Sunday, February 13, 2011

Cairo to overthrow Mubarak: clean of revolutionary

They revolted celebrated, and now they clean up: The protesters want from Tahrir Square in Cairo a neat, clean Egypt - in the truest sense of the word. Attributes appear to calls to take a broom and sweep the city. Hundreds follow the prompt. Dust swirls through the Tahrir Square in Cairo, young people put on a respirator.

Hundreds of men and women sweep the place that will be remembered as the starting point and central venue for the Egyptian revolution in history. President Hosni Mubarak is overthrown. After 30 years of autocratic rule, he declared on Friday night about his vice Omar Suleiman his resignation after he had one day before announcing in a speech to want to stay on the elections in September in office.

He had the demonstrators, who at first on the Tahrir Square, and later around the country called for his resignation, angrily. On Friday the protests culminating in an impressive rally, attended by more than one million people in Cairo. As against 18 known clock the message was that Mubarak had resigned and the power - contrary to the Constitution - not to Vice President Suleiman, a man of the system Mubarak, but had passed to the army, broke out cheering.

Drove all night honking motorcades through Cairo, the people waving red-white-black flags, danced, sang, rejoiced at the victory of the revolution. "We want an Egypt without corruption," says a young man on Saturday afternoon, the day after. He and his wife bought a broom and have come to Tahrir Square, in order to remove the rubbish, stones to clear away and remove the barricades.

"We have read a call for cleaning on Facebook, and we naturally want to be there," he says. They are clean and polite revolutionaries. A demonstrator holds a placard in the air with the inscription: "Sorry to trouble you - we are building a new Egypt." Another asks visitors with a note about with brooms and garbage bags to come back and help clean up.

No mob, then, the destruction in mind and makes for uncertainty, have as Mubarak and his supporters try to tell. These were the henchmen of the regime that had stormed at the start of the demonstrations in the crowd and had caused bloodshed. It is estimated that more than 300 people died.

Only the tanks are stationed at the entrances to the place, the soldiers are on it and watch the bustle. They help people to climb on the tanks, to pose for a photo to commemorate this historic moment. Some embrace the visitors. Also, children climb on the sand-colored metal monsters, parents raising babies in the tank itself in order to scan it.

Still make flag seller a good deal for the equivalent of ten cents a man paints a red-white-black flag in the faces of visitors to the Tahrir Square. The mood is relaxed. The people want peace and security, democracy and social justice. They do not want riots: while the army controls the entry of long ceased, the activists are still from people who scan the visitors for weapons and can show the cards.

How do we go from here in Egypt, do not know the man. "The main thing, Mubarak is gone," says one man, "We trust the army and we hope that it bridges the time responsible to free elections." Many say it is now time to create a "new Egypt" - without interference from abroad, many stress.

The day after the overthrow of the President, they demonstrate their attitude - with a broom in his hand.

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