Tags: Saturday

22 cardinals join club to elect pope’s successor

by
Categories: layout
Tags:
Comments: No Comments
Published on: February 20, 2012

Pope Benedict XVI arrives to preside over a consistory in St. Peter’s basilica at the Vatican, Saturday, Feb. 18, 2012. Pope Benedict XVI is bringing 22 new Catholic churchmen into the elite club of cardinals who will elect his successor amid signs the 84-year-old pontiff is slowing down. Benedict was presiding over a ceremony Saturday in St. Peter’s Basilica to formally create the 22 cardinals, who include the archbishops of New York, Prague, Hong Kong and Toronto as well as the heads of several Vatican offices. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini)

Pope Benedict XVI arrives to preside over a consistory in St. Peter’s basilica at the Vatican, Saturday, Feb. 18, 2012. Pope Benedict XVI is bringing 22 new Catholic churchmen into the elite club of cardinals who will elect his successor amid signs the 84-year-old pontiff is slowing down. Benedict was presiding over a ceremony Saturday in St. Peter’s Basilica to formally create the 22 cardinals, who include the archbishops of New York, Prague, Hong Kong and Toronto as well as the heads of several Vatican offices. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini)

Cardinals sit during a consistory in St. Peter’s basilica at the Vatican, Saturday, Feb. 18, 2012. Pope Benedict XVI is bringing 22 new Catholic churchmen into the elite club of cardinals who will elect his successor amid signs the 84-year-old pontiff is slowing down. Benedict was presiding over a ceremony Saturday in St. Peter’s Basilica to formally create the 22 cardinals, who include the archbishops of New York, Prague, Hong Kong and Toronto as well as the heads of several Vatican offices. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini)

Archbishop of New York Timothy Michael Dolan, center, and John Tong, archbishop of Hong Kong, right, sit inside St. Peter’s basilica at the Vatican prior to a consistory, Saturday, Feb. 18, 2012. Pope Benedict XVI is bringing 22 new Catholic churchmen into the elite club of cardinals who will elect his successor amid signs the 84-year-old pontiff is slowing down. Benedict was presiding over a ceremony Saturday in St. Peter’s Basilica to formally create the 22 cardinals, who include the archbishops of New York, Prague, Hong Kong and Toronto as well as the heads of several Vatican offices. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini)

Pope Benedict XVI presides over a consistory in St. Peter’s basilica at the Vatican, Saturday, Feb. 18, 2012. Pope Benedict XVI is bringing 22 new Catholic churchmen into the elite club of cardinals who will elect his successor amid signs the 84-year-old pontiff is slowing down. Benedict was presiding over a ceremony Saturday in St. Peter’s Basilica to formally create the 22 cardinals, who include the archbishops of New York, Prague, Hong Kong and Toronto as well as the heads of several Vatican offices. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini)

Cardinals sit during a consistory in St. Peter’s basilica at the Vatican, Saturday, Feb. 18, 2012. Pope Benedict XVI is bringing 22 new Catholic churchmen into the elite club of cardinals who will elect his successor amid signs the 84-year-old pontiff is slowing down. Benedict was presiding over a ceremony Saturday in St. Peter’s Basilica to formally create the 22 cardinals, who include the archbishops of New York, Prague, Hong Kong and Toronto as well as the heads of several Vatican offices. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini)

(AP) ? Pope Benedict XVI on Saturday brought 22 Catholic churchmen into the elite club of cardinals who will elect his successor, cementing the Italian majority in a future conclave but also giving New York’s garrulous archbishop a position of prominence.

Cardinal Timothy Dolan emerged as something of the star of the consistory, delivering a highly praised speech on spreading the faith and mentioned in some Italian media as an improbable “papabile,” or having the qualities of a future pope.

Traditionally Americans are ruled out as papal contenders, with the argument that the world doesn’t need a superpower pope. But Dolan’s joyful demeanor seemed to have struck a chord in a Vatican that has been anything but joyful over a rash of news reports about political infighting and financial mismanagement.

