Showing posts with label Arrests. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Arrests. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 18, 2014

Cop Arrests Cop & That"s When Her Troubles Begin... [RARE VIDEO]

At Alternate Viewpoint, the privacy of our visitors is of extreme importance to us (See this article to learn more about Privacy Policies.). This privacy policy document outlines the types of personal information is received and collected by Alternate Viewpoint and how it is used.


Log Files


Like many other Web sites, Alternate Viewpoint makes use of log files. The information inside the log files includes internet protocol (IP) addresses, type of browser, Internet Service Provider (ISP), date/time stamp, referring/exit pages, and number of clicks to analyze trends, administer the site, track user"s movement around the site, and gather demographic information. IP addresses, and other such information are not linked to any information that is personally identifiable.


Cookies and Web Beacons


Alternate Viewpoint does use cookies to store information about visitors preferences, record user-specific information on which pages the user access or visit, customize Web page content based on visitors browser type or other information that the visitor sends via their browser.


DoubleClick DART Cookie


  • Google, as a third party vendor, uses cookies to serve ads on Alternate Viewpoint.

  • Google"s use of the DART cookie enables it to serve ads to users based on their visit to Alternate Viewpoint and other sites on the Internet.

  • Users may opt out of the use of the DART cookie by visiting the Google ad and content network privacy policy at the following URL - http://www.google.com/privacy_ads.html.

These third-party ad servers or ad networks use technology to the advertisements and links that appear on Alternate Viewpoint send directly to your browsers. They automatically receive your IP address when this occurs. Other technologies ( such as cookies, JavaScript, or Web Beacons ) may also be used by the third-party ad networks to measure the effectiveness of their advertisements and / or to personalize the advertising content that you see.


Alternate Viewpoint has no access to or control over these cookies that are used by third-party advertisers.


You should consult the respective privacy policies of these third-party ad servers for more detailed information on their practices as well as for instructions about how to opt-out of certain practices. Alternate Viewpoint"s privacy policy does not apply to, and we cannot control the activities of, such other advertisers or web sites.


If you wish to disable cookies, you may do so through your individual browser options. More detailed information about cookie management with specific web browsers can be found at the browser"s respective websites.



Cop Arrests Cop & That"s When Her Troubles Begin... [RARE VIDEO]

Saturday, February 1, 2014

[275] Mass Wal-Mart Arrests, Obama"s "Killing Machine", Occupying the Debt



[275] Mass Wal-Mart Arrests, Obama

Abby Martin Breaks the Set on Wal Mart Wage Strike, Obama’s Killing Machine, Healthcare Brainwash, Justice for Andy Lopez, and Occupying the Debt. LIKE Break…
Video Rating: 4 / 5



[275] Mass Wal-Mart Arrests, Obama"s "Killing Machine", Occupying the Debt

Monday, December 2, 2013

Egypt Sentences 21 Women, Then Arrests Their Lawyer


(Newser) – As protests rage on in Egypt, the lawyer at the helm of the defense team representing 21 young female protesters was today arrested at home for “incitement of violence,” CNN reports. On Wednesday, 14 of the women—mostly aged 18 to 22, the AP notes—were sentenced to 11 years following their participation in a pro-Mohamed Morsi demonstration. Seven girls, meanwhile, were sentenced to juvenile detention until they turn 18. Charges included illegal gathering, weapons possession, and thuggery; rights groups called the ruling “politicized.”


“I can’t separate his arrest from the girls’ case,” says another lawyer defending the women, whose appeal is set to be heard Saturday. “This means that any lawyer who comes close to the case will be detained.” Though the women were clamoring for Morsi’s reinstatement, he added that the lawyer, Ahmed El-Hamrawy, “was part of Morsi’s opposition. He demonstrated against him on June 30, but he’s been involved in defending freedoms since July 3 … He’s being punished for that.” Authorities have long cracked down on Islamists who supported Morsi, but lately, they’ve been targeting young, secular demonstrators, the AP notes. A new rule bans gatherings of more than 10 people without prior notice.




World from Newser



Egypt Sentences 21 Women, Then Arrests Their Lawyer

Saturday, October 5, 2013

VIDEO: Undercover Officer Rode With Bikers Who Beat SUV Driver









After a group of motorcyclists beat a man in New York, new reports indicate one might have been an undercover police officer.













