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Egypt, Tunisia....nothing to say?
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10. |
03 Feb 2011 Thu 10:25 am |
Oh, I definitely hope the revolution will bring improvement of the conditions common people live in. Working for a dollar a day is not rare from what I heard there. And hoards of homeless children wandering and prostituting in the streets of cities are a heartbreaking sight as well. Some of them are under 5 years of age...Coptic girls kidnapped from the way to school, raped and forced to convert or sold abroad to work in brothels - awful and revolting. Corruption on top always degenerates, especially if you feel no matter what you do, your hands are tied. And then there are tourists who do not have to be rich by western standards to make you see life can be different. I am not surprised people started a revolution, 30 years of Mubarak´s "presidency" (supported by the US) is ridiculous, just like any system where the power belongs to a person who was not chosen by means of vote (monarchy etc).
What makes the matter worse, tourism will be badly affected this year, first sharks in the sea, now revolution. A lot of people who cannot afford to lose a cent are going to lose much more than that I just hope they´ll make up for it in the future by means of permanent change.
All the best to people of Egypt! I come from a country known for its revolutions and I appreciate everyone who is able to sacrifice a lot for a bigger cause.
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11. |
03 Feb 2011 Thu 07:10 pm |
Egyptian government asked Turkey mind its own business
February 03, 2011 | 19:37
The Egyptian government critically responded to the statements of Turkish President and Prime Minister regarding prevention of bloody events in Egypt.
We regret that Turkey interferes with Egypt’s domestic affairs, reads the statement. Let every state do its business.
Turkey’s Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan had advised Hüsnü Mübarek that he should listen to the demands of Egyptian people and hand in resignation. The Turkish Foreign Minister has left for Egypt on a “special mission”.
Source: here
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12. |
03 Feb 2011 Thu 09:00 pm |
Didn´t Mubarak say he´d stay in power till the elections in September?
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13. |
05 Feb 2011 Sat 03:33 am |
The current events in Tunisia and Egypt are not a political blow.These events are societal actions.Because there are no any ideology and leadership behind the actions. These are actions of searching for democracy, equality and legitimate.These events will affect the world countries.
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14. |
05 Feb 2011 Sat 11:50 pm |
source photo here: http://imgur.com/NhC4m
It is possible for everyone to coexiste together
Edited (2/5/2011) by stumpy
Edited (2/5/2011) by stumpy
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15. |
06 Feb 2011 Sun 12:50 am |
I have nothing to say, except for that I know people who are stuck in Cairo, in an embassy right now. I spend my time watching the phone, watching the news...
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16. |
06 Feb 2011 Sun 08:00 pm |
I have nothing to say, except for that I know people who are stuck in Cairo, in an embassy right now. I spend my time watching the phone, watching the news...
Hope it works out for the best, barba.
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17. |
14 Feb 2011 Mon 02:36 am |
Egyptian government asked Turkey mind its own business
February 03, 2011 | 19:37
The Egyptian government critically responded to the statements of Turkish President and Prime Minister regarding prevention of bloody events in Egypt.
We regret that Turkey interferes with Egypt’s domestic affairs, reads the statement. Let every state do its business.
Turkey’s Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan had advised Hüsnü Mübarek that he should listen to the demands of Egyptian people and hand in resignation. The Turkish Foreign Minister has left for Egypt on a “special mission”.
Source: here
good one!
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18. |
22 Feb 2011 Tue 01:02 pm |
Turkey struggles with chaotic evacuation of citizens from Libya
With unrest growing in Libya, Turkey is struggling to get permission to evacuate the 25,000 Turkish citizens living there. As one plane is forced to turn back empty, the Turkish foreign minister says Turkey is focused on ensuring ´personal safety´ amid threats of civil war, and claims by Libyan state media that protesters were encouraged by foreigners
Until now, Turkey has managed to evacuate only 581 of 25,000 Turkish citizens living in unrest-hit Libya. AA photo
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Legal issues and landing restrictions have complicated Turkey’s attempts to evacuate its citizens from Libya as the protest-hit country potentially approaches “civil war,” amid Libyan accusations that Turks helped fan the unrest.
The Turkish Foreign Ministry called an emergency meeting late Sunday to discuss the Libya crisis and has provided its Benghazi consulate with additional civil servants to better coordinate the evacuations. A Turkish plane flew to Benghazi, Libya’s second-largest city, on a repatriation mission early Monday but returned empty to Istanbul after it failed to get permission to land.
“Right now personal safety remains the most important priority in Libya, which makes it different from the other developments in the region,” Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoğlu told a group of reporters accompanying him to Tunisia, where protesters ousted the country’s longtime president in January.
Though Turkey successfully evacuated many of the 3,000 Turks living in Egypt during that country’s crisis, the situation in Libya is proving more challenging. The Turkish population in the country is much larger than in Egypt and the need to obtain legal permission from Libyan authorities makes it difficult to evacuate them.
Source: here
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19. |
27 Feb 2011 Sun 05:51 pm |
Italy sees 300,000 fleeing Libya turmoil-minister
MILAN Feb 23 (Reuters) - Up to 300,000 migrants from Libya could flee to Italy because of turmoil in the North African nation, Foreign Minister Franco Frattini said in an interview published on Wednesday.
About a third of Libya´s population, or 2.5 million people, are immigrants from sub-Saharan Africa who could flee if Muammar Gaddafi´s government falls, he told Corriere della Sera newspaper.
"We know what to expect when the Libyan national system falls -- an abnormal wave of 200,000 to 300,000 immigrants. Or rather, 10 times the Albanian (refugee) phenomenon that we saw in the ´90s," Frattini said.
"These are estimates, and on the low side ... It is a Biblical exodus."
Interior ministers from Italy, Cyprus, France, Greece, Malta and Spain will meet on Wednesday in Rome to set a common policy on the upheaval in North Africa and make a recommendation to the European Commission.
Tens of thousands of illegal immigrants try to make the journey from the northern coasts of Tunisia and Libya to islands off Italy every year. (Reporting by Ian Simpson)
Source: here
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