“He certainly is going to be given many responsibilities as a cardinal,” said the other American who got a red hat Saturday, Cardinal Edwin O’Brien, the outgoing archbishop of Baltimore. Asked if he thought Dolan had the stuff to be pope, O’Brien deadpanned: “His mother thinks so.”

Dolan artfully dodged the question when asked about the speculation Saturday by a gaggle of reporters who traveled from the U.S. for the ceremony: “Io non parlo inglese,” he said. (“I don’t speak English.”)

In all, 22 churchmen got their red hats Saturday, including the archbishops of Prague, Toronto, Florence, Utrecht and Hong Kong as well as the heads of several Vatican offices.

Seven of the 22 were Italian, adding to the eight voting-age Italian cardinals named at the last consistory in November 2010. As of Saturday, Italy will have 30 cardinals out of the 125 under age 80 and thus eligible to vote in a future conclave.

That boosts Italy’s chances of taking back the papacy for one of its own following decades under a Polish and a German pope ? or at least playing the kingmaker role if an Italian candidate doesn’t emerge.

Only the U.S. comes close, with 12 cardinals under 80.

In remarks at the start of the service, Benedict recalled that the red color of the three-pointed hat, or biretta, and the scarlet cassock that cardinals wear, symbolizes the blood that cardinals must be willing to shed to remain faithful to the church.

“The new cardinals are entrusted with the service of love: love for God, love for his church, an absolute and unconditional love for his brothers and sisters even unto shedding their blood, if necessary,” Benedict said.

It was a similar theme Dolan touched on in his keynote speech to cardinals and the pope on Friday, which was peppered with jokes, references to books, films and his own experiences as archbishop in New York, Milwaukee and as rector of the U.S. seminary in Rome.

“Holy Father, can you omit the ‘shedding of your blood’ when you present me with the biretta?” Dolan asked the pope. “Of course not! We are but ‘scarlet audio-visual aids’ for all of our brothers and sisters also called to be ready to suffer and die for Jesus.”

The Vatican said the pope had given Dolan a papal thumbs up, terming his speech “enthusiastic, joyful and profound.” Dolan said Benedict referred to the speech again on Saturday during the few moments they shared privately when Benedict gave him his skullcap, biretta and ring.

“He thanked me again for yesterday, which meant a lot,” Dolan told reporters at a reception after the ceremony. “He did have a little trouble getting the ring on the finger, which was a little embarrassing.”

Preparations for the ceremony were clouded by leaks of internal documents alleging financial mismanagement in Vatican affairs, and reports in the Italian media of political jockeying among church officials who, sensing an increasingly weak and aging pontiff, are already preparing for a conclave.

None of that was on display Saturday, however, amid the pomp of the consistory that brought to 213 the overall size of the College of Cardinals, including the four over-80 cardinals who were honored in recognition of their long service the church.

Among them was Maltese Cardinal Prosper Grech, 86, the first Maltese cardinal in 168 years. One of his claims to fame is that he heard Cardinal Giovanni Battista Montini’s confession hours before he was elected Pope Paul VI.

Benedict was wheeled into St. Peter’s Basilica aboard the moving platform he has been using for several months to spare him the long walk down the center aisle. Benedict, who turns 85 in April, has been slowing down recently: His upcoming trip to Mexico and Cuba, for example, is very light on public appearances, with no political speeches or meetings with civil society planned as has been the norm to date.

Even Saturday’s consistory was greatly trimmed back to a slimmer version of the service used in 1969: only one of the cardinals actually read his oath of loyalty aloud, while the others read it silently to themselves simultaneously rather than one after another. A reading was cut out, as was a responsorial psalm.

And at the end of his remarks, Benedict said: “And pray for me, that I may continually offer to the people of God the witness of sound doctrine and guide the holy church with a firm and humble hand.”

All of which has led to even more speculation that a conclave is very much on the minds of cardinals new and old.

“It’s one of the major responsibilities, and one hopes it doesn’t happen too soon,” O’Brien said.

