Egypt military promises no force against protests

As previously stated on this Blog, one has to give credit where credit is due, and the Egyptian people deserve a great deal of credit for the massive uprising against President Hosni Mubarak, who no doubt is a low-life. He’s also 82 years old and has been president for 30 years; when is enough enough?

On another note, I believe it’s safe to say that the woman pictured below won’t be modeling for Victoria’s Secret anytime soon. These Muslim women look like freaks in those body bags. TGO

Refer to story below. Source: Associated Press

By HAMZA HENDAWI and MAGGIE MICHAEL, Associated Press Hamza Hendawi And Maggie Michael, Associated Press

CAIRO – Egypt’s military pledged not to fire on protesters in a sign that army support for President Hosni Mubarak may be unraveling on the eve a major escalation — a push for a million people to take to the streets Tuesday to demand the authoritarian leader’s ouster.

More than 10,000 people beat drums, played music and chanted slogans in Tahrir Square, which has become ground zero of a week of protests demanding an end to Mubarak’s three decades in power.

With the organizers’ calling for a “march of a million people,” the vibe in the sprawling plaza — whose name in Arabic means “Liberation” — was of an intensifying feeling that the uprising was nearing a decisive point.

“He only needs a push!” was one of the most frequent chants, and a leaflet circulated by some protesters said it was time for the military to choose between Mubarak and the people.

The latest gesture by Mubarak aimed at defusing the crisis fell flat. His top ally, the United States, roundly rejected his announcement of a new government Monday that dropped his highly unpopular interior minister, who heads police forces and has been widely denounced by the protesters.

The crowds in the streets were equally unimpressed.

“It’s almost the same government, as if we are not here, as if we are sheep,” sneered one protester, Khaled Bassyouny, a 30-year-old Internet entrepreneur. He said it was time to escalate the marches. “It has to burn. It has to become ugly. We have to take it to the presidential palace.”

Another concession came late Monday, when Vice President Omar Suleiman — appointed by Mubarak only two days earlier — went on state TV to announce the offer of a dialogue with “political forces” for constitutional and legislative reforms.

Suleiman did not say what the changes would entail or which groups the government would speak with. Opposition forces have long demanded the lifting of restrictions on who is eligible to run for president to allow a real challenge to the ruling party, as well as measures to ensure elections are fair. A presidential election is scheduled for September .

In Washington, White House spokesman Robert Gibbs dismissed the naming of the new government, saying the situation in Egypt calls for action, not appointments.

Publicly, the Obama administration has declined to discuss the subject of Mubarak’s future. However, administration officials said Monday that Washington prefers Mubarak not contest the upcoming vote. They spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of diplomacy.

The State Department said that a retired senior diplomat — former ambassador to Egypt Frank Wisner — was now on the ground in Cairo and will meet Egyptian officials to urge them to embrace broad economic and political changes that can pave the way for free and fair elections.

The army statement, aired on state TV, said the powerful military recognizes “the legitimacy of the people’s demands” — the strongest sign yet that it is willing to let the protests continue and even grow as long as they remain peaceful, even if that leads to the fall of Mubarak.

If the 82-year-old president, a former air force commander, loses the support of the military, it would likely be a fatal blow to his rule.

For days, army tanks and troops have surrounded Tahrir Square, keeping the protests confined but doing nothing to stop people from joining.

Military spokesman Ismail Etman said the military “has not and will not use force against the public” and underlined that “the freedom of peaceful expression is guaranteed for everyone.”

He added the caveats, however, that protesters should not commit “any act that destabilizes security of the country” or damage property.

Looting that erupted over the weekend across the city of around 18 million eased — but Egyptians endured another day of the virtual halt of normal life, raising fears of damage to the economy if the crisis drags on. Trains stopped running Monday, possibly an attempt by authorities to prevent residents of the provinces from joining protests in the capital.

A curfew imposed for a fourth straight day — starting an hour earlier, at 3 p.m. — was widely ignored. Banks, schools and the stock market in Cairo were closed for the second working day, making cash tight. An unprecedented complete shutdown of the Internet was also in its fourth day. Long lines formed outside bakeries as people tried to replenish their stores of bread.

Cairo’s international airport was a scene of chaos as thousands of foreigners sought to flee the unrest, and countries around the world scrambled to send in planes to fly their citizens out.

Incidents of looting continued. In Cairo, soldiers detained about 50 men trying to break into the Egyptian National Museum in a fresh attempt to steal the country’s archaeological treasures, the military said. An attempt to break into an antiquities storehouse at the famed Pharaonic Karnak Temple in the ancient southern city of Luxor was also foiled.

The official death toll from the crisis stood at 97, with thousands injured, but reports from witnesses across the country indicated the actual toll was far higher.

Mubarak appeared fatigued as he was shown on state TV swearing in the members of his new Cabinet. The most significant change in the shake-up was the replacement of the interior minister, Habib el-Adly, who heads internal security forces and is widely despised by protesters for the brutality some officers have shown. A retired police general, Mahmoud Wagdi, will replace him.

