Mubarak's Gone! He Really Has Gone!
Sabtu, 12 Februari 2011

Spectacular: Fireworks light up the sky above Tahrir Square as the party continued long into the night
KOMPAS.- Hundreds of thousands of protesters exploded with joy as the hated Hosni Mubarak finally stepped down as Egyptian President, prompting Barack Obama to declare that the country 'will never be the same'.
After 18 days of demonstrations which had rocked this country and the world, the embattled leader bowed to an unstoppable wave of public pressure. The premier, who has been head of state for 29 years, has temporarily handed over power to the army until elections can be held.
President Obama hailed the resignation of Egyptian leader Hosni Mubarak in a statement broadcast live from the White House.
'In stepping down, President Mubarak has responded to the Egyptian people's hunger for change,' he said. 'Today belongs to the people of Egypt.
'The people of Egypt have spoken. Their voices have been heard. And Egypt will never be the same,' he said.
But the U.S President - speaking just hours after Mubarak gave up his three decades of authoritarian rule - warned it was just the beginning of the country's path to democracy. He stressed there would be 'difficult times' and 'many questions' ahead.
'I'm confident the people of Egypt can find the answers,' he said.
'Egyptians have inspired us, and they've done so by putting the lie to the idea that justice is best gained by violence.
'For Egypt, it was the moral force of non-violence, not terrorism, not mindless killing, but non-violence, moral force, that bent the arc of history toward justice once more.'
He added that the Egyptian military had served patriotically and responsibly and now must ensure a transition that is 'credible in the eyes of the Egyptian people'.
He said that meant lifting Egypt's hated 30-year-old police powers laws, revising the constitution and enacting other safeguards to 'make this change irreversible' and set the path for free and fair elections.
He also said he was confident that a democratic Egypt can assert its role as an 'influential player' in the Middle East and beyond. Obama had issued a statement from Washington last night in which he challenged Mubarak, without directly naming him, to explain his actions and his plans for democracy.
And then events changed. Earlier tonight, as news of Mubarak's departure filtered through to protesters in Liberation Square and outside Mubarak’s palace several miles away, the crowd erupted.
‘The people ousted the regime,’ people chanted as they clapped and danced in the streets. ‘Goodbye. Goodbye.’
Others raised their hands in prayer as fireworks and car horns blazed and blared around the chaotic city. In London, David Cameron called for 'a move to civilian and democratic rule' and said that it was a 'really precious moment of opportunity.'.
Speaking on the steps of No 10, he said the new government should start to put in place 'the building blocks of a truly open, free and democratic society'.
Mubarak's resignation was the culmination of a day of dramatic development in which it was first claimed that he had fled the Egyptian capital to the Red Sea resort of Sharm el-Sheikh.
Then came the news that there was to be an announcement. As darkness fell over the square, the crowds waited with baited breath to discover the fate of their revolution and the country.
When a grim-faced Vice President Omar Suleiman finally appeared on state television his message was short and to the point. Mubarak had finally gone, ceding control of the state to the army.
‘In these grave circumstances that the country is passing through, President Hosni Mubarak has decided to leave his position as president of the republic,’ he said.
‘He has mandated the Armed Forces Supreme Council to run the state. God is our protector and succour.’
In Tahrir Square, the site of some of the most extraordinary scenes in the country’s history, a single man shouted above the crowd.
‘He’s gone,’ he yelled. ‘He’s gone,’ and the protesters – men, women and children who had occupied the square for 18 days – roared.
Men fell to their knees to kiss the ground. At the presidential palace, one rolled around on the grass. People wept, jumped, screamed and hugged each other with a shared joy they had never known. Cairo erupted in a cacophony of celebration: fireworks and car horns and gunshots in the air.
‘This is the happiest day in my generation,’ said Ali al-Tayab, a 24-year-old demonstrator who paid tribute to those who died in clashes with police and Mubarak supporters. ‘To the martyrs, this is your day.’
‘Finally we are free,’ said Safwan Abou Stat, a 60-year-old in the crowd of protesters at the palace. ‘From now on anyone who is going to rule will know that these people are great.’
Abdel-Rahman Samir, one of the youth organisers of the protests, said the protest movement would now open negotiations with the military over democratic reform but vowed protests would continue to ensure change is carried out.
'We still don't have any guarantees yet - if we end the whole situation now the it's like we haven't done anything,' he said. 'So we need to keep sitting in Tahrir until we get all our demands.'
But, he added: 'I feel fantastic. .... I feel like we have worked so hard, we planted a seed for a year and a half and now we are now finally sowing the fruits.'
.......................