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DEMOCRACY
Egypt military pardons blogger after criticism
by Staff Writers
Cairo (AFP) Aug 18, 2011

Egypt's military said on Thursday it has dropped charges against prominent blogger Asmaa Mahfouz of insulting the country's ruling generals after a wave of criticism from rights groups.

The military, in a statement on its Facebook page, said it also decided to drop charges against another activist, Loai Nagati, who also faced trial by a military court for insulting the generals.

After a meeting between a general and Egyptian intellectuals who demanded that the charges be dropped, military ruler Field Marshal Hussein Tantawi decided to "drop the complaints against Loai Nagati and Asmaa Mahfouz," the statement said.

Mahfouz was charged over statements she made on Twitter and Facebook.

The statement called on Egyptians to be "responsible" in their criticism of the armed forces, which have ruled the country since a popular revolt ousted president Hosni Mubarak in February.

The charges against Mahfouz, who taped a widely circulated appeal for an uprising against Mubarak before the January 25 revolt, increased pressure on the military to end its trials of civilians.

New York-based Human Rights Watch described the charges against Mahfouz as an "escalation" in a crackdown on military opponents, who accuse it of delaying a handover of power to civilians.

The military on Wednesday sentenced two activists to six months in prison each for insulting the armed forces.

Thousands of other Egyptians have been sentenced by military courts in the six months since Mubarak's overthrow on February 11.

Critics say the trials, which are speedy and can result in harsh sentences, are unfair.




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Yemen to form revolutionary council?
Sanaa, Yemen (UPI) Aug 18, 2011 - Opposition groups in Yemen announced they formed a 143-member committee that will lead the country's revolution against the president.

Yemeni President Ali Abdullah Saleh vowed to "soon" return to Yemen after spending nearly two months in Saudi Arabia recovering from wounds suffered in a June 3 attack.

Saleh has faced pressure for most of the year step down. In an address early this week, he said he was still the country's legitimate leader until 2013.

A meeting of opposition leaders in Yemen formed a 143-member council they said would lead the country's revolution, the Yemen Post reports.

Muhammad Qahtan, a spokesman for the opposition Joint Meeting Parties, said the council would soon elect its own president and executive party.

Yemeni officials in Saleh's General People's Congress said any official movement in opposition of the president would lead to civil war.

The Yemeni report adds the six-month political crisis has cost the country significant economic losses, a situation complicated by the presence of al-Qaida and armed militias in the north and south of the country.





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DEMOCRACY
Egypt military sentences five to hang
Cairo (AFP) Aug 17, 2011
An Egyptian military court on Wednesday sentenced five men to death after they robbed a gas station and killed a police commander during the getaway, the official MENA news agency reported. Seven others who were arrested after the May robbery in the Red Sea town of Al-Quseir were acquitted, the agency said. The military, which has been in charge since a popular revolt ousted president Ho ... read more


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