Of the 29-member Cabinet, 14 were new faces, most of them not members of the ruling National Democratic Party. Among those purged were several of the prominent businessmen who held economic posts and have engineered the country’s economic liberalization policies the past decades. Many Egyptians resented the influence of millionaire politician-moguls, who were close allies of the president’s son, Gamal, long thought to be the heir apparent.

Mubarak retained his long-serving defense minister, Field Marshal Hussein Tantawi, and Foreign Minister Ahmed Aboul Gheit.

A major question throughout the unprecedented unrest has been whether protests that began as a decentralized eruption of anger largely by grass-roots activists can coalesce into a unified political leadership to press demands and keep up momentum.

There were signs Monday of an attempt to do so, as around 30 representatives from various opposition groups met to work out a joint stance.

The gathering issued the call for Tuesday’s escalated protests but did not reach a final agreement on a list of demands. They were to meet again Tuesday to try to do so and decide whether to make prominent reform advocate Mohamed ElBaradei spokesman for the protesters, said Abu’l-Ela Madi, a spokesman of one of the participating groups, al-Wasat, a moderate breakaway faction from the Muslim Brotherhood.

Unity is far from certain among the array of movements involved in the protests, with sometimes conflicting agendas — including students, online activists, grass-roots organizers, old-school opposition politicians and the fundamentalist Muslim Brotherhood, along with everyday citizens drawn by the exhilaration of marching against the government.

The various protesters have little in common beyond the demand that Mubarak go. Perhaps the most significant tensions among them is between young secular activists and the Muslim Brotherhood, which wants to form an Islamist state in the Arab world’s largest nation. The more secular are deeply suspicious the Brotherhood aims to co-opt what they contend is a spontaneous, popular movement. American officials have suggested they have similar fears.

ElBaradei, a pro-democracy advocate and former head of the U.N. nuclear watchdog, invigorated anti-Mubarak feeling with his return to Egypt last year, but the outlawed Muslim Brotherhood remains Egypt’s largest opposition movement.

In a nod to the suspicions, Brotherhood figures insist they are not seeking a leadership role.

“We don’t want to harm this revolution,” Mohamed Mahdi Akef, a former leader of the group.

Still, Brotherhood members appeared to be joining the protest in greater numbers and more openly. During the first few days of protests, the crowd in Tahrir Square was composed of mostly young men in jeans and T-shirts.

On Monday, many of the volunteers handing out food and water to protesters were men in long traditional dress with the trademark Brotherhood appearance — a closely cropped haircut and bushy beards.

___

AP correspondents Sarah El Deeb, Lee Keath and Michael Weissenstein in Cairo contributed to this report.

Dozens of police break up brawl at NC church

What kind of example are these “good” Christians providing for their children; having fist fights like a bunch of degenerates, and in a place of worship no less?

As I’ve stated many times before, there’s nothing like religion to get people all riled-up – fools that they are. TGO

Refer to story below. Source: Associated Press

Mon Jan 31, 8:28 am ET

FLETCHER, N.C. – Authorities say a dispute over leadership at a church in western North Carolina turned from angry words to fist fights.

About 30 police officers from five agencies were called to break up fights Sunday at Greater New Zion Baptist Church in Fletcher, about 94 miles west of Charlotte.

Henderson County Sheriff’s Capt. Jerry Rice says the brawl is under investigation and no one appears to have been seriously hurt.

Rice says there were about 75 people at the church when police arrived, but not all of them were scuffling.

Church members are divided over the recent ouster of the Rev. LeVonia Ray as pastor of the church. The fighting apparently began over whether a vote should be held to reinstate him.

No charges have been filed.

An uncertain future after jobless benefits expire

The most disturbing thing about these kinds of situations that thousands upon thousands of people find themselves in these days is that while this is happening, the United States government is wasting (not spending, wasting) billions of dollars in places such as Afghanistan, Iraq, Haiti, and many other countries across the globe. What ever happened to the thought of taking care of one’s own first? TGO

Refer to story below. Source: Associated Press

By CRISTINA SILVA, Associated Press Cristina Silva, Associated Press Sat Jan 29, 11:43 pm ET

LAS VEGAS – The portraits of his dead father are among the few mementoes Bud Meyers is certain he will take with him when he is forced from his home of five years next month because he cannot pay the rent.

His prized collection of mystery novels, the bedroom set he was once proud to purchase new and anything else that can’t fit into the trunk of a car must be left behind.

More than two years after Meyers lost his job as a Las Vegas Strip bartender and nearly eight months after he exhausted his unemployment benefits, it has come to this: a careful inventory of a life’s possessions and the hopeless embrace of a future as a middle-aged homeless man.

“I can’t believe this is happening to my life,” Meyers, 55, said on a recent afternoon, as he surveyed the one-bedroom apartment he must soon abandon. “It’s a social holocaust.”

Meyers, who is single and childless, is among a growing number of men and women who no longer qualify for unemployment benefits because they have been out of work for so long.

