Egyptian Police Disrupt Protest Efforts -- Voice of America
Egyptian police stopped efforts by protesters to regroup in Cairo on Wednesday, a day after waves of stone-throwing demonstrators occupied the city for hours.
The Interior Ministry said Wednesday no new demonstrations will be allowed and it warned that protesters will be prosecuted.
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More News On The Unrest In Egypt
Egyptian police crack down on new protests -- Yahoo News/AP
Egyptians defy ban on protests, demand Mubarak go -- Yahoo News/Reuters
Egypt police, protesters clash for second day -- Yahoo News/AFP
Egypt Cracks Down In Second Day Of Antigovernment Rallies -- Radio Free Europe
Police crack down on second day of protests in Cairo -- USA Today
Fresh anti-govt protests in Egypt -- Al Jazeera
Egypt protests: Cairo and Suez see clashes with police -- BBC
A day after huge protests, Egyptian security clamps down -- CNN
After Day of Protests, Egypt Bans New Rallies -- New York Times
Egypt expects more protests amid high security presence -- Ahram Online
Tensions rise as Egypt's protests are broken up by the security forces -- BBC
Egypt protests: 'We ran a gauntlet of officers beating us with sticks' -- The Guardian
Three killed and 250 wounded as thousands clash with police and protests boil over on streets of Egypt and Lebanon -- The Daily Mail
Pictures: 'Day of anger' -- Al Jazeera
Factbox: Protesters call for change in Egypt -- Reuters
Egypt president's son, family flee to Britain -- Times Of India
Twitter Blocked in Egypt, Company Confirms -- FOX News
Twitter, social network sites down in Egypt -- Bikyamasr
Facebook reported inaccessible in Egypt -- AFP
Twitter and web video site face clampdown in Egypt -- BBC
Egypt protesters want freedom, but can they organize to get it? -- Christian Science Monitor
Change in Egypt: Not yet! -- Ibrahim Hazboun, FOX News
Will Egypt follow Tunisia's lead? -- CNN
Can Egyptians revolt? -- Alaa Bayoumi, Al Jazeera
Egypt unlikely to turn into another Tunisia -- Adrian Blomfield, The Telegraph
Egypt Takes to the Streets, but Will It Shake Mubarak? -- Abigail Hauslohner, Time Magazine
A Region’s Unrest Scrambles U.S. Foreign Policy -- Mark Landler, New York Times
Protest Like An Egyptian -- Mark Thompson, Time Magazine
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