UN evacuates staff as violence continues in Egypt for 10th day after five killed in gunfire
- Pro-Mubarak thugs back on streets with sticks and knives today
- Prime minister Shafiq apologises for attacks on anti-government protesters
- Muslim Brotherhood call for president to step down before autumn
- Anti-Mubarak demo broken up by Palestinian Authority
- U.N. says transition of power 'should begin now'
- European leaders step up pressure on Mubarak
- Obama prays for violence to end as administration calls for political reforms
- Second plane chartered to rescue stranded Britons
Chaotic scenes have erupted in Cairo again as hired thugs and secret police loyal to the beleaguered President Hosni Mubarak continued to clash with protesters calling for regime change.
There are fresh fears of widespread loss of life after six people were killed and several injured during gunfire as the violence continued into its tenth day.
The Egyptian army has attempted to separate the two sides in the capital's central Tahrir Square but anti-government protesters and Mubarak supporters are continuing to pelt each other with rocks and other weapons.
During the night automatic gunfire was heard around what has become a battleground between the two opposing sides.
Sally Moore, 32, a London doctor who helped turn a mosque into a makeshift hospital to treat the wounded, told the Standard she feared the death toll would continue to rise.
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Fervour: Pro-Mubarak supporters hurl stones towards the barricade where anti-Mubarak protesters are stationed at the edge of Tahrir Square
Impasse: Egyptian army soldiers try to stop pro-government demonstrators from approaching the central square
Intervention: A soldier holds back a pro-Mubarak supporter attempting to hurl stones at demonstrators
ANTI-MUBARAK DEMO IS BROKEN UP IN WEST BANK
The Palestinian Authority has broken up a demonstration supporting anti-government protesters in Egypt, while permitting a smaller protest backing Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak - drawing accusations it is picking sides in the Egyptian unrest.
The Western-backed Palestinian Authority, which governs in the West Bank, considers Mubarak an ally for his role in peace talks with Israel and for seeking reconciliation between rival Palestinians factions.
While officials have not publicly commented on the Egyptian protests calling for Mubarak's ouster, some have privately expressed worries they'll lose a loyal friend - fears reflected in their handling of Wednesday's two protests.
Ms Moore, a pro-democracy activist, said: 'We’ve seen the dead brought in over night and all sorts of injuries. The police are behind this. Either they are plain-clothes officers or they are paid thugs.
'They’ve turned the square into a war
zone. Anti-government protesters outnumber them, but the Mubarak
supporters have weapons, molotov cocktails and knives.
'Our protests against Mubarak have
been peaceful with families camping in the square, but they have mostly
left because of the violence. But we are still determined and will not
leave.'
The Egyptian army today acted to create a buffer zone between the opposing sides in the first sign they were changing their policy of non-involvement.
Egypt's Prime Minister Ahmed Shafiq
has since apologised for the attacks by regime supporters on
anti-government protesters in central Cairo, vowing to investigate who
was behind them.
The
protesters accuse the regime of sending a force of paid thugs and
policemen in civilian clothes to attack them with rocks, sticks and
firebombs to crush their movement to oust the president
Prime Minister Shafiq told state TV: 'I offer my apology for everything that happened yesterday because it's neither logical nor rational.'
The United Nations today moved to evacuate much of its staff in Egypt, while about 5,000 passengers besieged Cairo airport a day after the protests that have gripped the Egyptian capital degenerated into a bloody street brawl.
U.S. President Barack Obama said he is praying for the violence to end in Egypt and that a 'better day will dawn' for the country.
Speaking at the National Prayer
Breakfast in Washington on Thursday, Mr Obama said he hopes the
aspirations of Egyptians can be realised.
His administration has been calling for restraint on all sides following an increase in violence on Cairo's streets, and for the country to start moving towards a more democratic system.
David Cameron today joined with other
European leaders to step up the pressure on Egyptian President Hosni
Mubarak to end his 30-year rule and give up the reins of power.
In a joint statement, Mr Cameron and the leaders of France, Germany, Italy and Spain said that the process of transition to a new, broad-based government 'must start now'.
THE MANY WAYS TO PROTECT YOUR HEAD IN A FIGHT WITH STONES
Desperate times call for desperate measures. The anti-Mubarak protesters in Tahrir Square have resorted to a variety of headgear - at times comical - to protect themselves in the pitched battle against President Mubarak's thugs.
Stones are the preferred weapon in this Old Testament-style fight within the Egyptian capital and the protesters have made use of whatever lies closest to hand.
There's the man with a saucepan on his head, another with what looks like a latticed litter basket - so he can still see where the rocks are coming from - and another with a piece of styrofoam tied with a scarf to the top of his head.
In Yemen, one protester was even more inventive - he created a makeshift helmet with two baguettes, a chapatti and clingfilm.
Throughout the night there were what appeared to be a planned series of assaults on the demonstrators. Activists said police snipers used the cover of darkness to shoot at them, killing at least three people.
WESTERN JOURNALISTS TARGETED BY MUBARAK SUPPORTERS
Journalists from a number of Western media organisations have been targeted by supporters of Mubarak as they make a concentrated effort to stop them from reporting on the escalating violence in Egypt.