“Exhaustees” or “99ers” — as they are sometimes called — are searching for work and help across the United States. But their situation seems particularly bleak in Nevada, where unemployment, bankruptcies and foreclosure rates are the highest in the nation and job creation is at a crawl. The “99er” moniker refers to those who’ve gone beyond the maximum weeks of benefits available, but many people don’t qualify for the full 99-week period.

More than 30,000 Nevadans have exhausted their benefits and hundreds more are expected to join those ranks this year, with the state’s average length of unemployment climbing to more than eight months in December, according to state data.

The response from Washington has been muted. A law passed last month that restored the federal emergency unemployment program through the end of 2011 did not account for exhaustees.

Meanwhile, efforts to extend benefits for 20 more weeks in states with unemployment rates of 10 percent or higher have mostly met silence.

“People that are unemployed, particularly in hard-hit states like Nevada, they are not spoiled,” said Rep. Shelley Berkley, a Las Vegas Democrat who introduced a measure to extend benefits. “They are not lazy. They are not hobos. It is just the economy is so bad that there aren’t enough jobs out there.”

The Silver State’s unemployment rate grew to 14.5 percent in December. In the Las Vegas area, where most Nevadans live, it soared to 14.9 percent. In Reno, the rate climbed to 13.8 percent from 13.3 the month before. Nationally, the unemployment rate was 9.4 percent in December, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

Transportation, warehousing and utility industries continued to shed jobs in Nevada. Gambling revenue, the lifeblood of Las Vegas, fell by 4.7 percent in November.

At best, Nevada’s economy shows uneven signs of growth, said Stephen Brown, director of the Center for Business and Economic Research at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas.

“People have stopped looking for work,” he said. “They don’t think they will find” a job.

Caught with no income and a recurring flood of unpaid bills, the chronically unemployed are overwhelming charitable groups.

At the Foundation for an Independent Tomorrow, a Las Vegas work placement center, the number of people asking for help has doubled to 1,000 this year since 2007. Staff members can only do so much for those who have been unemployed for years, said Development Coordinator Rachel Santos.

“These are some of the hardest to employ,” she said. “We can’t create jobs. We can’t do anything magical.”

The Goodwill of Southern Nevada said more than 5,600 people asked for career guidance in 2010, up 30 percent from the year before. Roughly 25 percent of those people no longer qualified for unemployment benefits, said CEO Steve Chartrand.

“One of the things we offer is hope,” he said. “Many people come in really feeling down and out and our staff will take the time to listen to them.”

But for some 99ers, the time for hope has passed.

Meyers initially welcomed his termination in October 2008 as a vacation from the daily grind of catering to tip-hungry cocktail waitresses and standing behind a crowded bar. He raided his $30,000 rainy-day fund and cut back on luxuries such as new clothes and hair cuts.

But as more people lost their jobs and the stock market teetered, Meyers became panicked. The casinos on the Las Vegas Strip, where he had worked his way up from a lowly bar-back to a comfortable $1,100 weekly wage, seemed reluctant to hire a pudgy, gray-haired bartender over the flocks of young women competing for the same jobs.

The one time he was called to an interview, his inexperience with mixing mojitos, a trendy mint-fused drink unheard of in the unassuming Vegas era that drew him to Sin City, cost him the opportunity, he said.

He all but emptied his checking account this month to make rent. With the remaining $56, he bought groceries — a pie, some bread, milk, coffee — and penned a notice to his friends on Facebook:

“I’m tired of being made to feel like dirt because I lost my job,” he wrote. “Only three more weeks, and I won’t be tired any longer.”

It was not so much a suicide note, he said days later, but a cry for help.

His friends have unsuccessfully urged him to seek counseling.

“I feel like he is desolate and he is at the end of his rope,” said Jacqueline Decker, who also has exhausted her unemployment benefits. “We each have our own hell.”

Robert Leahy, director of the American Institute for Cognitive Therapy in New York, said it is not uncommon for 99ers to grapple with depression.

“You certainly get stuck in a negative thought over and over again,” said Leahy, who studies depression. “The longer you are unemployed, the more evidence you think you have that you will never get a job.”

Meyers’ pessimism was somewhat softened recently by a display of altruism. A stranger who heard of his Facebook posting invited him to stay in her guest room if he is evicted. She, too, is unemployed.

He doesn’t see it as a solution that can last.

He calculates that it will take three days of not having access to a shower before he is shunned on the street. He pictures police officers rousting him from the sidewalk. He wonders what he will eat.

“It’s bad enough being 55 and clean and unemployed,” Meyers said. “Can you imagine being dirty and unemployed? There’s no going back from that.”

10 killed in German train crash, toll could rise

Wow, this must have been a horrifying experience for those on board! TGO

Refer to story below. Source: Associated Press

By KIRSTEN GRIESHABER, Associated Press Kirsten Grieshaber, Associated Press

BERLIN – A head-on collision between a cargo train and a passenger train killed 10 people and injured 23 others in eastern Germany, and left wreckage scattered across a frost-covered field. Authorities said Sunday they believe the death toll in one of the country’s worst train accidents ever could still rise.

