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Americans Protest In Support Of Egypt (PHOTOS)

AP / The Huffington Post   First Posted: 01/29/11 09:38 PM ET   Updated: 05/25/11 07:30 PM ET

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CHICAGO -- Thousands of people in Egypt who flooded streets in riots calling for President Hosni Mubarak to step down were joined Saturday by relatives and supporters at protests in major American cities.

"Mubarak will go. If not today, then tomorrow," Magdy Al-Abady, 39, of Chicago, said during a demonstration downtown in front of the Egyptian consulate's office. The genomics researcher, with an Egyptian flag draped over his shoulders, said his brother and parents were protesting in Egypt and he was speaking often with his brother.

Protesters also gathered outside the United Nations complex in New York City, filled the street in front of the Egyptian embassy in Washington and marched through downtown San Francisco to show solidarity with the uprising. Other cities including Seattle and Los Angeles also saw demonstrations.

In Chicago, picketers marched and chanted, "Hey Mubarak you will see, all Egyptians will be free." They held signs that said "Victory to the Egyptian people" and "Freedom and Justice for all Egyptians."

Al-Abady said he wants President Barack Obama to support the Egyptian people.

"He must say very clearly that he does not support Mubarak," Al-Abady said. "Mubarak is not Egypt. The Egyptians are not Mubarak."

The crowd in New York called for the international community to support the popular uprising and abandon Mubarak.

Dahlia Ashour, a native of the Egyptian capital of Cairo who still has family in Egypt, said she was disappointed Obama hadn't made a forceful statement in support of the protesters. "He should be standing by the people, not by the regime," she said.

Obama has issued a plea for restraint in Egypt and called on Mubarak to take steps to democratize his government and refrain from using violence against his people.

Ahmed Soliman, of Manhattan, said Egypt deserves a leader who is "completely democratic." He said the riots and massive demonstrations are the result of genuine popular anger, not the work of a scheming opposition party.

"This is coming from the people," he said. "I've been waiting for this to happen. I left Egypt 18 years ago, and I have been dreaming of this day since then."

In downtown Seattle, protesters carried hand-lettered signs, saying "We'll shout until he's out" and "Down, Down Mubarak."

Dozens gathered in Harvard Square in Cambridge, Mass., to peacefully protest, waving Egyptian flags, holding signs and chanting for Mubarak to step down as they marched toward Boston.

In San Francisco, a crowd crammed into a small plaza waving Egyptian flags and raising chants in English and Arabic against Mubarak. Demonstrators said they were not placated by Mubarak's decision Saturday to name his intelligence chief as his first-ever vice president.

"We want to say to the U.S. administration: Stop supporting terror - terror and dictatorship," said Omar Ali, 21, of San Francisco, referring to the Mubarak regime. "Either you stand for democracy or not."

College students in Los Angeles used Facebook to organize a demonstration outside the federal building in Westwood, asking for Mubarak to be ousted and a new interim government.

In Chicago, 35-year-old student and mother Basma Hassan waved the Egyptian flag and said she wants the Egyptian people to know they have support in the U.S.

"We feel their pain," she said. "We don't want anyone to think we betrayed them."

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Photographs courtesy of the Associated Press.

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Scroll down for photos. CHICAGO -- Thousands of people in Egypt who flooded streets in riots calling for President Hosni Mubarak to step down were joined Saturday by relatives and supporters at prote...
Scroll down for photos. CHICAGO -- Thousands of people in Egypt who flooded streets in riots calling for President Hosni Mubarak to step down were joined Saturday by relatives and supporters at prote...
 
 
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11:12 PM on 01/31/2011
There was a Tampa rally, as well:
http://s167.photobucket.com/albums/u121/stpeteforpeace/Egypt%20protest%20Jan%202011%20Tampa/?albumview=slideshow
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Viper1st
multi quasi faceted
08:44 PM on 01/30/2011
Egyptians want freedom & democracy

90% Egyptians are Sunni Muslim Islamic-Sharia Law

Do "they" realize, that democracy is freedom & human rights for women, as well as men?
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thereisonlyoneparty
more amazing than you
10:23 PM on 01/30/2011
Freedom and equality will extend to those who are determined by god to be equal.  Just as it has always been intended.
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ranchero42
Taunt him with the licence of ink...
01:08 AM on 01/31/2011
I'm guessing god ordained that there should only be one party. If there IS a god - he noticed his 'one party' drank all the beer and threw the potluck into the pool.

By these rules set down to smite the wicked and hypocritical - the 'cops' must on their way.
Try not to get singled out of the crowd.
08:10 PM on 01/30/2011
Photos: Sat, NYC Rally in support of the Egyptian People at the UN, http://www.flickr.com/photos/greenelent/sets/72157625933399530/
08:06 PM on 01/30/2011
I understand that it would be hard for obama. He does support the revolution as do I. But there are consequences. For example; If this revolution backfires and Mubarak continues to be president Egypt- U.S. relations can be damaged. If It does it succeeds the country could be in chaos depending on who will run the country. Hopefully someone with morals and knowledgable will run the country. USA had a revolution and we turned out great. France on the other hand was not as lucky as USA was. This whole revolution reminds me of the french revolution. But I hope the revolution is a success.
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thereisonlyoneparty
more amazing than you
10:27 PM on 01/30/2011
The revolution will destabilize one of the strongest military powers in Africa.  It will have the ability to control western Asian politics.