The Egyptian military has been rounding up members of the press for their own safety after a number were stabbed, punched, kicked, marched back to their hotel by gunpoint or hijacked in their cars.
Supporters blame them for encouraging the uprising and publishing pro-democracy views.
CNN's star reporter Anderson Cooper and ABC's Katie Couric and Christiane Amanpour are among those who have been physically attacked.
Cooper described how he was 'roughed up by thugs' and hit in the back of the head in the pro-Mubarak crowd, calling it 'pandemonium' and 'out of control'.
Miss Couric was also said to have been manhandled in the city while Miss Amanpour's car was surrounded by rioters shouting they hated America, though she escaped unhurt.
A Greek photographer was stabbed in the leg while the BBC's Jerome Boehm was also targeted by thugs.
Reuters said one of its television crews were beaten up close to Tahrir Square while filming a piece about shops and banks being forced to shut during the clashes.
Press freedom groups warn that reporting on the Egyptian uprising is becoming increasingly perilous as the number of journalists injured and arrested continues to rise.
About 300 people are believed to have died since the Egyptian uprising began more than a week ago. But after several days of peaceful rallies the situation drastically changed within the last 24 hours. The president’s supporters charged into the square on horses and camels, lashing people with whips, while others rained firebombs and rocks from rooftops.
Demonstrators calling for an immediate end to Mr Mubarak’s 30-year-rule accused the state of organising the violence to crush their protest or to create a pretence for the military to intervene to restore order.
The protesters showed police ID badges they said were taken from their attackers, while some government workers said their employers ordered them into the streets.
Dr Rafik Bedair, of the Egyptians United group based in the UK, helped organise a group of six British doctors who flew out to Cairo from London last night to provide medical treatment to protesters. He told the Standard: 'There is no question this is state-organised violence. People are being massacred in the square. The big question is when the army will intervene and whose side they will take.
'The government has used these tactics before at election times of paid thugs and secret police to create unrest. They may then call on the army to keep order. But more anti-government protesters have been arriving in the square this morning to increase our numbers. People are willing to fight.'
The U.S. is condemning the notion the state may have co-ordinated violence against protesters.
Egypt's health minister said this morning five people have been killed in the latest scenes after shots were fired at anti-government protesters in the early morning.
'Most of the casualties were the result of stone throwing and attacks with metal rods and sticks. At dawn today there were gunshots,' Health Minister Ahmed Samih Farid told state television.
'The real casualties taken to hospital were 836, of which 86 are still in hospital, with five dead.'
The Muslim Brotherhood, a formally banned mass movement seen as the best organised opposition, issued a statement calling for him to be replaced by a national unity government.
Preparations: Anti-government protesters bring stones to throw at supporters of President Hosni Mubarak
Aftermath: Protesters carry a suspected plain clothes policeman for treatment after he was hit by a rock
At dawn: The situation appears calm this morning after a night of violence
Calm after the storm: A brief moment of respite after enduring violence
The Islamist group, whose potential rise to power troubles Mubarak's Western allies, has so far taken a backseat in the protest movement.
Senator John McCain said today the
United States has to do 'a better job of encouraging democracy' in the
Middle East in light of the public uprising in Egypt.
The Arizona Republican told CBS's The Early Show that U.S. officials have correctly called for an orderly transition away from President Hosni Mubarak.
Senator McCain said the situation in Egypt is 'fraught with danger' and said he worries about 'the influence of extremist organizations'.
A doctor at the scene of this morning's gunfire told Al Arabiya TV that supporters of President Mubarak had opened fire on the anti-government protesters.
In the overnight fighting, machinegun fire echoed for more than an hour across the central square where protesters are unsatisfied by Mubarak's pledge to step down only in September.
By daylight there was a lull. Troops with tanks continued to look on. But in mid-morning groups of pro-Mubarak supporters were seen moving again toward the square with knives and sticks.
'One way or another we will bring Mubarak down,' some protesters chanted
in the early morning. 'We will not give up, we will not sell out,'
others shouted.
In a statement on Al Jazeera, the Brotherhood said: 'We demand that this regime is overthrown and we demand the formation of a national unity government for all the factions.'
Yesterday, pro-government attackers on horseback and camels charged into Tahrir Square while others rained firebombs from rooftops.
The organisers of a protest against Egypt's government said they had detained 120 people carrying identities associating them with either the police or the ruling party, most of them caught while attacking the demonstrators.
Kamal Ismail, an official in a committee organising the protests, showed a Reuters journalist two identity cards confiscated on Thursday from men he said had tried to infiltrate the protest camp. One of them belonged to a police officer.
He said most of those detained had been overpowered by the protesters during confrontations that began on Wednesday afternoon when supporters of President Hosni Mubarak tried to force anti-Mubarak demonstrators from a central Cairo square.
The anti-Mubarak protesters have been handing their detainees over to the army, he said.
Following yesterday's violent clashes between supporters of the beleaguered president and demonstrators demanding change, the leaders of the UK, France, Germany, Italy and Spain said the right to peaceful protest must be respected.