The trains crashed in heavy fog late Saturday on a single-line track near the village of Hordorf, close to Saxony-Anhalt’s state capital Magdeburg, vaulting the passenger train from the track and tipping it onto its side. The front rows of the first passenger compartment were crushed and several seats lay outside the train. Both trains caught fire, but most of the dead were killed on impact, police said.

“The crash was so strong that the passenger train was catapulted off the tracks,” Armin Friedrich, the police officer in charge of the rescue efforts, said at a news conference in Hordorf, about 125 miles (200 kilometers) southwest of Berlin, Germany’s capital. Nearly 200 police and rescue workers were sent to the crash site.

The cause of the crash was under investigation, and experts said they were still looking at all possibilities, including technical failure and human error. State governor Wolfgang Boehmer, who visited the site Sunday, told reporters one of the drivers may have missed a red traffic signal.

Police said it was too early to comment on a possible cause.

“We are still speechless and shocked by the images and the level of destruction,” said Holger Hoevelmann, the interior minister of Saxony-Anhalt.

The passenger train operated by Harze Elbe Express was on its way from Magdeburg to Halberstadt with about 50 passengers aboard, moving at a speed of 62 mph (100 kph), when it crashed with the cargo train, which was going 50 mph (80 kph).

The cargo train, run by Peine-Salzgitter, was carrying calcium carbonate, often used as a calcium substitute or antacid.

Neither train operator could immediately be reached for comment, but the head of Deutsche Bahn, the national German railway, told news agency DAPD that he was “deeply upset” by the accident.

“Of course, we will do everything possible to support all those involved in this accident,” Ruediger Grube said, adding that he had contacted Harz-Elbe-Express and offered help.

At the scene, mangled parts of the blue and yellow train passenger were scattered around the field. The dark imprints of some of the bodies that had been removed could be seen on the white frosty ground next to the crash site.

The noise of the collision was heard in the village of Oschersleben, more than four miles (about seven kilometers) away.

Due to the heavy fog, rescue helicopters were not able to fly the injured to nearby hospitals and they had to be taken by ambulance instead. Most of the injured were so severely hurt that doctors fear the death toll could rise, Hoevelmann added.

Several German media outlets said the train driver and a conductor of the passenger train were among the dead, but police did not confirm those reports.

Two bodies have been identified, but police did not want to release their identities before informing relatives. A phone hotline was activated for family members and friends, and psychologists and ministers were on the scene to counsel rescue personnel.

Police said they were having trouble identifying victims because most of them were not carrying ID with them.

Chancellor Angela Merkel expressed her condolences, saying she too was shocked.

“My thoughts are with the families of the victims,” Merkel said in a statement.

The chancellor also thanked the many rescue workers for their immediate and tireless help.

In 2006, 23 people were killed in a train accident in Emsland in northern Germany and 101 people died in 1998, when a high-speed train derailed near Eschede in Lower-Saxony.

US report: Iraq’s security at risk without aid

Here we go… More money will be poured into Iraq by the United States; while Americans continue losing their jobs and their homes. If one adds up all the money that has been spent in Afghanistan and Iraq during the last decade, the sum total would easily exceed two trillion dollars ($2,000,000,000,000) – a great deal more than beefing up our borders and improving intelligence would have cost. Of course, going that route would not have provided our crooked politicians and their equally corrupt business associates with the  huge sums of  money they have pocketed; hence their decision for this long, drawn-out war. In any event, it’s our tax dollars at work, for foreigners that is… TGO

On a different note, maybe Muslims women should wear full-face veils. The woman pictured below certainly could use one – ugh! TGO

Refer to story below. Source: Associated Press

By LARA JAKES, Associated Press Lara Jakes, Associated Press

BAGHDAD – Without more help — and quickly — Iraqi security forces may not be able to protect the fragile nation from insurgents and invaders after American troops leave at the end of the year, according to a U.S. report released Sunday.

The semiannual report by the special inspector general for Iraq reconstruction also cites data by the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad showing that the nation’s government, economy, legal systems and basic services like electricity and water remain unstable.

The 156-page report forecasts a dim outlook at best for Iraq’s near future as the United States steps back after nearly eight years of war and billions of dollars in aid.

It largely blames corruption in Iraq’s military and police forces for wasted resources and bad planning in running its bases and maintaining its equipment. Congress is still weighing how much money to give Iraqi forces this year.

“Several U.S. observers noted real or potential gaps in Iraqi security forces capabilities that could affect its ability to lock in hard-won security gains,” the report concluded.

“The U.S. faces the choice of making additional investments to fill essential gaps in Iraqi security forces capabilities or accept the risk that they will fall short of being able to fully secure Iraq from internal and external threats by the time U.S. forces depart.”

Under the security agreement between Washington and Baghdad, U.S. troops will leave Iraq by the end of the year. The Obama administration would consider keeping some troops in Iraq beyond the Dec. 31 deadline, but only if Iraqi leaders ask for them.

Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki has said Iraqi security forces are able to protect the nation, and does not believe foreign forces will be needed after this year. But Iraq’s top military officer, Gen. Babaker Shawkat Zebari, last summer said U.S. troops should stay for up to another decade to help secure the country’s borders from invaders.

