Menu
Accueil
Forums
Nouveaux messages
En ce moment
Nouveaux messages
Nouveaux messages de profil
Connexion
S'inscrire
Quoi de neuf
Nouveaux messages
Menu
Connexion
S'inscrire
Forums
Catégorie Principale
Actualités internationales
Quatrième jour de manifestations en Égypte contre le président Sissi
JavaScript est désactivé. Pour une meilleure expérience, veuillez activer JavaScript dans votre navigateur avant de continuer.
Vous utilisez un navigateur obsolète. Il se peut que ce site ou d'autres sites Web ne s'affichent pas correctement.
Vous devez le mettre à jour ou utiliser un
navigateur alternatif
.
Répondre à la discussion
Message
[QUOTE="compteblad, post: 16935179, member: 167672"] :joueur: [B]ne nous laissons pas intimider par les mouches électroniques[/B] :joueur::joueur::D:D faut juste utiliser un bon insectiside :D nous avons la chance de vivre dans une démocratie, cueillons en les fruits! suite article The police made extensive preparations ahead of September 20 to forestall the demonstrations. Patrol cars roamed the streets of downtown Cairo, especially Tahrir Square, the scene of the 2011 mass demonstrations that brought down the long-time US-backed dictator, Hosni Mubarak. Police were deployed in and around key buildings, and security forces stopped and searched pedestrians, demanding ID. According to [I]Al-Arabi al-Jadeed[/I], more than 1,000 young men and women were arrested in front of subway stations and in the streets surrounding Tahrir Square in the run-up to the demonstrations. El-Sisi has presided over an International Monetary Fund (IMF) dictated “reform” programme that has included slashing subsidies, raising fuel prices, cutting the health and education budgets and firing government employees. While these measures cut the budget deficit from 12.5 percent in 2016 to 6.7 percent in 2019, they ruined much of Egypt’s middle class and led to soaring poverty rates. Last month, the government started demolishing homes built without a license, potentially impacting vast numbers of people, particularly in the Cairo conurbation, home to 20 million people and desperately short of affordable housing. People would be spared demolition and eviction if they paid a hefty fine, prompting suspicions that this was a money-raising operation. Such was the anger that three weeks ago the government was forced to reduce the fines for landlords and contractors violating the licensing regulations. The shortage of homes has become all the more inflammatory in the wake of el-Sisi’s extravagant construction projects, such as the expansion of the Suez Canal and the new $58 billion administrative capital that will benefit the military construction companies and the financial elite, and which have become white elephants in the midst of the pandemic. The new seat of government being built in the desert 40 miles outside Cairo has already cost over $35 billion and will provide luxury homes for 5 million affluent people and just 100,000 “affordable” homes. The September 20 demonstrations were small and concentrated in towns and villages outside the capital, largely in the Nile Delta region. But within days, they spread to other parts of the country, including Giza, Alexandria, Al-Minya, Damietta, Suez, Qalyoubia, Beni Sueif and Cairo, governorates encompassing Egypt’s main industrial areas. The mainstream media both in Egypt and internationally have largely ignored the protests and the government’s repressive response. But videos on social media and opposition TV channels showed the security forces using tear gas and rubber bullets to disperse protesters. Egyptian security forces killed at least one protester Friday. The Geneva-based Committee for Justice reported that riot police in the village of Balayda in Giza governorate, part of the vast Cairo conurbation, had shot and killed a 25-year-old protester, with other reports that police had killed another three people, including a child. :joueur::joueur: [/QUOTE]
Insérer les messages sélectionnés…
Vérification
Répondre
Forums
Catégorie Principale
Actualités internationales
Quatrième jour de manifestations en Égypte contre le président Sissi
Haut