left the palace as the crowd started getting out of control.
Protesters broke through police lines and barbed wire barricades in front of the presidential palace, with riot police responding with tear gas.
To avoid further confrontation police forces then reportedly retreated, allowing the demonstrators to move closer to the palace.
Thousands of demonstrators marched to the palace in protest of Morsi’s decree which grants him near absolute powers, and a draft constitution which was quickly adopted by his allies.
“The revolution was ended by these people. We are not fighting for a new revolution, but simply want but what we struggled for. This is a continuity from January 2011,” Shimaa Helmy, a human right activist, told RT.

The march came as no surprise – earlier on Tuesday, demonstrators warned they would approach the palace if action was not taken.
“This is the last warning before we lay siege on the presidential palace,” 21-year-old protester Mahmoud Hashim told AP. “We want the presidential decrees cancelled.”
A crowd of several hundred protesters also gathered outside a mosque in the Abbasiyah district earlier in the day shouting, “Freedom or we die! Mohammed Morsi! Illegitimate! Brotherhood! Illegitimate!”
Demonstrators assembled in front of Morsi’s residence shouting, “Down with the sons of dogs. We are the power and we are the people!”
Morsi has called for a nationwide referendum on the draft constitution on December 15.

A woman stands near barbed wire in front of the presidential palace in Cairo, December 4, 2012. (Reuters / Mohamed Abd El Ghany)
Morsi losing his grip?
¬Tuesday’s events highlight the split within Egyptian society, with many hoping for change as Morsi’s power seems to disappoint an increasing number of Egyptians, Ahmed Fathi, a Middle East journalist, told RT.
“It shows that Morsi is not in full control of the organizations that form the Egyptian state. He is not in full control of the police forces. He is not in full control of the army. He is not in control of anything other than the Islamo-fascist group – the Muslim Brotherhood. The Egyptians are showing once more that they can stand up to restore the revolution back, to restore its demands: freedom, social justice, human dignity.”
Liberal forces in Egypt must once again rise up and defend the values they fought for in 2011, Fathi says.
“I would hope that they will start another revolution, much more stronger than the 18 days that removed the military dictator Hosni Mubarak. Showing yet another time that they have the sense and the sensibility to remove yet another dictator – another pharaoh in the making, an Islamo-fascist leader such as Mohamed Morsi,” he added.

Egyptian protesters demonstrate outside the presidential palace in Cairo, December 4, 2012. (Reuters / Mohamed Abd El Ghany)

Anti-Mursi protesters run from smoke from a tear gas canister thrown by riot police, during clashes in front of the presidential palace in Cairo, December 4, 2012. (Reuters / Amr Dalsh)

An anti-Mursi protester damages a riot police vehivle during a demonstration in front of the presidential palace in Cairo, December 4, 2012. (Reuters / Amr Dalsh)

Protesters chant anti-Mursi slogans in front of the presidential palace in Cairo, December 4, 2012. (Reuters / Amr Dalsh)

An anti-Mursi protester takes a photo of a riot police van with tear gas smoke coming out of it during clashes in front of the presidential palace in Cairo, December 4, 2012. (Reuters / Amr Dalsh)

www.iraq-war.ru (en) RSS feed for articles and news

US-Educated Idiot Morsi flees as angry crowd storms Cairo palace in clash with riot police…rats are leaving the ship? he he he

By , December 6, 2012 12:48 am

US-Educated Idiot Morsi flees as angry crowd storms Cairo palace in clash with riot police…rats are leaving the ship? he he he
By: Bulov on: 06.12.2012 [02:49 ] (41 reads)

US-Educated Idiot Morsi flees as angry crowd storms Cairo palace in clash with riot police…rats are leaving the ship?
http://rt.com/news/cairo-egypt-protest-teargas-269/

Published: 04 December, 2012, 20:22
Edited: 05 December, 2012, 05:45

Anti-Mursi protesters barricade a road during clashes with riot police in front of the presidential palace in Cairo, December 4, 2012. (Reuters / Amr Dalsh)
(4.6Mb) embed video

Egyptian riot police have fired tear gas at protesters demonstrating against President Mohamed Morsi near the presidential palace in Cairo. At least 18 people have been injured in the clashes, which forced Morsi flee his residence.

Presidential sources say Morsi left the palace as the crowd started getting out of control.
Protesters broke through police lines and barbed wire barricades in front of the presidential palace, with riot police responding with tear gas.
To avoid further confrontation police forces then reportedly retreated, allowing the demonstrators to move closer to the palace.
Thousands of demonstrators marched to the palace in protest of Morsi’s decree which grants him near absolute powers, and a draft constitution which was quickly adopted by his allies.
“The revolution was ended by these people. We are not fighting for a new revolution, but simply want but what we struggled for. This is a continuity from January 2011,” Shimaa Helmy, a human right activist, told RT.

