Thursday, February 10, 2011

A notice to hold universally

Tahrir Square this afternoon contains the breath to the possible imminence of his victory, given the proximity of the ad announced the resignation of Mubarak. The democracy movement triggered by the Egyptian youth cyber has made out a key issue Mubarak. In recent days the motto came to be: "If the" rais "is stubborn in his efforts to cling to power, more so are we." And it turns out in every way unlikely to face a transition to democracy in the Nile Valley with Mubarak as head of state.

Imagine such a thing had been raised in Spain in the seventies. Unthinkable. As much as I pretend to Mubarak announced on TV that are not re-submitted in September and that meanwhile he would initiate reforms. As much as they wanted the leading figures of his regime. However much they were willing to accept the scariest leaders and Western diplomats.

The people of the Liberation Square says loud and clear that will not leave there until the king assumed his political demise and the need for his mummy have a funeral. It's the least that the courage and suffering of hundreds of thousands of Egyptians, life and liberty of hundreds of them, may require.

This past weekend it seemed that the democratic movement had lost steam, but on Tuesday recovered a renewed vigor with the resurgence among free Ghonim Waƫl Net Activist. Say what they say the Sabiondo of Washington and Brussels feared that Israel feared the Falcons, who engineered the appliance as great men of the regime, the people of Tahrir, supported by many other compatriots in other cities, continued to demand the overthrow of Mubarak.

Tahrir in Arabic means "liberation." And for people who has made this place the beating heart of the struggle for freedom not only of the Egyptians and all Arabs, but now, of humanity, the first thing to be free is the general stone face that has ruled the Nile valley with an iron fist for more than thirty years.

Confirmed the news tonight they expect the Democrats, a burst of joy and will shake the Tahrir to the four corners of the planet. There will be time to discuss whether or not Omar Suleiman is the man of the transition, if it is, as everything indicates, the Arias Navarro in Egypt or if you can spring a surprise.

We will also have time to talk about the need for a government of concentration in which the Democrats play a significant role and address the tasks of drafting a new constitution and prepare for free elections. Not to miss hours and days to discuss the merits and possibilities of alternative personalities like El Baradei and Amr Mussa.

And even to speculate on the fate of the Muslim Brotherhood. All this will come in due time. One thing at a time. Confirmed the news tonight out of Mubarak, the first will celebrate the victory of a universally uniquely democratic revolution. And would be the two autocrats who died in this spring of the Arab peoples to carry off so many stupid prejudices and with so many cowards Western government in the West caution.

And now, you want to know what the next Arab autocrat could be overthrown as a result of a popular revolution? The answer is easy: look at where they spent their Christmas vacation the Sarkozy government ministers. The joke circulating these days in France by the embarrassing fact Alliot-Marie Minister pass, free full, your holiday in Tunisia, Ben Ali and Prime Minister Fillon, with the same travel agency in Mubarak's Egypt.

And this is not over.

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