'We are watching with utmost concern the deteriorating situation in Egypt,' they said in their statement.
'The Egyptian people must be able to exercise freely their right to peaceful assembly, and enjoy the full protection of the security forces. Attacks against journalists are completely unacceptable.
'We condemn all those who use or encourage violence, which will only aggravate the political crisis in Egypt.
'Only a quick and orderly transition to a broad-based government will make it possible to overcome the challenges Egypt is now facing. That transition process must start now.'
Their statement echoed calls by the White House which has been demanding that America's old ally - who has said he will not stand for election again in September - should begin the process of political transition immediately.
David Cameron's official spokesman said: 'We will continue to use all channels to bring pressure to bear on the regime.'
Missiles: The opposing sides clash violently in central Cairo
Stand-off: Anti-government protesters (bottom) hold their position amid escalating chaos
An injured pro-Mubarak supporter is detained by anti-government demonstators at an underground metro station after being rounded up
Defiant: Anti-government protesters (left, bottom) stand their ground and shout against the regime (right)
Held: Egyptian supporters of President Hosni Mubarak stand on a stairway after they were detained by anti-Mubarak protestors
People line up to get past a makeshift barricade guarded by anti-government protesters at the entrance to Tahrir Square
As the UN moved to evacuate its staff, Secretary General Ban Ki-moon called for s swuift transition of power.
'Many people are now asking the government should take reform,' he told a London news conference.
'There have been calls for transition, very orderly peaceful transition. If a transition needs to be taken, the sooner the better.
Asked about reports of attacks on reporters, Ban said: 'The freedom of speech, whether peaceful demonstrators or journalists, should be fully guaranteed and protected.
'The government should listen very attentively to the wishes of the people.'
20,000 TAKE PART IN 'DAY OF RAGE' AS YEMEN CALLS FOR REFORM
Over 20,000 people took to the streets of Yemen's capital Sanaa today demanding regime change.
Amid fears of a repetition of the violent scenes in Tunisia and currently Egypt, President Ali Abdullah Saleh has said he will step down in 2013.
He also promised his son would not take over but his remarks have not quelled anti-government sentiment in Yemen.
Further protests are expected with demonstrators outside Sanaa University today shouting : 'The people want regime change - No to corruption, no to dictatorship.'
Mr Saleh's supporters have gathered in Sanaa's central square, calling for the president to remain in power.
However, even pro-government Yemenis are demanding political and economic reforms, with the nation plagued by high unemployment, a growing separatist movement and fears of an increasing Al Qaeda presence.
White House press secretary Robert Gibbs also warned: 'If any of the violence is instigated by the government, it should stop immediately.'
The UN was sending in two chartered
aircraft to take 350 staff and their families to Cyprus, said Rolando
Gomez, a spokesman for its peacekeeping mission on the Mediterranean
island. Each aircraft was to make two roundtrips to Cyprus.
‘The staff will be temporarily
relocated due to the security situation in Egypt,"’Gomez told The
Associated Press, adding that arrangements had been made to accommodate
up to 600 staff and their families at hotels in Cyprus. It was unclear
whether they would remain on the island or head to other destinations.
Gomez said some U.N. staff will remain in Egypt to carry out ‘essential functions’.
The United States said more than 1,900 Americans had been evacuated in three days of flights, and additional flights were planned for Thursday.
The State Department said that even
citizens whose passports had expired within the past decade could go
directly to the airport, reflecting the urgency of evacuating people
even if their travel documents were not in order.
About 160 Americans were at the airport early Thursday. In total, about 5,000 passengers of various nationalities were there, waiting for commercial or government-chartered flights.
A Foreign Office charter flight will leave Cairo for London's Gatwick Airport later with more than 200 passengers expected on board.
Those
taking the flight will be charged £300 a seat, although arrangements
are being made for those who cannot afford the upfront cost.
Downing Street has stressed the ticket price would not cover the cost of chartering the flight 'by any means'.
Mr
Cameron's spokesman said the Government did not want to undermine
commercial airlines operating flights in and out of Egypt by offering
free tickets.
'It's very important that we maintain commercial flights in and out of Egypt, so we don't want to be in a position where we are providing flights at no cost, because that would undercut commercial airlines,' he said.
The Foreign Office confirmed today it had chartered a second plane - which will depart Cairo on Saturday - because of the 'fluidity and unpredictability' of the situation.
A spokesman renewed the advice to all Britons without a "pressing reason" to stay in the Egyptian capital to leave the city.
Staff not immediately involved in dealing with the crisis have also been temporarily withdrawn, he said.
An estimated 150 people have been killed so far and there have been protests across the country. United Nations human rights chief Navi Pillay said up to 300 people may have died.
A city ablaze: Pro-government demonstrators, bottom, clash with anti-government demonstrators, top right, as a palm tree burns from a firebomb, in Tahrir Square
Clashes: The two factions face off against each other from behind make shift shields and barriers
Pitched battle: Supporters of Hosni Mubarak and anti-government demonstrators hurl projectiles at each other
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