CNN.com         
 
Protesters defy curfew, surround opposition figure

Cairo, Egypt (CNN) -- The government's call for protesters to follow curfew and 
the low-flying fighter jets overhead did nothing to deter thousands of 
Egyptians from continuing their protest into Sunday night.

Instead, crowds surrounded Mohamed ElBaradei, an opposition figure, as he 
walked into Cairo's Tahrir Square. Throngs of people cheered his arrival.

ElBaradei told protesters he came "to participate today in the lives of 
Egyptians. Today I look into the eyes of each one of you, and everyone is 
different today. Today you are an Egyptian demanding your rights and freedom, 
and what we started can never be pushed back. As we said, we have one main 
demand: the end of the regime and to start a new phase."

ElBaradei, in a CNN interview earlier, called on Egyptian President Hosni 
Mubarak to "leave today and save the country."

"This is a country that is falling apart," ElBaradei told CNN's "Fareed Zakaria 
GPS."

ElBaradei, a former head of the International Atomic Energy Agency, is one of 
several opposition figures whose name surfaces when protesters talk about 
possible future leaders of Egypt. Among other names is Amr Moussa, head of the 
Arab League.

But Mubarak has given no indications of giving up his 30-year rule. He vowed to 
listen to the protesters' message and fired his entire Cabinet on Saturday. On 
Sunday, Mubarak, 82, visited an armed services operations center, state-run 
Nile TV reported. Mubarak was following up on the security situation and 
showing support for the military, the report said.

The demonstrations throughout the day Sunday were generally peaceful, and at 
times felt like a music festival, with people cheering, chatting, and posing 
for pictures with members of the military in their tanks. The army had been 
deployed to replace police forces that had crashed brutally with demonstrators.

Some residents picked up the slack for police in areas surrounding the protests 
-- offering to clean up trash, for example. Medical personnel worked their way 
through the crowd, seeing if anyone needed help.

With the world's attention focused on their efforts, the protesters issued two 
central demands: that the regime that has run Egypt for years face a trial, and 
that the constitution be changed.

Many expressed optimism that they will succeed. "This is the start of the rest 
of my life," one jubilant young man who appeared to be in his 20s told CNN. "As 
cheesy as it sounds, that's exactly how I feel right now."

He added that he had been concerned there wouldn't be enough people "to deter 
any threat -- either by police or by the army. Now, it's definitely over."

In a statement carried by state television, Gen. Mohamad Tantawi, the defense 
minister in the sacked Egyptian government, urged the public to obey the 4 p.m. 
- 8 a.m. curfew (9 a.m.-1 a.m. ET). Tantawi was escorted to the network's 
headquarters by red-helmeted troops in a convoy of sport-utility vehicles. 
Later, Egyptian TV stations showed him walking in the streets of Cairo checking 
on troops.

Fighter jets began flying low over the crowd of tens of thousands minutes 
before the curfew was to begin. The jets flew so low, according to CNN staffers 
on the ground, that their cockpits could be seen.

A group of Egyptian troops fired warning shots at a car that attempted to run a 
barricade around Tahrir Square, but the vehicle made it through the barricade 
and escaped, according to CNN photographer Joe Duran.

Protesters showed no signs of winding down, indicating a likelihood that they 
will continue their efforts into Monday, which would mark the seventh straight 
day of the protests that have grabbed the world's attention.

Whether the 450,000-strong armed forces -- deployed to the streets for the 
first time since the mid-1980s -- will remain loyal to Mubarak is a key 
question for the nation's future.

There were also protests in other parts of the country, including in 
Alexandria, where demonstrators seemed to be expressing more frustration Sunday 
-- with the fact that Mubarak has not stepped down, and with the lack of 
security in many areas.

Fear of anarchy and looting lingered Sunday. Many in the nation's capital have 
been left without security after police stopped patrolling.

Shops and businesses were looted and abandoned police stations were stripped 
clean of their arsenals.

A body was found in front of the country's interior ministry Sunday morning, 
but there was no police presence nearby.

