NOTE: Sharif Kouddous is a senior producer for Democracy Now. Also, graphic images in the "well documented" link within the article.http://www.thenation.com/article/158145/live-egyptian-revolutionThe Nation.
Live From the Egyptian RevolutionSharif Kouddous
Saturday, January 29, Cairo, Egypt—I grew up in Egypt. I spent half my life here. But Saturday, when my plane from JFK airport touched down in Cairo,
I arrived in a different country than the one I had known all my life. This is not Hosni Mubarak’s Egypt anymore and, regardless of what happens, it will never be again.In Tahrir Square, thousands of Egyptians – men and women, young and old, rich and poor – gathered today to celebrate their victory over the regime’s hated police and state security forces and to call on Mubarak to step down and leave once and for all. They talked about the massive protest on Friday, the culmination of three days of demonstrations that began on January 25th to mark National Police Day. It was an act of popular revolt the likes of which many Egyptians never thought they would see during Mubarak’s reign. "The regime has been convincing us very well that we cannot do it, but Tunisians gave us an idea and it took us only three days and we did it," said Ahmad El Esseily, a 35 year-old author and TV/radio talk show host who took park in the demonstrations. "We are a lot of people and we are strong."
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The military was greeted warmly on the streets of Cairo. Crowds roared with approval as one soldier was carried through Tahrir Square today holding a flower in his hand. Dozens of people clambered onto tanks as they rode around the square. Throughout the day people chanted: "The people, the army: one hand."
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A 4pm curfew set for today was casually ignored with people convinced the army would not harm them.
The police were a different story. Their brutality the past few days--decades in fact--has been well documented.- snip -
At this point it seems clear the people are not leaving the streets. They own them now and they are refusing to go until Mubarak does.
They chanted, "Mubarak, the plane is waiting for you at the airport," and "Wake up Mubarak, today is your last day."
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