The consistory class of 2012 is heavily European, reinforcing Europe’s dominance of the College of Cardinals, even though two-thirds of the world’s Catholics are in the southern hemisphere. Only three of the new under-80 cardinals ? a Brazilian, an Indian and a Chinese ? come from developing countries.

Hong Kong Archbishop John Tong Hon spoke Friday about the plight of the Catholic Church in China, where priests and bishops of the underground church loyal to the pope are frequently harassed by government authorities.

Dolan, who has been embroiled in the battle with the Obama administration over health care coverage and contraception, said he got a lesson in what violations of religious freedom really means in the real world.

“I’m just sitting there thinking ‘Wow, with all the problems we’ve got at home, and with even the difficulties we have in talking about the freedom of religion, it’s nothing compared to what my brother cardinals throughout the world” are dealing with, Dolan said.

“They know what this red means.”

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2012-02-18-EU-Vatican-Cardinals/id-b3759c4b5c9a4888ac1a837b23a616d6

rampage jackson sean kingston sce go daddy nascar schedule danica patrick apocalypse now

For now at least, Romney campaign cruising (AP)

by
Categories: layout
Comments: No Comments
Published on: February 6, 2012

LAS VEGAS ? For now at least, Mitt Romney’s presidential campaign seems to mostly be going according to plan. A commanding Nevada victory Saturday night underscored as much.

“You have given me your vote of confidence. And this time, I’m going take it all the way to the White House,” an upbeat Romney told a raucous crowd gathered at the Red Rock Resort a few miles from the Las Vegas Strip. He ignored his GOP rivals and instead attacked President Barack Obama, insisting the president doesn’t deserve credit for the recent drop in the unemployment rate to 8.3 percent.

“Mr. President, we welcome any good news on the jobs front, but it is thanks to the innovation of the American people in the private sector, and not to you,” Romney said in Nevada.

Before the Nevada triumph, the former Massachusetts governor had turned in a strong performance in Iowa and won New Hampshire before suffering a serious setback in South Carolina. He recalibrated and went on to win decisively in Florida. Next up are Colorado, where Romney is expected to perform strongly, and Minnesota, which even advisers acknowledge could emerge as a stumbling block.

Romney still has plenty of challenges as he looks to clinch the nomination.

He’s shown a tendency to make comments that provide fodder to his critics, saying recently he was “not concerned” about the very poor. The remark prompted backlash among some Republicans worried he would make similar mistakes while running against Obama. Romney’s also still working to prove that he can unite skeptical conservatives behind him ? even though entrance polls in Nevada showed he performed strongly.

And chief rival Newt Gingrich insists he’ll stay in the race until summer, and he could win more contests, particularly those in the South.

As Saturday began, Romney campaigned in neighboring Colorado, where he won in 2008 and where advisers say they are confident he can perform strongly again.

“I need your vote on Tuesday!” Romney told the overflow crowd at a Colorado Springs warehouse. Instead of focusing on any of his Republican rivals, he attacked Obama’s economic policies.

“He doesn’t get credit for things getting better,” Romney said there.

As confident as Romney’s advisers seem about Colorado, they appear equally as nervous about upcoming Minnesota.

He won the state in 2008, too, and many observers have assumed he could easily win again. But Romney aides say Minnesota is unpredictable for many reasons. It’s a small electorate with a strong evangelical contingent ? and the caucus system itself can make the outcomes harder to determine in advance.

In a sign that his team may be considering bypassing the state altogether, Romney on Saturday abruptly canceled plans to headline a rally early Monday in Minneapolis. He decided to head straight to Colorado and leave the Minneapolis event to two of his top surrogates ? former Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty and former Ambassador John Bolton, one of his most conservative backers. Romney doesn’t currently plan to visit before Tuesday’s voting.

Minnesota’s Republican activists are strongly conservative, which could pose problems for Romney as candidates considered more conservative than him ? Gingrich and former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum ? work to impede the former Massachusetts governor’s march to the nomination. Even the libertarian-leaning Ron Paul may end up a player in the Minnesota caucuses.

