Sunday, February 13, 2011

The Egyptian Army says civilians committed

After the departure of ousted President Hosni Mubarak, the Egyptian army said they are committed to civilian rule, while assured that they would respect all treaties, a move to reassure Israel and Washington. Campaigners for democracy in Tahrir Square in Cairo, the epicenter of the protests that toppled Mubarak, has promised to stay there until the Higher Military Council to accept his democratic reform agenda.

Across the Middle East, autocratic rulers were calculating their chances of survival after Mubarak was forced from power in a dramatic 18-day uprising that changed the course of Egyptian history, upsetting the United States and its allies. In another move to restore order, the military said that ensure "the peaceful transition of power in the context of a free and democratic system that allows a civil sovereign power and rule the country to build a free and democratic state." In comments following the declarations of force, the Muslim Brotherhood, viewed with suspicion by the United States, said it was seeking power and praised the efforts of the Government to transfer military civilians.

As the first priority of the military rulers, this is to establish law and order before the start of the workweek, which begins in Egypt on Sunday. Tanks and soldiers remained in the streets and guarding key intersections government buildings after the police force in any year in its work.

As the threat of a possible confrontation between the military and demonstrators have disappeared, residents of Cairo took souvenir photos with the smiling soldiers to record the first day of the post-Mubarak era.

No comments:

Post a Comment