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The 3,000 Dead
Will They Speak For Egypt?

By Jim Kirwan
2-13-11
 
 
 
This is the headline that you will not see anywhere that conforms to the powers that be.
 
During 911 there were purportedly 3,000 people killed during that attack: Our response was not to treat this as the crime it was, but rather it became a call to another unjustified war upon yet another Muslim Country, where we killed over 6,000 by way of retribution for crimes that Afghanistan did not commit.
 
Now inside Egypt there are another 3,000 people that lost their lives to the savagery of despotism: And yet no one seems to even notice either their sacrifice for their nation; or the ultimate price they PAID so that Egyptians might have the chance to be FREE.
 
At the top Death rises from the lotus blossom of renewal. The stars of which she is made stand for the 28 day cycle of the feminine. She is protected by guardians of the Egyptian Funeral Pyre as Death has always been an eternal part of all human life. Below her is the buzz saw blade of RUMOR, which will keep the eye and ear of truth from rising. And finally there are the QUESTIONS that must be unlocked if we are ever to put the events of the eighteen days in Egypt into a realistic perspective.
 
These "3,000" deserve to be recognized and proclaimed because they did not die on camera-but were instead murdered by the secret-police and the army out of view from the crowd-obsessed television cameras that were focused on the peaceful demonstration and not on the comparitively few, given that millions participated, that were murdered for speaking out!
 
This puts the efforts of those at Facebook, Twitter and Tweet into a more accurate perspective. Anyone could've started that fire in the tinder-box that Egypt had become, once the starvation became real. But it will be the blood of the 3,000 and more that will keep the flames of this uprising burning in the minds and hearts of those from other countries that will soon begin their own Odyssey toward Freedom.
 
Here's more on Suleiman:
"Mamdouh Habib interview on new US/Israeli Egyptian pet Omar Suleiman by AntonyLoewenstein
Australian citizen Mamdouh Habib was captured and tortured in the years after September 11 in both Egypt and Guantanamo Bay.
 
Today, with the Egyptian uprisings in full swing, the man tapped by the US, Israel and the West to lead the country, Omar Suleiman, was one of Habib's torturers and there is intense scrutiny of who this man truly is. I interviewed Habib exclusively tonight inSydney about Suleiman, his calls for the torturer-in-chief to be charged, his knowledge about all the figures complicit in his rendition and his support for the Egyptian protests. He stressed that Suleiman was a CIA/Mossad agent who was willing to do anything for a price:
 
I reviewed Habib's book, My Story, in 2008 for the Sydney Morning Herald and it tells a powerful story. The extracts below are all the references to Suleiman:
 
pp.112-115
 
The guard quickly told me that the very big boss was coming to talk to me, and that I must be well behaved and co-operate. Everyone was nervous. I have since found out that the boss was Omar Suleiman, head of all Egyptian security. He was known for personally supervising the interrogation of al-Qaeda suspects and sending reports to the CIA. In the beginning, he was often present during my interrogations. He must have thought that he had a big fish when I was sent to him by the Americans and Australians.
 
I was sitting in a chair, hooded, with my hands handcuffed behind my back. He came up to me. His voice was deep and rough. He spoke to me in Egyptian and English. He said, "Listen, you don't know who I am, but I am the one who has your life in his hands. Every single person in this building has his life in my hands. I just make the decision."
 
I said, "I hope your decision is that you make me die straight away."
 
"No, I don't want you to die now. I want you to die slowly." He went on, "I can't stay with you; my time is too valuable to stay here. You only have me to save you. I'm your savior. You have to tell me everything, if you want to be saved. What do you say?"
 
"I have nothing to tell you."
 
"You think I can't destroy you just like that?" He clapped his hands together.
 
"I don't know". I was feeling confused. Everything was unreal.
 
"If God came down and tried to take you by the hand, I would not let him. You are under my control. Let me show you something that will convince you."
 
The guard then guided me out of the room and through an area where I could see, from below the blindfold, the trunks of palm trees. We then went through another door back inside, and descended some steps. We entered a room. They sat me down.
 
"Now you are going to tell me that you planned a terrorist attack", Suleiman persisted.
 
"I haven't planned any attacks."
 
"I give you my word that you will be a rich man if you tell me you have been planning attacks. Don't you trust me?" he asked.
 
"I don't trust anyone", I replied.
 
Immediately he slapped me hard across the face and knocked off the blindfold; I clearly saw his face.
 
"That's it. That's it. I don't want to see this man again until he co-operates and tells me he's been planning a terrorist attack! he yelled at the others in the room, then stormed out.
 
The guard came up to me, upset that I hadn't co-operated.
 
I said to him, "You have to let me go soon; it's nearly 48 hours."
 
He looked at me, surprised, and asked, "How long do you think you've been here?"
 
"A day", I replied.
 
"Man, you've been here for more than a week."
 
They then took me to another room, where they tortured me relentlessly, stripping me naked and applying electric shocks everywhere on my body. The next thing I remember was seeing the general again. He came into the room with a man from Turkistan; he was a big man but was stooped over, because his hands were chained to the shackles of his feet, preventing him from standing upright.
 