The political mood in Minnesota has soured of late, with a vitriolic struggle that shut down the state government last year. The sizable evangelical community is concerned about social issues. And a win for one of Romney’s competitors could fuel concern that the GOP front-runner still hasn’t been able to win over conservatives in his party ? or shake the narrative that he is already the presumptive GOP nominee.

Romney himself has sounded increasingly confident in recent days, calling himself the only candidate in the race who can beat Obama. And when his wife, Ann, introduced him at his Nevada victory speech, she cast the win as one not for February but for November.

“Mitt has started to win in states that are very important for the general election,” she said, mentioning wins in New Hampshire and Florida. “This state is going to be an important state in the general. … We’re going to need you again next November.”

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/gop/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120205/ap_on_el_pr/us_romney

john demjanjuk san antonio weather allegra mary tyler moore llama jay mariotti katharine hepburn

Death toll in latest Egypt clashes climbs to 12

by
Categories: layout
Tags:
Comments: No Comments
Published on: February 6, 2012

Backdropped by Egyptian riot police, two men ask protestors not to throw stones during clashes near the Interior Ministry in Cairo, Egypt, Saturday, Feb. 4, 2012. The number of people killed in clashes with Egyptian security forces in the wake of a deadly soccer riot rose on Saturday, according to a field doctor and a security official, as demonstrators in Cairo kept up their calls for an end to military rule and retribution for those killed in the soccer game violence. (AP Photo/Muhammed Muheisen)

Backdropped by Egyptian riot police, two men ask protestors not to throw stones during clashes near the Interior Ministry in Cairo, Egypt, Saturday, Feb. 4, 2012. The number of people killed in clashes with Egyptian security forces in the wake of a deadly soccer riot rose on Saturday, according to a field doctor and a security official, as demonstrators in Cairo kept up their calls for an end to military rule and retribution for those killed in the soccer game violence. (AP Photo/Muhammed Muheisen)

An Egyptian protestor runs toward security forces to throw back a tear gas canister during clashes near the Interior Ministry in Cairo, Egypt, Saturday, Feb. 4, 2012. The number of people killed in clashes with Egyptian security forces in the wake of a deadly soccer riot rose on Saturday, according to a field doctor and a security official, as demonstrators in Cairo kept up their calls for an end to military rule and retribution for those killed in the soccer game violence. (AP Photo/Khalil Hamra)

An Egyptian man stands in front of riot police blocking the road during clashes with protestors near the Interior Ministry in Cairo, Egypt, Saturday, Feb. 4, 2012. The number of people killed in clashes with Egyptian security forces in the wake of a deadly soccer riot rose to 11 on Saturday, according to a field doctor and a security official, as demonstrators in Cairo kept up their calls for an end to military rule and retribution for those killed in the soccer game violence. (AP Photo/Muhammed Muheisen)

Egyptian security forces stand guard near the Interior Ministry during clashes in Cairo, Egypt, Saturday, Feb. 4, 2012. The number of people killed in clashes with Egyptian security forces in the wake of a deadly soccer riot rose on Saturday, according to a field doctor and a security official, as demonstrators in Cairo kept up their calls for an end to military rule and retribution for those killed in the soccer game violence. (AP Photo/Khalil Hamra)

Egyptian protestors evacuate a wounded man by motorbike during clashes with security forces near the Interior Ministry in Cairo, Egypt, Saturday, Feb. 4, 2012. The number of people killed in clashes with Egyptian security forces in the wake of a deadly soccer riot rose to 11 on Saturday, according to a field doctor and a security official, as demonstrators in Cairo kept up their calls for an end to military rule and retribution for those killed in the soccer game violence. (AP Photo/Nathalie Bardou)

(AP) ? Egyptian security forces on Saturday fired tear gas from armored trucks at protesters demanding an end to military rule, as anger over a deadly soccer riot fueled a third day of clashes that have killed at least 12 people.

The violence followed a melee and stampede after a soccer match Wednesday in the Mediterranean city of Port Said in which 74 people died in the world’s worst soccer violence in 15 years. Protesters accuse the security forces of failing to prevent the bloodshed.

