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Field Marshal Tantawi, Egypt's new strongman?

UAE confident armed forces can run Egypt
Dubai (AFP) Feb 11, 2011 - The United Arab Emirates, whose foreign minister met president Hosni Mubarak two days before he was forced out, said on Friday it is confident Egypt's armed forces are able to run the country.

"The UAE... confirms its confidence in the ability of the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces in running the country's affairs in these delicate circumstances in such away that would realise aspirations and hopes of the Egyptian people," said state news agency WAM.

The oil-rich Gulf state "is always keen to foster brotherly, distinguished (and) historic ties with Egypt in a way that serves the interests of the two brotherly countries and their" people, said the English-language statement.

Emirati Foreign Minister Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed al-Nahayan on Tuesday was Mubarak's first high-level overseas visitor since the crisis in the Arab world's most populous country began on January 25.

Egyptian Vice President Omar Suleiman on Friday announced the handover of power to the armed forces after an extraordinary national outpouring of rage brought more than a million furious demonstrators onto the streets.

by Staff Writers
Cairo (AFP) Feb 11, 2011
The sudden collapse of Hosni Mubarak's 30-year rule in Egypt had all the trappings of a revolution, but the military strongman at the heart of the new regime is anything but a fresh face.

Field Marshal Mohammed Hussein Tantawi, Chairman of the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces, is a 75-year-old veteran of Egypt's wars and political manoeuvres and a long-time close associate of the hated autocrat he replaces.

On taking power Friday, the military moved quickly to reassure the citizens whose street revolt toppled Mubarak that it would respect the popular will, but its leader is not someone known to be comfortable with change.

Anyone hoping that he will usher in a new era in Egyptian democracy would be well advised to read what the US embassy said about him in a March 2008 diplomatic cable recently published by the activist website WikiLeaks.

"He and Mubarak are focused on regime stability and maintaining the status quo through the end of their time. They simply do not have the energy, inclination or world view to do anything differently," the cable warned.

According to the same March 2008 cable, Tantawi, while "charming and courtly," is also "aged and change-resistant," hardly reformer credentials.

As the 82-year-old Mubarak makes way for his 75-year-old ally, it is their similarities more than their differences that stand out.

Tantawi was commissioned in 1956 and fought in Egypt's 1956, 1967 and 1973 wars against Israel, although his close allies in the United States now believe he "is committed to preventing another one."

Since 1991 he has served as minister of defence in the authoritarian government of Mubarak, himself a former air force general and war veteran, and he was already commander of the armed forces when the regime fell.

When Mubarak's allies found their other levers of power weak -- the National Democratic Party (NDP) and its suspiciously successful businessmen allies are hated by the Egyptian protesters -- they turned back to the army.

On the street the demonstrators hailed the armed forces as a unifying national force, less brutal and corrupt than the interior ministry police or pro-Mubarak goons who attacked their marches and killed some 300 people.

Tantawi might thus enjoy a honeymoon with his people, as he takes charge and looks for ways to respond to demands for democratic rule.

But the new generation that took to the streets has other heroes than the commanders of the 1973 conflict with Israel in the Sinai -- their actions were inspired by Internet cyber-activists and the example of Tunisia's revolt.

The biggest cheers of the week on Tahrir Square, focus of Egypt's uprising, were for Wael Ghonim, a 30-year-old Google marketing executive and the Facebook enthusiast who marshalled an online army to challenge the state.

Tantawi, an austere infantry officer and regime apparatchik, doesn't fit the same profile.

earlier related report
Iraqis in Egypt offered money, flights back home
Baghdad (AFP) Feb 11, 2011 - The Iraqi government is offering money and free flights to their citizens in Egypt who want to escape the raging protests against President Hosni Mubarak, a spokesman said on Friday.

More than 1,700 Iraqis have so far taken up the offer to return home, with Iraq making use of Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki's personal plane and one provided by transport ministry, while families who opt to stay in Egypt are also to receive financial support.

"The families which returned back to Iraq got 300,000 dinars ($255) from the ministry of migration," said Hassanayn Ahmed, spokesman for Iraq's ministry of migration and the displaced.

"More than 1,700 Iraqis have so far returned from Egypt to Iraq."

Ahmed said that families had arrived in Iraq over several days and moved back to their home provinces, with the majority hailing from Baghdad. The families were free to return to Egypt at a later date.

The migration ministry has also sent officials to Egypt to provide $200 in financial support to Iraqi families who have elected not to leave the country, Ahmed said.

Iraq announced on January 30 that it would start to evacuate its citizens from Egypt, five days after protests initially erupted in the country against Mubarak.

Between 15,000 and 20,000 Iraqi refugees fled to Egypt from violence in their own homeland after the 2003 US-led invasion, according to a study by the American University in Cairo.



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DEMOCRACY
Egypt army says to take 'measures to protect nation'
Cairo (AFP) Feb 10, 2011
Egypt's armed forces said on Thursday they will start taking "necessary measures to protect the nation" and "support the legitimate demands of the people." Egyptian television interrupted programming to present footage of a panel of senior military officers reading out a statement they described as "communique number one" of the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces. "Based on the responsi ... read more







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