Thursday, January 20, 2011

What Happend To Geman Helmets Aftr The War

Tunisia: They must all go! Overcoat

Wed 19-Jan-11, Ale Olmos wrote:

From: Ale Olmos

Subject: Tunisia: They must all go! Date: Wednesday, January 19, 2011, 17:37




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Tunisia: They must all go!

Extends the Arab world the rebellion begun in Tunisia
1/19/1911 A dozen people were burned in several countries "to bonzo" and one died in Egypt, calling for democracy and employment. Imitated and the self-immolation of a Tunisian who eventually sparking the revolt against the regime of Ben Ali. Tunisia
was involved in violence and the government of national unity began to crumble yesterday, just in its second day duties. Meanwhile, Arab countries were watching with concern a wave of protests and attempted suicide to bonzo, imitating the gesture of the young Tunisian whose death triggered a popular uprising that reflected deep social and political unrest, and overthrew the regime of Zine el Abidine Ben Ali, on Friday, after 23 years in power. Mohamed
Bouazizi, 26, died in early January after having set fire on December 17 in the center of the Tunisian city of Sidbouzid to protest high unemployment, after the police had overturned the cart in which sold fruit and vegetables. The terrible scene of his body in flames broke out in a square violent protests in the capital, Tunis and other cities. Clashes between protesters and police left at least 78 deaths, according to human rights organizations.
but also for the young and the subsequent revolt in opposition to the economic situation, censorship and corruption in government, was the trigger for a chain reaction throughout the Arab world, where there have been only yesterday dozen other suicide attempts to bonzo and at least one death.
All claimed employment and democratic opening in countries ruled for years, or decades, by the same hands.
Five Egyptians were burned in the last two days to protest against their poor living conditions. A mason of 25 years, unemployed for a year, died yesterday at the hospital, a day after being sprayed with gasoline and set fire on the roof of his home in Alexandria, sources with the security forces, adding that the man suffered from depression.
Three other men tried to set fire in downtown Cairo. On Monday, another was outside parliament to protest the closure of his restaurant. All four survived.
also recorded from the Sunday five cases in Algeria and one in Mauritania. All were seriously injured.
In all cases, the immediate response of the authorities was to ensure that individuals suffering from mental disorders, and not protesting against the government. But analysts say these cases show a growing unrest.
The wave seems to have arrived in France, where yesterday a teenager was ablaze in a high school in Marseille and was taken to hospital in serious condition, fire officials said. But the reasons were unclear.
In Yemen, police used tear gas dispersed a demonstration of students demanding democratic change. The students marched through the campus of the University of Sana'a with slogans of support for the uprising in Tunisia "and called the" Arab peoples to revolt against their leaders. "
In Sudan, the Islamist opposition leader Hassan al Turabi, was arrested Monday night at his home, hours after declaring that a popular uprising like Tunisia was "probable" in his country.
"There is no channel through which to convey complaints and that is causing people to burn. People end up well after many injustices, "he told DPA Bahey Eldin Hassan, director of the Institute for Human Rights Studies, Cairo (CIHRS).
To Amr Hamzawi, the Center for Middle East U.S. Carnegie Foundation, based in Beirut, these immolations reflect the "total despair" high part of the Arab populations and their inability to provide an answer to it by the authoritarian regimes in place in these countries.
Meanwhile, Tunisia was in chaos yesterday. Three ministers left the "unity government" formed on Monday and thousands of people returned to the streets to protest the Cabinet remain in the former allies of ousted president on Friday. The protesters complained that the new government is purely cosmetic and not real change.
The situation in Tunisia is likely to be the hub of an economic summit of Arab leaders today in the Egyptian resort of Sharm el-Sheikh.

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