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darling80m:

View in Tahrir now as Egyptian govt announces resignation (via @sultanalqassemi)

darling80m:

View in Tahrir now as Egyptian govt announces resignation (via @sultanalqassemi)

By André Panisson, an animation of tweets tagged #Jan25, and their connections, just before and just after Mubarak stepped down. (via)

How many times do i have to respond to questions in which people express their fear over the future of Egypt: “I’m just really worried about what this might turn into…” and then…”what if Islamic extremists take power?”; “How will this affect Israel?” Only the U.S. imperial psyche can produce questions that can simply disavow the past and the present. Why not express worry over what is and has been happening to Egyptian people or feel outraged by the Mubarak regime, the blood shed on tahrir square, the 30 plus years of state violence and repression, and U.S. complicity? Again and again, in the racism of U.S. empire, some bodies have no value. From an Egyptian friends’ standpoint…the fall of Mubarak means “I’ve never felt safer in Egypt.

—Nadine Naber (via curate)

 
URGENT MESSAGE FROM ACTIVIST IN EGYPT. PLEASE REPOST IF YOU CAN!

thunderheist:

roxanneritchi

[via]

“To all the people of world”

Alicia Ali Marsden

To all the people of world

The people in Egypt are under governmental siege. Mubarak regime is banning Facebook, Twitter, and all other popular internet sites Now, the internet are completely blocked in Egypt. Tomorrow the government will block the 3 mobile phone network will be completely blocked.

And there is news that even the phone landlines will be cut tomorrow, to prevent any news agency from following what will happen.

Suez city is already under siege now. The government cut the water supply and electricity, people, including, children and elderly are suffering there now. The patients in hospitals cannot get urgent medical care. The injured protesters are lying in the streets and the riot police are preventing people from helping them. The families of the killed protesters cannot get the bodies of their sons to bury them. This picture is the same in north Saini (El-Sheikh zoyad city) and in western Egypt (Al-salom). The riot police is cracking down on protesters in Ismailia, Alexandria, Fayoum, Shbin Elkoum, and Cairo, the capital, in many neighborhoods across the city.

The government is preparing to crackdown on the protesters in all Egyptian cities. They are using tear gas bombs, rubber and plastic pullets, chemicals like dilutes mustard gas against protesters. Several protesters today have been killed when the armored vehicles of the riot police hit them. Officials in plain clothes carrying blades and knives used to intimidate protesters. Thugs deployed by the Egyptian Ministry of Interior are roaming the streets of Cairo, setting fire on car-wheels as means of black propaganda to demonize protesters and justify police beatings and state torture

All this has been taken place over the past three days during the peaceful demonstrations in Cairo and other cities. Now, with the suspicious silence of the local media and the lack of coverage from the international media, Mubarak and his gang are blocking all the channels that can tell the world about what is happening.

People who call for their freedom need your support and help. Will you give them a hand?

The activists are flooding the net (youtube and other sites) with thousands of pictures and videos showing the riot police firing on armless people. The police started to use ammunition against protesters. 15-year old girl has been injured and another 25 year old man has been shot in the mouth. While nothing of these has appeared in the media, there is more to happen tomorrow. Will you keep silent? Will you keep your mouth shut while seeing all these cruelty and inhumane actions?

We don’t ask for much, just broadcast what is happening

[To reblog without Tumblr cutting the text off, select “reblog as text” at the top of the reblog page.]

Just like our sisters and brothers in other parts of the world, we will need new voices, perspectives, and modes of communication to rethink our nation’s values, its policies, and its relationship to the global community at this crossroads moment in American and world history. The age of relying on expert opinion is coming to a spectacular demise.