Thanks for checking us out. Please take a look at the rest of our videos and articles.







To stay in the loop, bookmark our homepage.







VIDEO: Undercover Officer Rode With Bikers Who Beat SUV Driver

Saturday, September 28, 2013

Greek govt cracks down on neo-Nazi Golden Dawn party, arrests leader



Published time: September 28, 2013 13:33

Supporters and members of extreme-right Golden Dawn party hold Greek national flags as they sing the national anthem outside the Greek police headquarters in Athens September 28, 2013 (Reuters / John Kolesidis)

Supporters and members of extreme-right Golden Dawn party hold Greek national flags as they sing the national anthem outside the Greek police headquarters in Athens September 28, 2013 (Reuters / John Kolesidis)




Greek police have arrested the leader, several MPs and dozens of members of ultra-right Golden Dawn party on charges of leading a “criminal organization.” The party promised to respond with mass rallies of its supporters.


Greek police issued arrest warrants for Golden Dawn leader Nikos Michaloliakos, party spokesman and MP Ilias Kassidiairis, two other prominent members, at least five other party MPs, as well as number of ordinary party members.


“The Secretary General and one lawmaker of the Golden Dawn Party were arrested a short while ago after arrest warrants were issued,” Greek police informed journalists.


Police have detained about 30 members of the ultra-right party, which won 18 seats in the Greek parliament in the June 2012 elections, having received close to 7 percent of the popular vote.


“Democracy in Greece is strong,” Justice Minister Haralambos Athanassiou said after meeting with Prime Minister Antonis Samaras and Public Order Minister Nikos Dendias. “All those arrested will have a fair trial,” he said.


In response to the crackdown, the neo-Nazi party called on to its supporters to “resist unlawfulness.”


“We call upon everyone to support our moral and just struggle against the corrupt system,” a statement said on the party’s website.


Supporters and members of extreme-right Golden Dawn party shout slogans outside the Greek police headquarters in Athens September 28, 2013 (Reuters / John Kolesidis)


The ultra-right party faced a public backlash after the Sept. 18 murder of 34-year-old anti-fascist rapper Pavlos Fyssas, who was stabbed to death in Keratsini by George Roupakias, 45, an avowed supporter of Golden Dawn.


In the aftermath of the killing, the government signaled it would take a tough line against the neo-Nazi party.


“This government is determined not to allow the descendants of the Nazis to poison our social life, to commit crimes, terrorize and undermine the foundations of the country that gave birth to democracy,” Prime Minister Antonis Samaras said in a televised address a day after the killing.


The man who allegedly murdered the rapper confessed to the killing when detained by police, and volunteered that he had links to Golden Dawn. The party, however, denied any links to the murderer and the killing.


After the killing, an investigation revealed that sympathetic members of Greek law enforcement agencies had helped to train the Golden Dawn party’s paramilitary wing. As a result nine police officers, including two high-ranking officials, were fired while two senior police officials resigned for “personal reasons.”


The murder of the anti-fascist activist sparked mass protests nationwide as people held street protests to express their anger with the murder, clashing with police on Wednesday night.


The anti-fascist mass rallies apparently prompted the Greek government to launch a crackdown on the members of Golden Dawn, reportedly including wiretapping party members.


Lawmaker of extreme-right Golden Dawn party Nikolaos Mihos (L) is escorted by a police officer as he arrives at the Greek police headquarters in Athens September 28, 2013 (Reuters / John Kolesidis)


But Mihaloliakos and other leaders of Golden Dawn appeared to be defiant ahead of their arrest.


“We will exhaust any means within our legal constitutional rights to defend our political honor,” Mihaloliakos told reporters on Thursday.


On Friday, Golden Dawn threatened to pull its 18 MPs out of parliament in protest against the murder accusations, a move that could potentially prompt by-elections in 15 regions of the country and – if the opposition were to win those elections – it could threaten the small majority of the ruling coalition, which currently controls 155 seats in the 300-seat parliament.


A good result for the opposition could mean that the ruling coalition would become politically untenable, The Guardian reported Mihaloliakos as saying Friday.


“Golden Dawn holds a weapon in its hands to cause a political earthquake. Those in charge should bear that well in mind,” Mihaloliakos said.


Greece’s finance minister downplayed the political risks of arrests of the Golden Dawn party members.