More than 200 Iraqis — mostly security forces and Shiites — have been killed in insurgent attacks over the last two weeks that underscore the country’s continuing instability. Still, the report warns that a lack of electricity, water and sewage pose one of the greatest threats to Iraq’s shaky peace.

“The lack of sufficient basic services will be the most likely cause of future instability in Iraq,” it said, adding that power demands likely won’t be met until 2014 at the earliest. “The lack of perceived improvements in Iraq’s water, sewage, and electricity systems could lead to popular unrest more so than political or sectarian disagreements.”

A two-month study of Iraq’s basic services, politics and government, economy and legal systems in each of the nation’s provinces found widespread instability in almost every area.

Additionally, the return of anti-American cleric Muqtada al-Sadr to Iraq also poses “a major challenge for the new government,” the report found, noting that the firebrand populist controls a commanding chunk of parliament lawmakers.

“This significant political power places him in a position to demand policy concessions from Prime Minister al-Maliki,” it concluded.

Thousands march against corruption in India

Political corruption is rampant in just about every country on Earth. And quite frankly, the United States may lead the world in this category; our politicians just go about it differently. Here in the U.S., we start wars, then at some point during the latter part of these wars we send billions of dollars to the war-ravaged country in order to build it back up. The politicians, major corporations and banks make a killing (no pun intended) in the process, while the American people sit idly by and watch with apathy.

The difference between the United States and a country like India is that in the U.S. the people are entertained with material goods and there is generally a higher standard of living, in part  due to the fact that India has about four time the population of the United States. But corruption is still prevalent here in the good ol’ USA, and substantially so. TGO

Refer to story below. Source: Associated Press

NEW DELHI – Thousands of people holding placards and shouting slogans have protested in India’s capital against what they called widespread corruption and poor governance.

At least 5,000 people marched Sunday through central New Delhi to show their anger over recent scandals that hit Prime Minister Manmohan Singh’s government.

A telecommunications scandal cost the country billions of dollars and paralyzed Parliament’s four-week session in December.

India’s image was also sullied by allegations of corruption, construction delays and cost overruns during last October’s Commonwealth Games.

The government had no immediate comment.

Sunday is the anniversary of the death of independence leader Mohandas K. Gandhi, who was known for his scrupulous honesty.

Egypt in crisis as Mubarak meets commanders

Observing the make-up and behavior of various people across the globe is interesting. For example, last year in Thailand the “Red Shirts” took to the streets and poured bucket-fulls of their own blood outside government headquarters in a show of defiance against those in power. Here in Egypt thousands are protesting the 30-year rule of President Hosni Mubarak, and rightfully so. Obviously anyone who remains in power that long is a dictator, abusing the system and its people. Then we have places like Cuba, where Fidel and Raul Castro have ruled the country for 52 years, with little opposition from the people. In fact, a great deal of the Cuban population supports the dictators, despite the fact that they have ruined the nation.

It’s all very interesting… TGO

Refer to story below. Source: Reuters

By Shaimaa Fayed and Yasmine Saleh Shaimaa Fayed And Yasmine Saleh

CAIRO (Reuters) – President Hosni Mubarak, clinging to power despite unprecedented demands for an end to his 30-year rule, met on Sunday with the powerful military which is widely seen as holding the key to Egypt’s future.

Mubarak held talks with Vice President Omar Suleiman, whose appointment on Saturday has possibly set the scene for a transition in power, Defense Minister Mohamed Hussein Tantawi, Chief of Staff Sami al-Anan and other senior commanders.

An earthquake of unrest is shaking Mubarak’s authoritarian grip on Egypt and the high command’s support is vital as other pillars of his ruling apparatus crumble, political analysts said as protests entered their sixth day.

Amidst a heavy military presence, up to 4,000 people gathered in Cairo’s Tahrir Square, which has become a rallying point to express anger at poverty, repression and corruption in the Arab world’s most populous nation.

Warplanes and helicopters flew over the square and by late afternoon extra army trucks appeared in an apparent attempt to enforce a curfew through a show of military force.

“Hosni Mubarak, Omar Suleiman, both of you are agents of the Americans,” shouted protesters, referring to the appointment of intelligence chief Suleiman as vice president, the first time Mubarak has appointed a deputy in 30 years of office.

It was the position Mubarak, a key U.S. ally, held before he become president and many saw the appointment as ending his son Gamal’s long-predicted ambitions to take over and as an attempt to reshape the administration to placate reformists.

Clearly those in Tahrir Square did not wish to see Mubarak’s ruling structure replaced by a military line-up featuring his closest cronies. “Mubarak, Mubarak, the plane awaits,” said demonstrators, intent on getting rid of the old guard.

SHOCKWAVES AROUND MIDDLE EAST

The turmoil, in which more than 100 people have died, has sent shock waves through the Middle East where other autocratic rulers may face similar challenges, and unsettled financial markets around the globe as well as Egypt’s allies in the West.

The final straw seems to have been parliamentary elections in November last year, which observers said authorities rigged to exclude the opposition and secure Mubarak’s ruling party a rubber-stamp parliament.