After two days of running street battles, clashes broke out again in downtown Cairo Saturday as demonstrators marched on the Interior Ministry. Security forces fired volleys of tear gas at rock-throwing protesters calling for the army to relinquish power. The ministry has been a frequent target for the protesters because it is responsible for the widely distrusted police.

In a bid to end the violence, a group of lawmakers and public figures said they met with Interior Ministry officials to try to negotiate a cease-fire. But security forces disregarded a plan to hold their fire, and lobbed tear gas and fired birdshot on a group of mediators attempting to convince protesters to clear a street leading to the ministry.

“The continued clashes are a way for the ministry to distract attention from the real demands for the military leaders to step down,” said Bassem Kamel, a lawmaker who tried to negotiate the truce.

“We know the protesters aren’t angels and come with a lot of anger from what happened in Port Said, but it has made people want to stand up to the military rulers,” he added.

Some of the protesters themselves urged for an end to the violence and called on people to leave the Interior Ministry area.

“If you love Egypt, return to the (Tahrir) square,” chanted protesters along the side streets of the ministry on Saturday.

Police cordoned off several streets with lines of riot police and barbed wire, pushing protesters further back from the ministry.

Rights groups and several newly elected members of parliament have called on the country’s military leader, Field Marshal Hussein Tantawi, who served as President Hosni Mubarak’s defense minister for 20 years and took power after Mubarak’s ouster last February, to immediately transfer of power to a civilian administration.

Egyptian presidential hopeful and ex-Arab League chief Amr Moussa echoed those calls Saturday, saying the situation in the country was “very frightening” and that the military needed to open up presidential campaigning in March and step down in favor of civilian authorities by April 30.

“The time has come to transfer power to a civilian administration which will promote stability and the achievement of the revolutionary goals,” Moussa said in a statement carried by the state-run news agency, MENA.

Some of the worst violence in the latest unrest has been in the port city of Suez, where protesters set up cordons outside the police headquarters to ban people from demonstrating around it and keep the calm.

On Friday, security forces in Suez opened fire on a crowd of several thousand outside the police headquarters. A total of seven people were killed, a police official said Saturday. Egypt’s state-new agency MENA reported the victims ranged in age between 18 and 21, and that the most recent victim died of a gunshot wound Saturday that he sustained the previous day.

By Saturday morning, five protesters were also reported dead in Cairo after security forces fired tear gas and birdshot. The death toll was provided by the security official and a volunteer doctor.

Abdolheliem Mahmoud, the doctor at a field hospital in Tahrir Square, said the latest victims died Saturday from birdshot to the head or chest in overnight clashes. Another protester was in critical condition, he said.

Field hospitals were set up in streets near the Interior Ministry to assist hundreds of cases of suffocation from tear gas inhalation on Friday.

The Health Ministry said Saturday that 2,500 people have been injured since the violence began on Thursday.

Also, a security officer died after an armored police vehicle ran him over in the mayhem outside the ministry Friday, the security official said, speaking on condition of anonymity in line with police regulations.

The riot after the soccer match in Port Said has shocked Egyptians.

There have been accusations that plainclothes officers took part in the melee, and some have alleged that riot police intentionally allowed the bloodshed at the stadium to happen to retaliate against die-hard soccer fans of the visiting team Al-Ahly, known as Ultras, who played a key role in clashes with security forces during the uprising that toppled Mubarak.

Lawmakers have accused the interior minister of “negligence.”

The violence in Port Said began after home team Al-Masry pulled off a 3-1 upset win over Cairo’s Al-Ahly, Egypt’s most powerful club. Al-Masry fans stormed the field, rushing past lines of police to attack Al-Ahly fans.

Survivors have said police stood by doing nothing as Al-Masry fans attacked Al-Ahly supporters, stabbing them, undressing them and throwing them off bleachers. Others died from the stampede down a narrow corridor after the stadium’s gate, which was locked from the outside, was forced open by the crowd.

