Monday, November 21, 2011

Unrest In Egypt -- News Updates November 21, 2011



Third Day Of Violence Begins Between Police And Protesters In Cairo After 22 Killed And More Than 1,700 Wounded -- Daily Mail

* Thousands converge on Tahrir Square after overnight clashes
* Doctors seeing '80 casualties and hour' in makeshift hospital stations
* Soldiers and police burn tents and hit crowd with truncheons
* Social networks again linking protesters to outside world

Police in Cairo are clashing for a third day with stone-throwing protesters demanding that Egypt's military rulers quickly transfer power to a civilian government.

At least 3,000 protesters are in the capital's Tahrir Square, facing off with hundreds of black-clad riot police firing tear gas and rubber bullets.

Clashes have also been reported near the Interior Ministry, which is close to Tahrir Square - the epicentre of the uprising which toppled President Hosni Mubarak in February.

Read more ....



More News On The Unrest In Egypt

Egypt: The return to Tahrir Square- live updates -- The Guardian
Egypt Clashes Enter 3rd Day As Military Faces Pressure -- New York Times
Death toll hits 22 on third days of Egypt clashes -- Yahoo News/Reuters
More than 20 killed in Cairo clashes -- Yahoo News/AP
Deadly clashes rock Cairo's Tahrir Square -- Yahoo News/AFP
20 Dead as Clashes Rock Cairo for 3rd Day -- Voice of America
Clashes in Egypt's Tahrir Square over protests -- BBC
At Least 22 Dead In Cairo Clashes As Protests Move Into Third Day -- Radio Free Europe
Egyptian violence spirals out of control -- UPI
Egypt protests: New street battles erupt in Tahrir Square -- The Guardian
Casualties mount from protests in Egypt -- CNN
Egyptian Health Ministry says 22 people killed in 3 days of Cairo clashes -- Washington Post/AP
Facing Calls to Give Up Power, Egypt’s Military Battles Crowds -- New York Times
Egypt's Arab Spring: A Revolution Gone Astray -- New York Times/AP
For Egyptians, a New Foe and a New Revolution -- Thanassis Cambanis, The Atlantic
Egyptians turn on the army: the heroes have turned villains -- Adrian Blomfield
Egypt’s revolution is beginning to turn sour -- The Telegraph editorial

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