UPDATED w/ music vid. breaking news: Egyptian people oust Mubarak

breaking news: Egyptian people oust Mubarak in an uprising (see music video posted above, next post)



See music video posted above, next post.

UPDATED with a music video: Credits: all photos by the wires: Agence France Presse, Reuters, Associated Press. Music by Schönberg and Kretzmer from the original French text by Boublil and Natel, all used here non-commercially for academic purposes.

Produced by blog admin, using a computer given by Myra and Teng from an original Les Miserables CD brought home by Teng (with other CD’s and gizmos)

xxx

alternative headlines if you’re a newspaper (the traditional media is constrained by time and space):

Mubarak falls

Mubarak ousted

Mubarak flees (when Marcos was ousted, the headline of the inquirer was: “Marcos flees”. When Erap was ousted, the headlines of newspapers were: “Erap falls” and “Erap resigns”. Because this is a blog, there are no space and time constraints, so one is able to put “people oust” as the first two words of a head, it’s longer though)

People oust Mubarak

Mubarak steps down (CNN and New York Times)

Or, if you want to be cute:

Facebook generation ousts dictator

Journalists attacked by armed Mubarak supporters as Mubarak army watches, Cairo, Egypt

Vodpod videos no longer available.

Video of Assault on Anderson Coop, posted with vodpod

(video from CNN embedded by other sites, made available to the public by those sites through the “embed” button)

“Foreign journalists attacked in Egypt protests, Agence France-Presse,  02/03/2011

“CAIRO – Several foreign journalists covering the confrontations between pro- and anti-regime protesters in Cairo became on Wednesday the target of violent attacks, a media watchdog and news organisations said.

“Correspondents, photographers and cameramen reporting on the fierce clashes that took place in Cairo’s central Tahrir Square said that the supporters of embattled President Hosni Mubarak were hostile to the press.

“An AFP journalist said he needed the protection of two soldiers to be able to exit the square without being hurt by aggressive pro-regime protesters surrounding the area.

“Media watchdog group Reporters Without Borders (RSF) said the “shocking” attacks appeared in revenge for the coverage of nine days of protests calling for the departure of Mubarak.

“ “These attacks seem to have been acts of revenge against the international media for relaying the protests calling for President Mubarak’s resigning,” Jean-Fran?s Julliard, secretary general of the Paris-based group, said in a statement.

“ “They are also designed to silence journalists and gag news media,” he said of attacks reported against BBC, Al-Jazeera, CNN, Al-Arabiya and ABC News journalists, among others.

“Several of the reporters were hit and their equipment was stolen, Julliard said.

“RSF urged the international community to “react strongly to these excesses”.

“The United States also voiced concern at attacks on journalists.

“ “We are concerned about detentions and attacks on news media in Egypt. The civil society that Egypt wants to build includes a free press,” State Department spokesman Philip Crowley said on the microblogging website Twitter.

“Among the journalists attacked were Anderson Cooper of CNN, Herome Boehm of the BBC, and Lara Setrakian of ABC News, RSF said.

“Belgian newspaper Le Soir said its correspondent Serge Dumont was beaten up and dragged off to a barracks in Cairo by non-identified civilians who accused him of supporting Egyptian dissident Mohamed ElBaradei.

“He told the daily in a brief phone conversation that he received several blows to the face, was taken to a military barrack and accused of being a spy.

“Dumont also covers the Middle East from Israel for Swiss paper Le Temps and French regional paper La Voix du Nord.

“Belgian Foreign Minister Steven Vanackere called for Serge Dumont’s “immediate release.”

“A cameraman working with the Canadian state television Radio-Canada was also rescued by the army after falling into the hands of the crowds at Tahrir Square.

“Sylvain Castonguay was beaten up by dozens of people in a “collective hysteria” said reporter Jean-Francois Lepine on Radio-Canada.

“Two Swedish journalists with the Aftonbladet tabloid were also attacked by an angry mob while reporting from an impoverished area of Cairo before a soldier arrested them and held them for several hours, the daily said.

“Three Israeli journalists were arrested for violating a curfew imposed by the authorities. But the trio — two television crew and a writer for an Arab Israeli website — have been released and were returning to Israel, Israeli foreign ministry spokesman Yigal Palmore told AFP.

“French international news channel France 24 said three of its journalists had been detained while covering protests in Egypt and were being held by “military intelligence services”.

“ “Two of them were detained during the protest” in Cairo, a spokeswoman for France 24, Nathalie Lenfant, told AFP.

“A third journalist, who was slightly injured during the protest, was separately detained at a barricade, she said.

“Saudi-owned Al-Arabiya news channel said its correspondent Ahmed Abdullah was severly beaten by Mubarak supporters.

“The Doha-based Al-Jazeera said Monday that six journalists working for its English-language news channel were briefly arrested. The six were Australian, Portuguese and British nationals, an Al-Jazeera spokesman told AFP, without giving a breakdown.

“Authorities in Cairo had the day before shut the Al-Jazeera office over its live coverage of anti-regime protests. It also blocked Al-Jazeera’s satellite broadcast through Nilesat, interrupting its programmes aross the region.

“The ministry of information declined Wednesday to comment about the attacks and arrests.”