More the results could be very anti-Egyptian.  Egypt now is rather secular.   After the revolution the power that will likely take hold will be religious in nature.

The likely target will be Israel (which will please a lot of people on here) in the short term, but longer term it could really mess things up in a region that is already really messed up.
11:10 PM on 01/30/2011
"The revolution will destabiliz e one of the strongest military powers in Africa. It will have the ability to control western Asian politics."

I hope you're not talking about egypt because egypt Is in africa so you got that right but having ability to control western asian politics? egypt is not in asia. It's in africa.

I hope they don't target isreal because they have a treaty. Having a revolution against that government is fine but starting a war with israel is not a good idea.

How can it be anti egyptians when the egyptians are the one revolting you don't make any sense.
05:27 PM on 01/30/2011
If you are in the US and want to follow the breaking news from Egypt, Link TV is carrying AL Jazeera English right now and many hours throughout the weekend. Tune in to DIRECTV channel 375 and DISH Network channel 9410.

Link TV is an independen­t non-commer­cial network devoted to global issues, available in 33 million U.S. homes receiving satellite television . It is the largest US network with rights to air Al Jazeera English nightly news, broadcast weekdays at 10:00pm ET (7:00pm PT), followed by "Mosaic: World News from the Middle East" . Check out www.linktv .org.
03:26 PM on 01/30/2011
Sucks that rightwing tool Mark Kirk is your senator. Might want to work on him first. His foreign policy isn't much different from Sarah Palin's.
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shthar
An error (500 Internal Server Error) has occured
02:55 PM on 01/30/2011
#1 on iTunes for the last three days, KING TUT!
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PharmaCan
Trying to make sense of it all
12:26 PM on 01/30/2011
Want to show a little solidarity with the Egyptian people? Here's a link to a free site for a printable Egyptian flag.

http://www.free-printable-flags.com/printable-world-flags/africa/egypt.gif

I know it's not much. But, at times like this every little show of support helps.
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KarlaElisa
The atmosphere is Toxic
03:38 PM on 01/30/2011
Great idea PharmaCan. Thanks for the link!
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naschkatze
A free man creates himself.
06:35 PM on 01/30/2011
Great link. Fanned and faved.
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eagle17765
12:06 PM on 01/30/2011
Teabaggers would have been against the Colonists & would have turned Adams & Hancock over to the Brits.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Andy Williams 1
Liberals! 21st century kooky!
12:09 AM on 01/31/2011
Yeah cuz they want more government!
11:51 AM on 01/30/2011
President Obama, History is passing you by.
How sad.
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eagle17765
12:05 PM on 01/30/2011
ELc

Education passing you by -- how sad.
03:41 PM on 01/30/2011
Education !
What's that got to do with what I posted ?
At any rate, I've got one from the streets and another one from 2 Universities.
I figure that's enough for now ( might work on a Doctorate's when I retire ).

El C
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naschkatze
A free man creates himself.
06:36 PM on 01/30/2011
As someone else brilliantly said, he's voting present.
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guveqzero
Inventor and Innovator
11:39 AM on 01/30/2011
Why does our government support dictators? I guess they are the only ones that will listen to our global policy message.
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11:44 AM on 01/30/2011
We don't support dictators because they are dictators. We support those who uphold what we consider important to US....in the case of Egypt its maintaining the suez canal as an open waterway, a non-fundementalist regime in Cairo, maintaining the Israeli/Egyptian peace treaty that has kept the peace for over 25 years, without a war in the Sinai. We would support a democratic govt in Egypt that maintained those values just as much as we would a dictator. Foreign policy is about realipolitik majority of the time. Its rarely based on Human rights, which is an exception not the rule.
11:36 AM on 01/30/2011
A lot of the dictators are not learning like the USA. They do not have to provide jobs or housing but give the people food stamps.
This would have appeased the crowds and stoped the rioting.
cabinetmaker
made in USA
11:23 AM on 01/30/2011
looks like a repeat of 1979
muslims rioting in the streets
high unemployment
rising prices
where is Jimmy Carter when you need him
oh yea, it was Reagan that freed our people
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eagle17765
11:54 AM on 01/30/2011
Reagan "freed our people" ... huh?
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KickstandCat
Christian, therefore Liberal
12:06 PM on 01/30/2011
I believe that was sarcasm. Maybe not, but that's how I'm taking it. LOL!
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jwmellott
11:12 AM on 01/30/2011
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1351385/Controversial-Muslim-cleric-caught-smuggled-U-S-Mexico-border.html

an article you'll never find in the huffington post.
11:01 AM on 01/30/2011
We get most of our oil from Venezuala, Mexico and Russia.
cabinetmaker
made in USA
11:25 AM on 01/30/2011
do you think they will start exporting to countries willing to pay more if there supply is cut off?
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eagle17765
11:56 AM on 01/30/2011
Gee --- too bad America is willingly dependent upon oil as energy. Too bad no US Administration ever figured out that we are a FREE country only when we are not beholden to foreign oil.