"This guy is no use to us anymore. This is what is going to happen to you. We've had him for one hour, and this is what happens."
 
Suddenly, a guy they called Hamish, which means snake, came at the poor man from behind and gave him a terrible karate kick that sent him crashing across the room. A guard went over to shake him, but he didn't respond. Turning to the general, the guard said, "Basha, I think he's dead."
 
"Throw him away then. Let the dogs have him."
 
They dragged the dead man out.
 
"What do you think of that?" asked the general, staring into my face.
 
"At least he can rest now", I replied." There is much more to this article, please see the link. (1)
 
Ask yourself just how long the Egyptian people will tolerate this pig as the new head of anything to do with the country he has disgraced internationally for the entirety of his filthy existence? This is the kind of thing that only the Egyptian populace ought to be allowed to decide for themselves-especially given the fact that this uprising has already needlessly claimed 3,000 lives!
 
Here's what CNN had to say this morning:
 
"Cairo, Egypt (CNN) -- Egypt's military dissolved parliament and will run the country for six months or until elections are held, it said in a statement Sunday, two days after President Hosni Mubarak resigned. It is suspending the constitution and will appoint a committee to propose changes to it, the statement said, adding that the public will then get to vote on the amended constitution.
 
The Supreme Council of the Armed Forces can issue new laws during the transition period, according to the statement on state television.
 
The government is now reporting to the military high command in the same way it reported to Mubarak before he stepped down, the prime minister confirmed shortly before the military statement was read.
 
The restoration of security and normal life is the government's priority, Prime Minister Ahmed Shafiq said, as troops began trying to clear protesters from Tahrir Sqaure, the spiritual heart of the 18-day uprising that toppled Mubarak after 30 years.
 
That could take time, Shafiq acknowledged in his first comments to the press since Mubarak stepped down.
 
"The feeling of the lack of security which started when the situation began has to end," he said. "It will end gradually, but not as fast as we want."
 
He also said he was reviewing candidates to fill vacant government ministries, adding that no one who was not acceptable to the public would be appointed. His remarks were carried live on state television.
 
Egypt's ambassador to the United States said he did not expect opposition figures to join the government before elections.
 
"This current composition is basically a technocratic government to run the day-to-day affairs, to take care of the security void that has happened, and to also address the issues related to the economy," Ambassador Sameh Shoukry said on CNN's "Fareed Zakaria GPS."
 
A prominent Egyptian activist credited with helping spark the revolution warned against taking too long to establish a new representative government.
 
"Biggest mistake now is to give the Egyptian people too little too slow. Restoring confidence requires a faster pace," Wael Ghonim said on Twitter.
 
There were angry shouts from some in the crowd when members of the army tried to move people from Tahrir Square.
 
Tahrir appeared less crowded Sunday than in previous days, though some Egyptians have vowed to keep protesting until "Egypt is ruled by a civil government, not a military one."
But more signs of normalcy are sprouting up on the first regular work day without Mubarak as president. For the first time since demonstrators took control of Tahrir Square, traffic in the area flowed freely.
 
Sunday marks the traditional start of the work week in Egypt. By Sunday morning, the majority of shops around Tahrir were open.
 
A mass of young people gathered outside the ministry of natural gas on Sunday to fill out applications, some leaning on cars to do so.
 
In the immediate future, the military -- largely respected by Egyptians -- will have to grapple with guiding the country of more than 80 million people through the transition amid massive problems of unemployment and economic underdevelopment.
The nation virtually shut down during the unrest, losing vital tourism dollars as well.
On Saturday, a marble memorial was being erected to remember those who died in the uprising. Human Rights Watch has documented 302 deaths, a number the monitoring group called conservative.
 
Some analysts have been sounding the alarm over the takeover by the military, which has suddenly become accountable for the nation. Analysts with Stratfor, a global intelligence company, said Egypt had essentially experienced a coup.
 
"Egypt is returning to the 1952 model of ruling the state via a council of army officers," the Stratfor statement said. "The question now is to what extent the military elite will share power with its civilian counterparts."
 
But even as officials hash out the details of Egypt's murky political future, public demands for change rippled throughout the region.
 
In the Yemeni capital of Sanaa, protesters chanted Saturday: "Yesterday Tunisia, todayEgypt -- tomorrow Yemen will open the prison."
 
And in restive Algeria, anti-government protesters chanted "Change the power" on Saturday. But security forces clashed with the crowds Saturday in Algiers and detained roughly 100 protesters, according to the opposition Algerian League for Human Rights."(2)
 
Maybe Egyptians might not be quite so willing to stop their demonstrations ­ given these new rules, via Israel, Mossad, USI and the New World Order?
kirwanstudios@sbcvglobal.net
 
1) Who Suleiman Really Is by One of His Victimshttp://desertpeace.wordpress.com/2011/02/12/who-suleiman-really-is-by-one-of-his-victims/
 
2) Egypt's Military Dissolves Parliament, Suspends Constitutionhttp://www.cnn.com/2011/WORLD/meast/02/13/egypt.revolution/index.html?hpt=T1
 
  
 
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