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Egypt Prez Mubarak to step down: TV reports

Updated on: 02 February,2011 07:28 AM IST  | 
Agencies |

A million people, maybe more, rallied across Egypt yesterday, clamouring for President Hosni Mubarak to give up power, piling pressure on a leader who has towered over Middle East politics for 30 years to make way.

Egypt Prez Mubarak to step down: TV reports

A million people, maybe more, rallied across Egypt yesterday, clamouring for President Hosni Mubarak to give up power, piling pressure on a leader who has towered over Middle East politics for 30 years to make way.

Al Arabiya television said the 82-year-old former general was about announce on television that he would not seek re-election in a ballot scheduled for September but would stay in office until then to respond to demands for reform.

That will not satisfy many of those on the streets who want Mubarak and his ruling party to step aside immediately.

Cairo's Tahrir (Liberation) Square was jammed with people ranging from lawyers and doctors to students and jobless poor, the crowd spilling into surrounding streets.

"He goes, we are not going," chanted a crowd of men, women and children as a military helicopter hovered over the sea of people in the square, many waving Egyptian flags and banners.

Crowds also demonstrated in Alexandria, Suez and in the Nile Delta on the eighth and biggest day of protests against Mubarak by people fed up with years of repression, corruption and economic hardship.

With the army refusing to take action against the people and support from long-time backer the United States fading, the aging strongman's days seemed numbered.

His downfall after three decades could reconfigure the geopolitical map of the Middle East, with implications from Israel to oil-giant Saudi Arabia. Unrest is already stirring in other Arab countries such as Jordan and Yemen.

King Abdullah of Jordan replaced his prime minister yesterday following protests, but the opposition dismissed the move as insufficient.




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