"We came here to prevent members from entering the PND. We will stay until our demands are met or we will die here," said Mohammed Abdullah, 25, while the crowd chanted anti-Mubarak slogans and waving Egyptian flags. In response, Foreign Minister Ahmed Aboul Gheit affirmed that the military could intervene in case of chaos "to take things in hand".
"Aboul Gheit called for the preservation of the Constitution to prevent the country from descending into chaos," recounts an interview with the Minister to Al-Arabiya. This follows warnings Omar Suleiman. Tuesday night, the vice president warned that if the demonstrators did not sit at the negotiating table, the country could be a thank you to the coup, leading to chaos.
Tahrir Square, Cairo, protesters, however, seemed unwilling to let go on Wednesday the sixteenth day of revolt and its aftermath a new monster mobilization against Hosni Mubarak. On this roundabout has become a symbol of the protest movement, the thousands of protesters present at all times promise not to yield.
The organizers of the mobilization expressed their plan to march Friday, after the great prayer weekly on the radio building and state television, mouthpiece of the regime. Protesters call for, besides the immediate departure of Mr. Mubarak, a new Constitution. According to the official MENA news agency, a committee appointed by the Head of State to revise the agreement fell for change six sections and is considering further changes.
Several social movements on working conditions and wages have also emerged in the country. Demonstrations took place Tuesday and Wednesday in the arsenals of Port Said at the northern entrance of the Suez Canal, as well as in several private companies working on this strategic global trade.
At Cairo airport, strikes have affected service companies or security. Department officials to government statistics have also demonstrated in the capital. Strikes were also reported in Mahalla textile factories in the Nile Delta, or a gas company in the Fayoum.
"Aboul Gheit called for the preservation of the Constitution to prevent the country from descending into chaos," recounts an interview with the Minister to Al-Arabiya. This follows warnings Omar Suleiman. Tuesday night, the vice president warned that if the demonstrators did not sit at the negotiating table, the country could be a thank you to the coup, leading to chaos.
Tahrir Square, Cairo, protesters, however, seemed unwilling to let go on Wednesday the sixteenth day of revolt and its aftermath a new monster mobilization against Hosni Mubarak. On this roundabout has become a symbol of the protest movement, the thousands of protesters present at all times promise not to yield.
The organizers of the mobilization expressed their plan to march Friday, after the great prayer weekly on the radio building and state television, mouthpiece of the regime. Protesters call for, besides the immediate departure of Mr. Mubarak, a new Constitution. According to the official MENA news agency, a committee appointed by the Head of State to revise the agreement fell for change six sections and is considering further changes.
Several social movements on working conditions and wages have also emerged in the country. Demonstrations took place Tuesday and Wednesday in the arsenals of Port Said at the northern entrance of the Suez Canal, as well as in several private companies working on this strategic global trade.
At Cairo airport, strikes have affected service companies or security. Department officials to government statistics have also demonstrated in the capital. Strikes were also reported in Mahalla textile factories in the Nile Delta, or a gas company in the Fayoum.
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