Egypt set for mass protest as army rules out force

Artykuły

• One million to march on critical day for rebellion
• Vice-president says he will talk to opposition
• White House hardens stance over transition

Egypt's army gave a powerful boost to the country's opposition last night by announcing that it would not use force to silence "legitimate" demands for democratic reforms in the Arab world's largest nation.

On the eve of a million-strong protest planned for today and amid multiplying signs that the US is moving steadily closer to ditching its long-standing ally, Egypt's president, Hosni Mubarak, now has few options left.

Last night, in an apparent attempt to soften popular anger, the Egyptian vice-president said Mubarak had asked him to start a dialogue with all the country's political parties. According to state TV, Omar Suleiman said it would involve constitutional and legislative reforms.

The White House said in a statement that the crisis should be settled by "meaningful talks", while the EU called for an "orderly transition" to democracy via "free and fair" elections. Mubarak has shown no sign of accepting either.

The veteran Egyptian leader formed a new cabinet yesterday, after appointing his intelligence chief as his vice-president, but there was no indication that popular pressure for him to quit was abating.

The military's statement, reported by the state-run Mena news agency, said: "The presence of the army in the streets is for your sake and to ensure your safety and wellbeing. The armed forces will not resort to use of force against our great people." It referred to the "legitimate demands of honourable citizens".

It was not clear whether the pledge not to use force was intended to draw the sting from protests or signal a weakening of support for the president, who relies heavily on the armed forces as the guarantor of the regime and its stability.

On the seventh consecutive day of unrest, tens of thousands of people again rallied in Cairo's Tahrir Square chanting "Get out … we want you out" and singing Egypt's national anthem emphasising the patriotic motives of the unprecedented mass unrest.

"We have spoken. When the citizens speak, we cannot go back," said Ahmed Mustafa. "I came here to fight the fear inside me. People have lost their fear."

Israel's prime minister, Binyamin Netanyahu, said he was concerned that Egypt could end up with a regime as radical as that of Iran. "Our real fear is of a situation that could develop … and which has already developed in several countries, including Iran itself: repressive regimes of radical Islam," he told reporters after meeting Germany's Angela Merkel.

In Washington, the Obama administration has sent a retired senior diplomat to Egypt to press the US case for democratic reforms to top Egyptian officials.

The state department said that a former ambassador to Egypt, Frank Wisner, is now on the ground in Cairo and will be meeting officials to urge them to embrace broad economic and political changes.

Obama met Middle East experts yesterday as his administration tried to find a path to a post-Mubarak era that continues to serve its interests, including ensuring that Egypt maintains its 30-year peace treaty with Israel. US hopes are solidifying around the reformist Mohamed ElBaradei, despite his difficult relationship with the US after he undermined Washington's claims that Iraq had weapons of mass destruction when he was head of the IAEA, and his criticism of Obama's failure to ask Mubarak to resign.

There are concerns in Washington that ElBaradei may be used by the Muslim Brotherhood, Egypt's leading Islamist political party, to help topple Mubarak, and then be pushed aside. ElBaradei has been mandated by opposition parties, including the Muslim Brotherhood, to talk to the army about forming a "national salvation government".

The US administration's message to Mubarak was initially a call for reform, but has hardened to the secretary of state, Hillary Clinton, saying there has to be a transition of power. But Clinton still suggested that Mubarak could stay to oversee free elections, a view that is viewed with distrust by the Egyptian opposition.

The Egyptian head of the Arab League, Amr Moussa, said there must be a peaceful transition "from one era to another".

Tony Blair, envoy for the Middle East Quartet, stopped short of calling for Mubarak to step down: "Change will happen," he said. "You can't put the genie back in the bottle now." William Hague, the foreign secretary, said after meeting EU colleagues: "We are setting down what should happen [in Egypt] in terms of values, process and institutions, but not trying to dictate precise timetable of elections."

Analysts believe that a likely outcome of the crisis is that Mubarak will eventually be persuaded to stand down by his closest advisers, including the army top brass and Suleiman. The US has close links to the Egyptian military.

Reuters news agency reported that 138 people have been killed in the protests, according to medical sources, hospitals and witnesses. No official figure has been given.

In Alexandria, Egypt's second city, thousands of protesters gathered in the square outside the main railway station, chanting "Come on, go away, show some shame." Witnesses said they had brought blankets and food, intending to stay the night and take part in tomorrow's million-strong march.

abate: słabnąć, tracić na sile

chant: skandować

consecutive: kolejny

ditch: porzucać

embrace: obejmować

emphasise: podkreślać

envoy: poseł, wysłannik

genie: dżin (duch z butelki)

guarantor: gwarant

indication: oznaka, znak

intelligence chief: szef wywiadu

maintain: utrzymywać, podtrzymywać

outcome: wynik, rezultat

oversee: nadzorować

pledge: obietnica

refer (to): nawiązywać (do)

resort to: uciekać się do (np. użycia siły)

salvation: zbawienie

solidify: krzepnąć, zastygać

stance: stanowisko

topple: obalać

undermine: podważać

unprecedented: bezprecedensowy

urge: zachęcać, namawiać

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