One of the biggest concerns of many Egyptians in the wake of the chaos -- that 
prisoners could escape -- proved true. State-run TV Nile TV said some prisoners 
broke out of Abu Zaabal prison in Cairo, though it was not immediately clear 
how many. At the Ataa prison in Al Badrashin, a town in Giza, some prisoners 
broke out as well. Roughly 1,000 inmates escaped from Prison Demu in Fayoum, 
southwest of Cairo, Nile TV reported early Sunday.

More than 3,000 people have been arrested so far, including some prisoners and 
looters, Nile TV reported.

"Those thugs are setting things on fire. ... They are setting fire in front of 
the hospital," a caller to Nile TV said, identifying herself as a doctor in a 
Cairo neighborhood.

"It seems that every major square and every small street in Cairo was basically 
taken over by communities ... people are parading the streets, walking around 
with baseball bats and knives," said Ahmed Rehab of the Council on American 
Islamic Relations from Cairo. "We didn't get any sleep all night."

Cell phone and mobile internet service appeared to have returned, but word of a 
possible new crackdown on communication emerged Sunday.

Egypt's information ministry announced that it was revoking Al Jazeera's 
license and withdrawing accreditation of the network's staff, state media 
reported.

"The closing of our bureau by the Egyptian government is aimed at censoring and 
silencing the voices of the Egyptian people," the Al Jazeera network said in a 
statement.

The network's Arabic-language channel was off the air in Egypt Sunday 
afternoon, but Al Jazeera English was still on the air.

As the threat of further unrest loomed, Turkey sent two planes to Egypt on 
Sunday to begin evacuation of its citizens, Turkish foreign ministry spokesman 
Selcuk Una said.

The U.S. Embassy in Cairo said it would assist American citizens who want to 
leave Egypt with flights departing from the country's capital Monday, embassy 
spokeswoman Elizabeth Colton said.

Mubarak appointed his trusted and powerful intelligence chief, Omar Suleiman, 
as his deputy, the first time the authoritarian regime has seen such a post. 
Suleiman is well respected by the military and is credited with crushing an 
Islamic insurgency in the 1990s, for which he earned the ear of Western 
intelligence officials thirsting for vital information about regional terrorist 
groups.

Suleiman had a meeting Sunday with the head of the military and the interior 
minister, Egyptian TV network ESC reported.

Mubarak also asked Ahmed Shafik, the civil aviation minister in the cabinet 
that just stepped down, to form a new government, state-run Nile TV reported. 
Shafik is a former Air Force officer with strong military connections.

But many called for Mubarak to step down.

The protests come weeks after similar disturbances sparked a revolution in 
Tunisia, forcing then-President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali to flee the country.

Both Egypt and Tunisia have seen dramatic rises in the cost of living in recent 
years and accusations of corruption among the ruling elite.

Tunisia-inspired demonstrations have also taken place in Algeria, Yemen and 
Jordan.

The Egyptian crisis reverberated across the world, with activists in cities 
including New York, Toronto and Geneva staging protests Saturday in support of 
those in Egypt and demanded that Mubarak step down.

Mubarak, who had not been seen in public for some time, addressed the nation in 
a televised speech early Saturday. He said he asked his government to step down 
but he intended to stay in power.

"These protests arose to express a legitimate demand for more democracy, need 
for a greater social safety net, and the improvement of living standards, 
fighting poverty and rampant corruption," Mubarak said.

The aging president has ruled Egypt with an iron fist for three decades, and it 
was widely believed he was grooming his son, Gamal, as his successor -- a plan 
now complicated by demands for democracy.

"I understand these legitimate demands of the people and I truly understand the 
depth of their worries and burdens, and I will not part from them ever and I 
will work for them every day," he said. "But regardless of what problems we 
face, this does not justify violence or lawlessness."

CNN's Nic Robertson, Ben Wedeman, Frederik Pleitgen, Ivan Watson, Housam Ahmed, 
Caroline Faraj, Saad Abedine, Joe Duran and journalist Ian Lee contributed to 
this report.
 
 
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