The military response to the crisis has been ambivalent. Troops now guard key buildings after police lost control of the streets, but have neglected to enforce a curfew, often fraternizing with protesters rather than confronting them.

It remains to be seen if the armed forces will keep Mubarak in power, or decide he is a liability to Egypt’s national interests, and their own. It was also unclear if Mubarak had decided to talk with the generals or if he was summoned by them.

It was Tunisian generals who persuaded former President Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali to flee last month after weeks of protests.

The crisis deepened on Sunday with Egyptians facing lawlessness on the streets with security forces and citizens trying to stop rampaging looters.

Through the night, Cairo residents armed with clubs, chains and knives formed vigilante groups to guard neighborhoods from marauders after the unpopular police force withdrew following the deadly clashes with protesters.

As a result the army has deployed in bigger numbers across Egypt, easing some of the panic over law and order. In central Cairo, army check points were set up at some intersections.

“The armed forces urged all citizens to abide by the curfew precisely and said it would deal with violators strictly and firmly,” state television issued a statement.

Residents expressed hope the army, revered in Egypt and less associated with daily repression than the police and security agencies, would restore order.

“People are terrified by these outlaws on the streets looting, attacking and destroying,” said Salah Khalife, an employee at a sugar company.

Army tanks and tracked vehicles stood at the capital’s street corners, guarding banks as well as government offices including Interior Ministry headquarters. State security fought with protesters trying to attack the building on Saturday night.

TANKS SPRAYED WITH SLOGANS

In surreal scenes, soldiers from Mubarak’s army stood by tanks covered in anti-Mubarak graffiti: “Down with Mubarak. Down with the despot. Down with the traitor. Pharaoh out of Egypt.”

Asked how they could let protesters scrawl anti-Mubarak slogans on their vehicles, one soldier said: “These are written by the people, it’s the views of the people.”

Egypt’s sprawling armed forces — the world’s 10th biggest and more than 468,000-strong — have been at the heart of power since army officers staged the 1952 overthrow of the king. It benefits from about $1.3 billion a year in U.S. military aid.

So far, the protest movement seems to have no clear leader or organization even if Mubarak did wish to open a dialogue.

Prominent activist Mohamed ElBaradei, a Nobel Peace Laureate for his work with the U.N. nuclear agency, returned to Egypt from Europe to join the protests. But many Egyptians feel he has not spent enough time in the country.

The Muslim Brotherhood, an Islamist opposition group, has also stayed in the background, although several of its senior officials have been rounded up. The government has accused it of planning to exploit the protests.

Thirty-four members of the Brotherhood, including seven of its leaders, walked out of prison on Sunday after relatives of prisoners overcame the guards, a Brotherhood official said. The Brotherhood has called on Egyptians to keep up their protests.

Prisoners have escaped from several major prisons across Egypt after police morale and discipline started to break down. In many parts of Egypt police have abandoned their stations.

State television largely ignored protests until Friday, the biggest day when a curfew was announced. Since then it has given more coverage but has focused on disorder and shown pictures of small protests, not the mass gatherings.

The government has interfered with Internet access and mobile phone signals to try and disrupt demonstrators’ plans.

TUMULT HITS TOURISTS

The tumult was affecting Egypt’s tourist industry and the United States and Turkey said they were offering evacuation flights for citizens anxious to leave. Other governments advised their citizens to leave Egypt or to avoid traveling there.

The United States and European powers were busy reworking their Middle East policies, which have supported Mubarak, turning a blind eye to police brutality and corruption in return for a bulwark against first communism and now militant Islam.

“This is the Arab world’s Berlin moment,” said Fawaz Gerges of the London School of Economics, comparing the events to the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989. “The authoritarian wall has fallen, and that’s regardless of whether Mubarak survives.”

(Additional reporting by Dina Zayed, Marwa Awad, Shaimaa Fayed, Sherine El Madany, Yasmine Saleh, Alison Williams and Samia Nakhoul in Cairo, Alexander Dziadosz in Suez, Arshad Mohammed in Washington and Peter Apps, Angus MacSwan and William Maclean in London; Writing by Peter Millership, editing by Sonya Hepinstall)

Suicide bomber kills Kandahar deputy governor

The towel heads are still at it; business as usual for them… TGO

Refer to story below. Source: Reuters

By Ismail Sameem Ismail Sameem Sat Jan 29, 6:23 am ET

KANDAHAR, Afghanistan (Reuters) – A motorcycle suicide bomber killed the deputy governor of Afghanistan’s Kandahar province on Saturday, a blow to U.S.-led forces trying to bolster governance and fight a robust insurgency in the Taliban’s heartland.

Violence in Afghanistan is at its worst since U.S.-backed Afghan forces overthrew the Taliban in late 2001 with casualties on all sides at record levels and militant attacks increasing in number and spreading to almost every part of the country.

Deputy Governor Abdul Latif Ashna was killed as he left his home to travel to work in Kandahar city, capital of Kandahar province, the governor’s spokesman Zalmay Ayoubi said.