“There is no risk of destabilization,” Finance Minister Yannis Stournaras told reporters on Saturday.


On Saturday, the ultranationalists called on their supporters to rally outside the police headquarters in Athens where their leaders were being held.


“Shame on them, the people will lift Golden Dawn higher,” Golden Dawn MP Ilias Panagiotaros told reporters shortly before his own arrest.


Supporters of the extreme far-right Golden Dawn party hold Greek flags and shout slogans during a protest in solidarity of the arrested lawmakers in front of the police headquarters of Greek Police, in Athens, on September 28, 2013 (AFP Photo / Angelos Tzortzinis)


The Golden Dawn party has expressed open hostility toward left-wing opponents and immigrants in Greece, championing slogans such as “clean up the stench,” and “Greece for the Greeks.” They have pledged to eject all immigrants from Greece and secure Greece’s borders with landmines and armed patrols. The party has also opposed austerity measures introduced in exchange for bailout credits from the EU, IMF and European Central Bank – the so-called “Troika”. 


The arrests of Golden Dawn leaders are the largest crackdown against a political party in Greece since the fall of the neo-fascist military junta in 1974.




RT – News



Greek govt cracks down on neo-Nazi Golden Dawn party, arrests leader

Wednesday, September 25, 2013

ALEX JONES INFOWARS: MASS ARRESTS, GUN CONFISCATION & TYRANNY OPPRESSION


Subscribe here for the latest worldwide news http://www.youtube.com/user/MrWoodworksfilms?feature=mhee Thanks for watching ALEX JONES INFOWARS: MASS ARRESTS,…
Video Rating: 5 / 5



ALEX JONES INFOWARS: MASS ARRESTS, GUN CONFISCATION & TYRANNY OPPRESSION

Wednesday, August 21, 2013

Egypt arrests senior pro-Morsi cleric


Egyptian authorities have arrested a leading cleric who supported ousted President Mohamed Morsi, amid the ongoing crackdown on Muslim Brotherhood and its supporters.


Safwat Hegazy was arrested at a checkpoint near the border with Libya early on Wednesday, official MENA News Agency reported.


The Egyptian authorities have accused the cleric of ‘instigating violence in the country.’ He was reportedly flown to a detention center in the capital, Cairo.


Hegazy was one of the key speakers at Morsi supporters’ main sit-in, which was dismantled by security forces on August 14 in the eastern Cairo district of Nasr City.


Earlier, Mourad Ali, a spokesman for the Muslim Brotherhood’s political party, was arrested at the Cairo airport before catching a flight to Italy.


The arrests came only a day after the Brotherhood’s leader Mohamed Badie was detained in an apartment in Nasr City.


Badie and his deputy Khairat el-Shater, who is also in custody, are due to go on trial on August 25 over accusations of having played a role in the killing of eight people outside the Brotherhood’s Cairo headquarters in June.


Morsi has not been seen in public since the military announced his ouster on July 3. He is reportedly held in a detention center in a secret location.


Egypt’s army-backed government has accused the Muslim Brotherhood of seeking to destabilize Egypt following the ouster of Morsi.


Egyptian security forces have arrested hundreds of Brotherhood supporters in recent days as the military-backed government has tried to stifle weeks of protests.


SAB/PR/HJL




PRESS TV RSS News



Egypt arrests senior pro-Morsi cleric

Tuesday, August 20, 2013

VIDEO: 19 Charged in NYC"s Largest-Ever Gun Bust







New York City officials say 19 people are under arrest for allegedly smuggling guns from North and South Carolina to New York City. Officials say the guns were hidden in luggage taken on discount buses. (Aug. 20)













Thanks for checking us out. Please take a look at the rest of our videos and articles.







To stay in the loop, bookmark our homepage.







VIDEO: 19 Charged in NYC"s Largest-Ever Gun Bust

Egypt arrests Brotherhood"s spiritual leader



CAIRO (AP) — Egypt on Tuesday announced the arrest of the supreme leader of the Muslim Brotherhood, dealing a serious blow to the Islamist group at a time when it is struggling to keep up its street protests against the ouster President Mohammed Morsi in the face of a harsh crackdown by authorities.


The Brotherhood’s spiritual guide, Mohammed Badie, was arrested in an apartment at the eastern Cairo district of Nasr City, close to the location of the six-week sit-in protest by supporters of Morsi, who also hails from the Islamist group. The encampment was cleared by security forces last Wednesday, along with another protest site in Giza, in a raid that killed hundreds of people.