Prime Minister Kamal el-Ganzouri said he sacked the Egyptian Soccer Federation’s board on Thursday and referred its members for questioning by prosecutors about the violence. To keep in line with international soccer federation guidelines, which do not give el-Ganzouri the right to dissolve the board, its eight members formally submitted their resignations on Saturday.

___

Associated Press writer Sarah El Deeb contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2012-02-04-ML-Egypt/id-533d5097da2d494ea67d5bb5f36dee92

fox sports maya angelou pineapple express champions league highlights chimera chaos faction 2 sputnik

Familiar fight: Paul vs. Santorum (Politico)

by
Categories: layout
Comments: No Comments
Published on: January 8, 2012

GOFFSTOWN, N.H. ? Instead of engaging the front-runner in the ABC News/Yahoo! debate, Ron Paul and Rick Santorum went after each other.

The beneficiary was Mitt Romney, who escaped largely unscathed.

Continue Reading

The Paul-Santorum sniping is a familiar storyline, and Saturday night provided the latest in a series of low intensity confrontations between two candidates representing distinctly different GOP camps and political cultures.

Santorum, more than two decades Paul?s junior, is a hawkish social conservative who quickly found his way into a GOP leadership role in the Senate. Paul is in many ways his polar opposite: a dovish libertarian and career House backbencher who thumbs his nose at both his party and the traditional paths to power in Washington.

For much of the campaign, the tensions between the two ? frequently expressed through their differences on U.S. policy toward Iran ? didn?t matter: neither seemed to be going anywhere in the race.

But with both candidates now ensconced as top tier candidates according to recent polls, their clashes have taken on a greater strategic significance. Paul?s attacks on Santorum work to Romney?s advantage, sullying the former Pennsylvania senator while leaving Romney?s hands clean. And every moment that Paul and Santorum spend focused on each other is a moment when the field isn?t attacking the front-runner.

Asked after Saturday?s debate if there is any personal animosity between himself and Paul, Santorum replied, ?Oh gosh, no? and then sought to divest himself of responsibility for the bickering.

?He called me corrupt. What are you gonna?I don?t think I?m the one that started the skirmish,? Santorum said.

In the post-debate spin room, Paul?s son, Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul, attributed the conflict between his dad and Santorum to the ex-senator?s new-found place in the GOP field?s first tier.

?It?s just the fact that he?s new to the top tier, hasn?t been screened or vetted, and this is his chance,? Rand Paul said.

Even prior to the debate, Paul had gone on the air with a new ad in South Carolina that accuses Santorum of being a ?corporate lobbyist? and ?Washington politician? who was named ?one of the most corrupt members of Congress.?

At St. Anselm College, where the debate took place Saturday night, Paul defended the ad when asked about it by debate moderators.

?He?s a big-government, big-spending individual ? He became a high-powered lobbyist,? Paul contended.

?They caught you not telling the truth, Ron,? Santorum interjected.

Paul went on: ?What really counts is his record. I mean, he?s a big government, big spending individual. Because, you know, he preached to the fact he wanted a balanced budget amendment but voted to raise the debt [limit] five times. So he is a big government person.?

?And also where did he get ? make his living afterwards? I mean, he became a high-powered lobbyist on ? in Washington, D.C. And he has done quite well.?

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/politics/*http%3A//us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/external/politico_rss/rss_politico_mostpop/http___www_politico_com_news_stories0112_71201_html/44111057/SIG=11m1temcj/*http%3A//www.politico.com/news/stories/0112/71201.html

gabrielle union michael jordan bryce dallas howard kentucky fried chicken moscow traffic blueberry

Egypt Protest: Troops Use Brutal Force Against Women

by
Categories: layout
Comments: No Comments
Published on: December 18, 2011

CAIRO — Troops pulled women across the pavement by their hair, knocking off their Muslim headscarves. Young activists were kicked in the head until they lay motionless in Cairo’s Tahrir Square.

Unfazed by TV cameras catching every move, Egypt’s military took a dramatically heavier hand Saturday to crush protests against its rule in nearly 48 hours of continuous fighting in Egypt’s capital that has left more than 300 injured and nine dead, many of them shot to death.

