Monday, March 7, 2011

Armed civilian’s attacked on Egyptian demonstrators


According to the report Pro-democracy protestors in Egypt have been assaulted by men wearing plain clothes, armed with knives, outside the interior ministry in Cairo.
Since the fall of former president Hosni Mubarak last month it was the first such attack. The demonstrators have blizzard ministry and secret agencies to acquire documents they say appear proofs of suppression under the former president.
New Prime Minister Essam Sharaf has promised to change the security equipments and has named a cabinet to preside over until elections.
The eyewitnesses say that on Sunday, person in plain clothes armed with swords and petrol bombs tackled the pro-democracy demonstrators after armed forces isolated a Cairo gathering they were holding to demand change of the security services. Mohammad Fahmy told the army begun air firing to isolate us. We tried to escape but we were met by 200 hooligans in plain clothes having sharp weapons. The protestors were almost 2000.
He says taking apart the security equipment has been one of the main claims of the demonstration movement. The incidents of the destabilized have been explained as the Egyptian attacking of the Bastille. The secret police tool was the spirit centre of the Mubarak government.
The demonstrators who stormed the Cairo headquarters told, they had originated proofs of a equivalent state arrangements that observed all features of life in Egypt. Another activist Mohammed Abdelfattah said we have found record phone calls between university professors, political activists and opposition leaders. Evidence of violence was also traced, he added.
The new prime minister told to the biggest crowd in Cairo's Tahrir Square on Friday that he expected that Egypt's security tools would in future "give out the nationals".
The experts say the new cabinet which is still under procedure of indemnity from the military rulers is probably be acknowledged by the protestors because it would be minus Mubarak loyalists. He expected as the new interior minister Major General Mansour-el-Essawy, a former Cairo security chief, followed by Nabil Elaraby would be the new foreign minister and Mahmoud al-Guindy the new law minister.

No comments:

Post a Comment