Thursday, February 3, 2011

Among the "executioners" in front of the bunker of President Mubarak

Heliopolis (Cairo) - A tall, white wall conceals the compound in which there is a bunker of Hosni Mubarak. Barbed wire, tanks, fighters and cameras on the towers. The palace of Heliopolis, the seat of the Presidency of the Republic of Egypt, it seems more inaccessible to Fort Knox. The powerful tenant of that building is threatened.

If by tomorrow will have packed up, like asking the opposition from Tahrir Square to tens of thousands would march against him. There is no time to lose, then. We must act in advance and raise hell today. America has downloaded, the army as well, but still the police, intelligence services and virtually unlimited financial resources.

It can buy all the protesters want. It is still strong, the Pharaoh. And is determined to sell life dearly. His place in history is a bloodbath. Heliopolis, at ten in the morning. A couple of hundreds of loyalists, armed with flags and photos of the rais, parked outside his residence. Awaits the green light and meanwhile makes the final details of the plan before going to Cairo.

Fifteen minutes after the mountain on SUVs, vans and cars and shall not commence, the cry of "We scap to defend to the death," the operation "clean sweep". In Mustafa Mahmud square await tens of thousands of men. And thousands more, all with faces and tonnage to be tough, we will add them along.

It is all too clear that these are people hired to lead the hands. The police did not see the place has become more a symbol of rebellion in these areas is massive but not lift a finger. There are a couple of officers that even wink at the parade of so-called "pro-Mubarak". The only thing missing that would tell them, give them a good lesson.

What a difference to the men and women, actors of civil protest in recent days. You have to be blind not to realize that this is a colossal hoax. A skit for the use of state television to show that there is a part of the country, most in their view that President Mubarak would like to life.

The problem is not limited to, unfortunately, shouting slogans that seem written by the same Pharaoh - "You're our hero, our guide," "The father of us all" - but will try to free them by force - to blows stones and petrol bombs - the square, where it all began. With the army that will be watching, while hundreds will fall under the blows of an assault carried out with horses and camels.

There will be for everyone, including journalists and cameramen. Insults, beatings and arrests. The battle will go on for hours, but the square will not be able to conquer it. The garrison antiregime does not move from Tahrir Square, never mind the curfew and warning to be bound by the Vice-President Omar Suleiman.

But who are the agitators? "They are the same a few days ago, protected by their uniforms, they shot him to our comrades," said Walid, his face bloodied. Cops then, service men, laborers engaged in crime for a fistful of dollars. The Egyptian Interior Ministry denied that plain-clothes officers have mixed with the demonstrators to provoke violence, but as to believe him after what we saw? Robert Gibbs, spokesman for the White House on behalf of the United States branded the brutal raids by organized gangs of the regime: "All violence instigated by the government - said Gibbs - must cease immediately." Harsh words that mark the final break between Washington and Mubarak.

There is no longer the second time Obama, "the transition must be immediate. It is imperative". It is not an invitation, is an order. And former Deputy Secretary of State, Jamie Rubin did not hesitate to speak of "crowd for rent" and point the finger at pro-Mubarak protesters, clearly engaged with the aim of destabilizing the country.

Desperate move, therefore, it seems that Saddam's willing to do anything not to be forced to exit the stage model of Ben Ali. The biggest problem is that nobody seems able to stop it. But dissenting voices are beginning to rise among its ranks: "The president must resign - said the Minister of Egyptian Antiquities Nouraddin Adbulsamad - if you do not want to reduce to ashes all over Egypt."

1 comment:

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