The most sustained crackdown yet is likely a sign that the generals who took power after the February ouster of Hosni Mubarak are confident that the Egyptian public is on its side after two rounds of widely acclaimed parliament elections, that Islamist parties winning the vote will stay out of the fight while pro-democracy protesters become more isolated.

Still, the generals risk turning more Egyptians against them, especially from outrage over the abuse of women. Photos and video posted online showed troops pulling up the shirt of one woman protester in a conservative headscarf, leaving her half-naked as they dragged her in the street.

“Do they think this is manly?” Toqa Nosseir, a 19-year old student, said of the attacks on women. “Where is the dignity?”

Nosseir joined the protest over her parents’ objections because she couldn’t tolerate the clashes she had seen.

“No one can approve or accept what is happening here,” she said. “The military council wants to silence all criticism. They want to hold on power … I will not accept this humiliation just for the sake of stability.”

Nearby in Tahrir, protesters held up newspapers with the image of the half-stripped woman on the front page to passing cars, shouting sarcastically, “This is the army that is protecting us!”

“Are you not ashamed?” leading reform figure and Nobel Peace laureate Mohamed ElBaradei posted on Twitter in an address to the ruling military council.

Egypt’s new, military-appointed interim prime minister defended the military, denying it shot protesters. He said gunshot deaths were caused by other attackers he didn’t identify. He accused the protesters of being “anti-revolution.”

Among those shot to death in the crackdown was an imminent cleric from Al-Azhar, Egypt’s most respected religious institution. At the funeral Saturday of the 52-year-old Sheik Emad Effat, thousands chanted “Retribution, retribution.” Some of them marched from the cemetery to Tahrir to join the clashes.

The main street between Tahrir Square, the epicenter of the anti-Mubarak protests, and the parliament and Cabinet buildings where the clashes began early the previous morning looked like a war zone Saturday. Military police on rooftops pelting protesters below with stones and firebombs and launched truncheon-swinging assaults to drive the crowds back.

Flames leapt from the windows of the state geographical society ? a treasure trove of antique scientific books ? that was hit by firebombs in the melee. Some youths tried to rescue books from the fire.

Young activists put helmets or buckets on their heads or grabbed sheets of concrete and even satellite dishes as protection against the stones hailing down from the roofs. The streets were strewn with chunks of concrete, stones ,broken glass, burned furniture and peddlers’ carts as clashes continued to rage after nightfall Saturday.

The clashes began early Friday with a military assault on a 3-week-old sit-in outside the Cabinet building by protesters demanding the military hand over power immediately to civilians.

More than a week of heavy fighting erupted in November, leaving more than 40 dead ? but that was largely between police and protesters, with the military keeping a low profile.

In the afternoon, military police charged into Tahrir, swinging truncheons and long sticks, briefly chasing out protesters and setting fire to their tents. Footage broadcast on the private Egyptian CBC television network showed soldiers beating two protesters with sticks, repeatedly stomping on the head of one, leaving the motionless bodies on the pavement.

They trashed a field hospital set up by protesters, swept into buildings where television crews were filming and briefly detained journalists. They tossed the camera and equipment of an Al-Jazeera TV crew off the balcony of a building.

A journalist who was briefly detained told The Associated Press that he was beaten up with sticks and fists while being led to into the parliament building. Inside, he saw a group of detained young men and one woman. Each was surrounded by six or seven soldiers beating him or her with sticks or steel bars or giving electrical shocks with prods.

“Blood covered the floor, and an officer was telling the soldiers to wipe the blood,” said the journalist, who asked not to be identified for security concerns.

The military’s violent response suggested it now felt emboldened. Two rounds of voting ? last weekend and in late November ? have been held for Egypt’s lower house of parliament, and millions of Egyptians turned out for the freest and fairest elections in the country’s modern history.

The generals appear to be betting that Egyptians engaged in elections have had enough of the multiple protests since Mubarak’s fall and want quiet.