The march came as no surprise – earlier on Tuesday, demonstrators warned they would approach the palace if action was not taken.
“This is the last warning before we lay siege on the presidential palace,” 21-year-old protester Mahmoud Hashim told AP. “We want the presidential decrees cancelled.”
A crowd of several hundred protesters also gathered outside a mosque in the Abbasiyah district earlier in the day shouting, “Freedom or we die! Mohammed Morsi! Illegitimate! Brotherhood! Illegitimate!”
Demonstrators assembled in front of Morsi’s residence shouting, “Down with the sons of dogs. We are the power and we are the people!”
Morsi has called for a nationwide referendum on the draft constitution on December 15.

A woman stands near barbed wire in front of the presidential palace in Cairo, December 4, 2012. (Reuters / Mohamed Abd El Ghany)
Morsi losing his grip?
¬Tuesday’s events highlight the split within Egyptian society, with many hoping for change as Morsi’s power seems to disappoint an increasing number of Egyptians, Ahmed Fathi, a Middle East journalist, told RT.
“It shows that Morsi is not in full control of the organizations that form the Egyptian state. He is not in full control of the police forces. He is not in full control of the army. He is not in control of anything other than the Islamo-fascist group – the Muslim Brotherhood. The Egyptians are showing once more that they can stand up to restore the revolution back, to restore its demands: freedom, social justice, human dignity.”
Liberal forces in Egypt must once again rise up and defend the values they fought for in 2011, Fathi says.
“I would hope that they will start another revolution, much more stronger than the 18 days that removed the military dictator Hosni Mubarak. Showing yet another time that they have the sense and the sensibility to remove yet another dictator – another pharaoh in the making, an Islamo-fascist leader such as Mohamed Morsi,” he added.

Egyptian protesters demonstrate outside the presidential palace in Cairo, December 4, 2012. (Reuters / Mohamed Abd El Ghany)

Anti-Mursi protesters run from smoke from a tear gas canister thrown by riot police, during clashes in front of the presidential palace in Cairo, December 4, 2012. (Reuters / Amr Dalsh)

An anti-Mursi protester damages a riot police vehivle during a demonstration in front of the presidential palace in Cairo, December 4, 2012. (Reuters / Amr Dalsh)

Protesters chant anti-Mursi slogans in front of the presidential palace in Cairo, December 4, 2012. (Reuters / Amr Dalsh)

An anti-Mursi protester takes a photo of a riot police van with tear gas smoke coming out of it during clashes in front of the presidential palace in Cairo, December 4, 2012. (Reuters / Amr Dalsh)

www.iraq-war.ru (en) RSS feed for articles and news

The Politics Of Crowd Estimates In Russia

By , February 6, 2012 5:53 pm

What conclusions about Russian society’s mood can be drawn from dueling pro and anti-regime protests on February 4? The answer, of course, depends on whom you ask — and which side of the barricades they stood on. View full post on Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

Syrian Crowd Stones U.S. Envoy’s Convoy

By , September 30, 2011 2:55 am

(Reuters) — Supporters of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad hurled rocks and tomatoes at U.S. ambassador Robert Ford’s convoy as he visited an opposition figure in Damascus on Thursday in an attack the U. View full post on Assyrian International News Agency

Plane Crashes Into Crowd At U.S. Air Show

By , September 18, 2011 2:30 am

At least three people are reported dead and some 50 injured after a World War II plane crashed into a crowd of spectators at an air show in the southwest U.S. state of Nevada. View full post on Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

New Start Can’t Crowd Out Andijon Refugees’ Painful Memories

By , May 14, 2011 3:04 am

Hapless refugees from a “massacre” in one of the poorest and most volatile pockets of Central Asia work hard to build new lives abroad while hanging on to their old ones in Uzbekistan. View full post on Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

Massive Crowd Gathers For Yemen Protesters’ Funerals

By , March 21, 2011 5:03 am

At least 28 bodies were laid out as the crowd massed under tight security near Sana’a University, the center of more than a month of protests that have shaken the regime of President Ali Abdullah Saleh. View full post on Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

Gaddafi addresses crowd in Tripoli

By , February 25, 2011 5:52 pm

Libyan leader spoke to supporters in the capital’s Green Square and said he would be arming people against protesters. View full post on AL JAZEERA ENGLISH (AJE)

Tunisian Police Chief Fires On Crowd, Kills Two

By , February 7, 2011 5:39 am

The official Tunisian news agency says a police chief in the northwestern town of Klef fired at a crowd of angry people, killing at least two and injuring 17 others. View full post on Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

Egypt Protests: ElBaradei Tells Crowd ‘Change Coming’

By , January 31, 2011 2:03 am

(BBC) — Leading Egyptian opposition figure Mohamed ElBaradei has joined thousands of protesters in Cairo defying a curfew to demand President Mubarak stand down. View full post on Assyrian International News Agency