At least five other civilians who were wounded in the blast had been taken to hospital. No further details were immediately available about the attack or about the condition of the wounded.

U.S. Ambassador Karl Eikenberry who was visiting Kandahar on Saturday condemned the attack but said it would not sap efforts to increase security in the southern province.

“The loss of a great deputy governor like this is a setback. What we’ve seen is consistently Afghan government leaders emerge and the people continue to rally in an effort to establish security in this province,” he told journalists.

ASSASSINATION CAMPAIGN

Kandahar is the spiritual homeland of the Taliban and has been the main focus of U.S. efforts over the past year to turn the tide of a war now in its tenth year.

Tens of thousands of foreign and Afghan troops have run “clearing” operations in some of the country’s most volatile districts around Kandahar city, while Afghan police, mentored by foreign trainers, formed security perimeters inside the city.

But while the city has seen a drop in large-scale attacks over the past year, militants have managed to step up a campaign of targeted killings, particularly against government figures, which makes it hard to recruit officials.

Between mid-June and mid-September, 21 people were reported to have been assassinated each week across Afghanistan, up from seven a week for the previous three months, the United Nations said. Most killings took place in the south and east.

Alongside the military campaign, the United States has also ramped up its civilian presence in Kandahar to try and strengthen local governance and improve public services to encourage residents to support their government and reject the insurgency.

But in May, Frank Ruggiero, then the U.S. State Department’s top official in southern Afghanistan and now acting top envoy to Afghanistan and Pakistan, said it was increasingly hard for civilians to work in Kandahar because of the assassinations.

Last year was the bloodiest for foreign troops in Afghanistan with 711 killed. But civilians bear the brunt of the war with 2,400 killed in the first ten months of 2010, U.N. figures show.

A war review by U.S. President Barack Obama last month said “notable operational gains” had been made and the Taliban’s momentum arrested in much of the country.

But many critics dispute those assessments, pointing out that statistics show insurgent attacks are at their highest since the war started and some say optimistic messages about security are simply aimed at preparing for an eventual withdrawal.

Afghans are to begin taking over security in some provinces of the country in March, ahead of a gradual withdrawal of U.S. troops — now numbering around 100,000 — beginning in July.

This is part of a larger plan to have Afghan forces take the lead in securing the entire country by the end of 2014.

(Additional reporting by Matt Robinson; Writing by Jonathon Burch, editing by Miral Fahmy)

NATO: Afghanistan war won’t end like Vietnam

The title of this article is false. History will show that the war in Afghanistan, just like the war in Vietnam, just like the war in Iraq, will have achieved nothing other than getting young men and women killed or maimed. But more importantly for those who run this country; this war (like those mentioned above) has put bushel-fulls of money in the pockets of politicians and businessmen.

We have been in Afghanistan for ten years now, spending over $100 billion dollars per year, and for what? We’re fighting a group of camel jockeys with walkie-talkies, rifles and make-shift bombs, yet we are expected to believe that the combined efforts of 28 countries with the most advanced intelligence and weaponry on the planet cannot defeat this enemy in a decade? Please… ! This war is being milked for political and business reasons. And at the end of the day, the country will still be in total anarchy, just as Iraq is after a decade of fighting there.

This is all BS. Of course, most Americans don’t really care, they’re more concerned over who the next “teen idol” will be. TGO

Refer to story below. Source: Associated Press

By SLOBODAN LEKIC, Associated Press Slobodan Lekic, Associated Press Thu Jan 27, 5:32 pm ET

BRUSSELS – The Afghan army will not collapse when international troops end their combat role, in the way that South Vietnam’s did in the 1970s, NATO’s top officer said Thursday.

Italian Adm. Giampaolo Di Paola said the international community intends to remain committed to Afghanistan after NATO forces hand over responsibility to the Afghan security forces in 2014.

“About 60 countries are engaged in the broader effort,” Di Paola told reporters. “It is not just a bilateral or trilateral effort, as it was (in Vietnam).”

“The United Nations, the World Bank, many non-governmental organizations are all there,” he said. “That is the fundamental difference.”

The U.S.-led military coalition in Afghanistan numbers more than 140,000 troops — two-thirds of them Americans. The allies hope to have trained a total of 306,000 Afghan army and police by the end of this year. They face an estimated 25,000 insurgents.

The Obama administration expects to start drawing down its forces in Afghanistan in July, when the first of the country’s 34 provinces will be turned over to Afghan control. NATO’s combat role will end in 2014, but some support units will remain in the country to help the Afghan security forces in case of need.

“The way the Afghan security forces are being trained is much better than in 1975,” said Di Paola, who heads NATO’s Military Committee — the alliance’s highest military body.

On Thursday, during a conference of the chiefs of military staffs of NATO’s 28 nations and their allies, he said “the overwhelming conclusion was that we are on the right track, that overall we are moving forward” toward the goal set for 2014.

In South Vietnam, U.S. and allied troops pulled out in 1973, after almost a decade of war. Two years later, the South’s army — which the Americans and French before them had trained for almost 30 years — collapsed within a matter of weeks during a communist offensive.

