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Hosni Mubarak Resignation: First Anniversary Marked By Strike

Hosni Mubarak Anniversary

First Posted: 02/11/2012 9:00 am Updated: 02/11/2012 5:45 pm


By Tamim Elyan

CAIRO, Feb 11 (Reuters) - Egypt marked the first anniversary of the popular overthrow of Hosni Mubarak on Saturday, but a poor turnout for a strike called by activists to protest the slow pace of change from military rule laid bare the country's deep divisions.

The general strike, called to press demands for the immediate departure of the military council that replaced Mubarak, failed to cause major disruption. It was opposed by religious figures and political groups, including the powerful Islamists.

It was business as usual at Cairo's railway station and airport. Buses and the metro ran as normal and an official said the strike call had no impact on the Suez Canal, the waterway linking Europe to Asia and a vital source of revenue for Egypt.

"We are hungry and we have to feed our children," said bus driver Ahmed Khalil, explaining why he was not taking part in the labour action called by liberal and leftist groups, together with some student and independent trade unions.

"I have to come here every morning and work. I don't care if there is a strike or civil disobedience," he said.

Hailed as heroes a year ago for unseating Mubarak, the army has faced growing criticism for its management of Egypt since assuming power at the culmination of 18 days of mass protests fuelled by poverty and demands for democratic government.

Though the generals have pledged to hand power to an elected president by mid-year, the protest groups which ignited the anti-Mubarak uprising doubt their intentions, seeing them as an extension of his rule and an obstacle to real democracy.

A year after hundreds of thousands of people packed into Tahrir Square united in their demand for an end to Mubarak's three-decade rule, Egypt faces a more divided picture.

Many have grown tired of street action and are urging a more patient approach, arguing Egypt needs stability to allow the recovery of an economy battered by a year of turmoil.

State-run media rallied behind a campaign against the strike call. "The nation rejects civil disobedience," read the headline in Al-Ahram, a widely circulated state-owned newspaper.

At Cairo's main railway station, banners echoed the theme. "Train drivers and their assistants refuse civil disobedience," read one.

While Saturday's call for action failed to make an impact, one of the activist groups expected more strikes in the coming days. "Today is the first real step toward civil disobedience," said Mohamed Abdel Aziz, coordinator of the Kefaya movement.

The army deployed extra soldiers and tanks to protect state buildings and public property in the build-up to Saturday's anniversary.


TOP U.S. MILITARY OFFICIAL MEETS GENERALS

Headed by former President Mubarak's long-time defence minister, the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces says it has no interest in governing the Arab world's most populous country.

In recent weeks, the generals have been tested by a crisis in ties with the United States triggered by an investigation into U.S.-based democracy groups working in Egypt, whose military receives an annual $1.3 billion in aid from Washington.

Foreigners including Americans face charges including working for groups that were not properly licensed. An undisclosed number of Americans involved in the case have taken shelter at the U.S. embassy in Cairo.

The United States' top military officer met with members of the army council in Cairo on Saturday, but there was no immediate word on what General Martin Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, had discussed.

The military council warned on Friday that Egypt was "subject to plots that aim to hit the revolution at its core and sow strife between Egyptian people and between them and their armed forces".

In an effort to rally public support, posters stuck to the side of armoured vehicles declared "the army and the people are one hand" -- a slogan chanted in Tahrir Square the day Mubarak stepped down a year ago, becoming the second leader to be ousted in the "Arab Spring".

The army's transition plans have mostly been supported by the Muslim Brotherhood and the Nour Party, the Islamist groups which between them dominated the recent parliamentary vote.

The Brotherhood came out in opposition to the strike call, saying it will cause further damage to the economy.

However Brotherhood criticism of the military-led authorities has grown in the wake of a Feb. 1 soccer stadium disaster in which at least 74 people were killed. A Brotherhood spokesman on Friday said the incident should have forced the military-appointed government out of office. (Additional reporting by Marwa Awad; Writing by Tom Perry, Editing by Rosalind Russell)

Earlier on HuffPost:

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Egyptian supporters of Hosni Mubarak stand in front of a courtroom in Cairo, Egypt, Tuesday, Jan. 3, 2012. The chief prosecutor in Hosni Mubarak's trial, Mustafa Suleiman accused the ousted Egyptian leader on Tuesday of imposing "tyrannical rule" and devoting the last 10 years of his three decades in power to ensure his son would succeed him. (AP Photo/Ahmed Ali)
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By Tamim Elyan CAIRO, Feb 11 (Reuters) - Egypt marked the first anniversary of the popular overthrow of Hosni Mubarak on Saturday, but a poor turnout for a strike called by activists ...
By Tamim Elyan CAIRO, Feb 11 (Reuters) - Egypt marked the first anniversary of the popular overthrow of Hosni Mubarak on Saturday, but a poor turnout for a strike called by activists ...
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10:38 PM on 02/11/2012
When will this coward give up the act with the hospital bed?
10:25 PM on 02/11/2012
He is the healthiest looking man in bed that I have ever seen! His hair and clothes look great. It would seem that he hasn't lost any weight at all after being in bed all that time. We really need to get his secret for the sick people in the UK as most people here loose a lot of weight when they have been ill for so long.
09:26 PM on 02/11/2012
Look at this guy. It's like Vinnie "the Chin" Gigante, the "Oddfather".
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
digitus impudicus
Appropriate gestures for the marionettes
09:18 PM on 02/11/2012
According to France24.com and the BBC, the so-called general strike in Egypt was a near-total failure, and hardly anybody was in Tahrir Square today.
photo
tallen
panem et circenses
photo
LMPE
I connect the most dissimilar things
07:49 PM on 02/11/2012
Am I the only one who thinks that Hosni Mubarak looks like Count Dracula?
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Hally
It's all stinky.
07:13 PM on 02/11/2012
This man claims to be so sick he must arrive in a stretcher everywhere he goes, yet he has a healthy looking pallor, is healthy enough to keep having his hair colored and maintain a petulant air.

Anybody know what his illness is other than wounded pride?
07:53 PM on 02/11/2012
I'm pretty sure he plays golf when he's back at the ranch.
REDSTATEREFUGEE
Texan by birth ; Californian by choice
05:05 PM on 02/11/2012
I can think of many uses for the $1.3 billions we devote to Egypt. Our entire foreign aid program should be re-evaluated....
04:18 PM on 02/11/2012
Mubarak was the worst person in Egypt...he make bad for Egypt...
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
cornel
wuf wuf
12:54 PM on 02/11/2012
He looks like a dead Pharaoh, time to put him in a sarcophagus !
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
omobob
left coast, usa
12:30 PM on 02/11/2012
> The United States has given Egypt an average of $2 billion annually since 1979, much of it military aid, according to the Congressional Research Service. The White House said it would review U.S. aid to Egypt based on events in the coming days amid mass protests aimed at ending President Hosni Mubarak's 30-year rule.

Threatening to remove US aid seems to be just fine with Egyptians who prefer to do their shopping else where’s. 

A Gallup Poll survey in December 2011 shows that about 7 in 10 Egyptians oppose US economic aid to Egypt.* Seeing as how most US aid is Military, this is a movement to sever ties with the US. We did, after al, help to prop up the repressive Mubarak regime for two decades. The US has been over there, fighting for the last ten years. All we have managed to do is make Iran the new bully on the block. Every one wants us to go home. And the for the vast majority of Americans, thats just fine.

*http://www.egyptindependent.com/node/642996
04:47 PM on 02/11/2012
I'll drink to that
12:22 PM on 02/11/2012
They should give Mubarak his job back. ASAP.
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01:45 PM on 02/11/2012
Political FRIEND of US?
BE very careful.
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iLdoRight
Encouraging The Rightest Rightness
12:05 PM on 02/11/2012
After Murbarak's ouster I sent perhaps over 100 emails out to Egyptian student associations in the U.S. and to any email address I could find in Egypt suggesting;

1. They set up classes on all government functions and lottery pick from the highest grades from all factions to become government decision makers for a one or 2 year term with staggered times of service so there would be constant good governing with no breaks, new ones help by those in.

2. Free dorms and meals for all these decision makers. No lobbyist paid meals.

3. Lobbying only on video with no contact between decision makers or any of their friends or family with monitoring of all family monies. Any citizen could make a video free to lobby and interns would make sure their video received consideration, with all lobbying videos available for public review. Good decision makers could get a bonus for good ideas and have their name put back in the hopper for another turn. Plaques for all on completion of their term showing all decisions and ideas to keep and also on display at the Government center.

Government "Of the people, by the people and for the people". Not "Of the money, by the money and for the money".

Perhaps they could achieve near a 100% confidence rating.

Too bad they decided to kill instead for accepting the good idea.
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02:08 PM on 02/11/2012
Hmm, hmm.
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photo
11:59 AM on 02/11/2012
I glanced at this photo right before reading the article about the volcano in Italy...
then I came back to read
the article to see if there was a connection between
Berlisconi on a stretcher and the volcano.

Oh.
Mubarek...I mean Mubarack...

the way I see it
is that after God created the earth...
there was a period of time
when other spirits tried to take control of it...
or at least pieces of it..
and we acknowledged this in history and cultural writings...

Over time
most of the people of the world have LEARNED
that we function more FUNCTIONALLY
and have an actual PLACE in our world
when the humans are singularly responsible for their own bodily actions and their own thoughts
and we denounce all other spritis who may wish to be control freaks out of us...
WHEN WE LOOK TO ONE GOD
as the control centre of our world...
ONE GOD
who prefers us to be OURSELVES.

Military takeovers
are a bit control freakish.
That's all.
12:25 PM on 02/11/2012
Couldn't you have condensed that a bit?
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PepCap
Pending
06:24 PM on 02/11/2012
all these gods, so confusing!