Source:
AP
Tens of thousands gather in Tahrir Square, while three Americans are detainedCAIRO (AP) — A swelling crowd of tens of thousands filled Cairo’s Tahrir Square Tuesday, answering the call for a million people to turn out and intensify pressure on Egypt’s military leaders to hand over power to a civilian government. The ruling military council held crisis talks with political parties across the spectrum to try to defuse growing cries for a “second revolution.”
The military head of state, Field Marshal Hussein Tantawi, was expected to address the nation as protests in Cairo and other major cities carried on for a fourth day. Security forces stayed out of Tahrir itself to lower the temperature. But there were clashes on side streets leading to the square — the epicenter of the uprising that ousted longtime authoritarian leader Hosni Mubarak in February.
The new wave of protests and violence around the country that began on Saturday has left 29 dead and has thrown Egypt’s politics into chaos less than a week before landmark parliamentary elections were to begin.
“If the elections don’t happen, there could be a clash between the army and the people. That’s what we’re afraid of,” said protester Mustafa Abdel-Hamid. He said he wanted a clear timetable for the transfer of power.
Read more:
http://www.salon.com/2011/11/22/as_crowds_swell_in_cairo_military_in_crisis_talks/
Wow! It is fascinating to see this process unfold and how the people of different nations are going about forming new governments.
It's like a volcanic eruption.