Some historians say the two wars are fundamentally similar. They have drawn parallels between Afghanistan’s deeply flawed elections, and the failed effort in Vietnam to legitimize a military regime lacking broad popular support through an imposed presidential election in 1967.

In August 2009, President Barack Obama’s then-envoy to Afghanistan Richard Holbrooke and the top U.S. and NATO commander there, Gen. Stanley McChrystal, contacted a key Vietnam historian to discuss what to do in Afghanistan.

The historian, Stanley Karnow, told them the main lesson of Vietnam was that “we shouldn’t have been there in the first place.”

Bomb strikes funeral, killing 48 in Baghdad

Just another day in Iraq (yawn)… TGO

Refer to story below. Source: Associated Press

By KIM GAMEL, Associated Press Kim Gamel, Associated Press Thu Jan 27, 3:56 pm ET

BAGHDAD – A car bomb exploded outside a funeral tent Thursday in a mainly Shiite area of Baghdad, killing at least 48 people — the latest in a wave of attacks that has triggered fury over the government’s inability to stop the bloodshed.

As ambulances raced to the scene and Iraqi helicopters buzzed overhead, young men enraged over the security lapse pelted Iraqi forces with sticks and stones, prompting skirmishes.

The violence over the past week and a half has mainly targeted the majority Shiite community and Iraqi security forces, posing a major challenge for Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki and his fragile coalition government that was seated last month.

Some lawmakers and city officials said insurgents were likely trying to undermine the government ahead of an Arab League summit to be held in March in Baghdad. The Iraqi leadership had campaigned to host the two-day meeting to tout security improvements and mend frayed ties with its Arab neighbors.

“The terrorists are carrying out these bombings now because they are angry over the successful formation of a new government and they want to try to foil the Arab Summit,” said Kamil Nassir al-Zaidi, the head of the Baghdad provincial council. “But the summit will be held as scheduled despite all these bombings.”

Anger over Thursday’s attack in the former Shiite militia stronghold of Shula stemmed from the fact the booby-trapped car had been parked just several yards (meters) from one end of the long, hangar-like tent.

Associated Press Television News footage showed broken plastic chairs overturned inside the tent. Broken tea cups and other debris covered the patterned rugs on the floor. A mourner held up a torn, blood-soaked dishdasha, traditional dress worn by Iraqi men.

At least 48 people were killed and 121 wounded, according to police and hospital officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity because they weren’t authorized to release the information. Several nearby cars and houses were damaged.

Hours later, troops fired in the air to disperse a crowd gathered for a demonstration to demand better protection, and some protesters set tires on fire. Security forces imposed a curfew in Shula, prompting complaints from some residents that they were unable to visit wounded loved ones who were taken to hospitals elsewhere in the capital.

A witness who identified himself as Abu Ahmed al-Saiedi said mourners had been allowed to park near the funeral tent because most people in the neighborhood knew each other.

“I blame the neighborhood security officials for letting this car bomb enter the area without being checked,” said al-Saiedi, who was hit in the arm with shrapnel. “When I saw people hurling stones at the security forces, I said to myself, ‘They deserve that.’”

Iraqis have become used to high-profile bombings, often followed by long periods of calm.

But the recent uptick in violence, with more than 200 people killed in near-daily attacks since Jan. 18, has raised new concern about the readiness of the Iraqis to take over their own security.

Al-Maliki formed his new Cabinet in late December after months of bitter haggling with other parties following inconclusive March 7 elections. But he has not yet filled key security posts, including leaders for the defense, interior and national security ministries.

Another important decision facing al-Maliki: whether to ask the U.S. military to stay beyond the end of the year.

In his State of the Union address Tuesday, President Barack Obama appeared to close the door on keeping any significant U.S. military presence in Iraq beyond that deadline.

“This year, our civilians will forge a lasting partnership with the Iraqi people while we finish the job of bringing our troops out of Iraq,” Obama said.

Four other Iraqis were killed Thursday in separate bombings targeting Iraqi troops and an electricity official in Baghdad. The latest was a roadside bomb that killed a policeman at about 7 p.m. in the mainly Sunni area of Dora, officials said.

Hakim al-Zamili, a Shiite lawmaker who is loyal to anti-U.S. cleric Muqtada al-Sadr, said Iraqi security forces have become complacent since violence ebbed in 2008 after a series of U.S.-backed offensives. He also agreed that the likely motive was to upstage the planned Arab Summit.

“The Iraqi security forces have become lax after achieving a victory on terrorism,” he said.

The Islamic State of Iraq, an al-Qaida front group, claimed responsibility for three bombings north of Baghdad last week.

The U.S. military declined to place blame on a single group, saying there are a number of different terrorist elements with varying objectives.

“As these attacks so vividly remind us, there remains a very real threat to Iraqis from violent extremists,” Brig. Gen. Jeffrey Buchanan, a military spokesman, said in an e-mail. “The attacks of the past days remind us just how critical it is for the Iraqi government to maintain pressure on the networks.”

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Associated Press writers Saad Abdul-Kadir and Hamid Ahmed contributed to this report.