One man arguing with activists in the square said he opposes protests. “Elections were the first step. This was a beginning to stability,” said Ahmed Abdel-Samei, 29. “Now we are going 10 steps back.”

The military shrugged off criticism from a civilian advisory panel that it created only last week to show it was consulting with others. The generals gave no comment after the panel announced it was suspending its operations in protest and demanded the army apologize for the violence.

At least nine people have been killed and around 300 people injured in the two days of clashes, according to the Health Ministry.

“The military council is either fed up or lacks vision in dealing with protests. It’s unbelievable what is happening; the revolution was meant to give us freedom,” said Aboul-Ela Madi, a member of the panel who resigned.

Meanwhile, the powerful Muslim Brotherhood and the more conservative Islamist Salafis focused on following vote counting from the most recent round of elections. The groups have emerged as the biggest winner so far and likely do not want to do anything to disrupt the voting, which continued until March. The Brotherhood has called for the military to apologize but has not urged supporters to join the protests.

“Islamists went after their own interests. The ballot boxes are their interests,” said Ahmed Hussein, a 35-year-old protester. He accused the military of trying to prolong the transition to ensure protection from civilian scrutiny.

As night fell in Tahrir, clashes continued around a concrete wall that the military erected to block the avenue from Tahrir to parliament.

Aya Emad told the AP that troops dragged her by her headscarf and hair into the Cabinet headquarters. The 24-year-old said soldiers kicked her on the ground, an officer shocked her with an electrical prod and another slapped her on the face, leaving her nose broken and her arm in a sling.

Mona Seif, an activist who was briefly detained Friday, said she saw an officer repeatedly slapping a detained old woman in the face.

“It was a humiliating scene,” Seif told the private TV network Al-Nahar. “I have never seen this in my life.”

WATCH: Footage from the clashes in Cairo today.
Warning: GRAPHIC. THIS ACCURACY OF THIS VIDEO HAS NOT BEEN INDEPENDENTLY VERIFIED ‘; var coords = [-5, -72]; // display fb-bubble FloatingPrompt.embed(this, html, undefined, ‘top’, {fp_intersects:1, timeout_remove:2000,ignore_arrow: true, width:236, add_xy:coords, class_name: ‘clear-overlay’}); });

Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/12/17/egypt-protests-brutal-force_n_1155665.html

how yellow renren ipo aramark citation machine geronimo navy seal training

page 1 of 1
sample other reads
Nation’s oldest federal judge dies at age 104 (AP)

WICHITA, Kan. ? As the nation’s oldest sitting federal judge in history, U.S. District Judge Wesley Brown allowed himself few concessions to his advancing age as he insisted on presiding over significant and often complex cases right up until his death at 104. Brown died Monday night at the Wichita [...]

Discrimination complaints hit all-time high

By Allison Linn The government received more complaints of worker discrimination its last fiscal year than ever before, but it was only a slight increase over 2010. The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission said Tuesday that it received 99,947 complaints of worker discrimination during its 2011 fiscal year, which ended in [...]

Strike on summit day shows task at hand

BRUSSELS (AP) ? German Chancellor Angela Merkel and other European leaders meeting for a summit will only have to look out of the window to see the biggest problem with their steady diet of austerity and belt-tightening to fix the financial crisis: disgruntled workers organizing a nationwide strike to protest [...]

Nia Crooks Charged With Battery For Basketball Wives Pimp-Slap

Basketball Wives star Nia Crooks has been charged with misdemeanor battery for slapping Jennifer Williams on a recent episode of the VH1 “hit” show. A rep for the Broward County State’s Attorney’s Office says officials decided to file the criminal charge on April 10, after Williams filed a formal complaint. [...]

Historical mystery conveys how ancient Rome dealt with crime, how …

(PR NewsChannel) / February 2, 2012 / CONCORD, N.H.? “Mars the Avenger” by Alan Scribner ?Mars the Avenger? (ISBN 1463789785) is an historical mystery set at the height of the Roman Empire.?? In the novel, Marcus Flavius Severus, a judge of the Court of the Urban Prefect in the city [...]


Welcome , today is Monday, May 21, 2012