Badie’s arrest is the latest stage in an escalating crackdown by authorities on the Brotherhood in which hundreds have also been arrested. The Brotherhood’s near daily protests since Morsi’s ouster have somewhat petered out the last two days, with scattered demonstrations in Cairo and elsewhere in the country attracting hundreds, sometimes just dozens.


Morsi himself has been detained in an undisclosed location since the July 3 coup, prompted by days-long protests by millions of Egyptians demonstrating against the president and his rule. He is facing accusations of conspiring with the militant Palestinian Hamas group to escape from prison during the 2011 uprising and complicity in the killing and torture of protesters outside his Cairo palace in December.


Badie’s last public appearance was at the sit-in protest last month, when he delivered a fiery speech from a makeshift stage in which he denounced the July 3 military coup that removed Morsi.


Badie’s arrest followed the death of one of his children, son Ammar, who was shot dead during violent clashes between security forces and Morsi supporters in Cairo on Friday.


Also, Badie and his powerful deputy, Khairat el-Shater, are to stand trial later this month on charges of complicity in the killing in June of eight protesters outside the Brotherhood’s national headquarters in Cairo.


Meanwhile, Egypt’s military-backed government is considering the outlawing of the Brotherhood, which has spent most of the 85 years since its creation as an illegal organization. The government is seeking legal advice on banning the group and has been coming under growing pressure from the media and a wide array of secular politicians to declare it a terrorist organization.


Brotherhood spokesman Ahmed Aref sought to downplay the significance of Badie’s arrest, writing on his Facebook page on Tuesday simply: “Mohammed Badie is one member of the Brotherhood.”


The private ONTV network showed footage of a man the network said was Badie after his arrest. In the footage, a somber looking Badie in an off-white Arab robe, or galabeya, sits motionless on a black sofa as a man in civilian clothes and carrying an assault rifle stands nearby.


Badie’s arrest came after suspected Islamic militants ambushed two minibuses carrying off-duty policemen in Egypt’s Sinai Peninsula early on Monday, forcing the men to lie on the sand and shooting 25 of them dead.


The daylight attack raised fears that the strategic desert region bordering Israel and the Gaza Strip could be plunged into a full-fledged insurgency. The policemen were given a funeral with full military honors late on Monday. The men’s coffins, draped in red, white and black Egyptian flags, were jointly carried by army soldiers and policemen, and Egypt’s interim President Adly Mansour declared a nationwide state of mourning to mark their deaths.


The Sinai Peninsula has long been wracked by violence by al-Qaida-linked fighters, some who consider Morsi’s Brotherhood to be too moderate, and tribesmen who have used the area for smuggling and other criminal activity. Attacks, especially those targeting security forces, have been on the rise since Morsi’s ouster.


Monday’s attack targeting the policemen took place near the border town of Rafah in northern Sinai. A few hours later, militants shot to death a senior police officer as he stood guard outside a bank in el-Arish, another city in the largely lawless area, security officials said.


There was no immediate claim of responsibility for either attack. The United States condemned the slaying of the police officers and repeated its commitment to help Egypt combat terrorism in Sinai. U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon also denounced the attack.


The Sinai attack came a day after security forces killed 36 detainees during a riot on a prison-bound truck convoy north of Cairo. The killings came as police fired tear gas to free a guard who was trapped in the melee, security officials said.


Associated Press



Powered By WizardRSS.com &
Hand Chain Saw – a must have Survival tool, with many uses.

Top Headlines

Egypt arrests Brotherhood"s spiritual leader

Tuesday, July 30, 2013

FBI arrests 150 in child prostitution crackdown




  • The Bay area and Detroit have the most arrests and child rescues

  • The FBI says the three-day undercover operation is its biggest to date

  • 105 children across the country are rescued in the nationwide operation

  • The ages of the children involved range from 13 to 17



Washington (CNN) — They are mostly teenage girls, often from broken homes where no one misses them. Their world is one of drugs and abuse — emotional and physical — in which they are forced to sell their bodies.


In announcing the FBI’s latest crackdown on child prostitution, officials Monday described a dark underside of society that has grown through Internet sites that provide pimps easy access to johns in hotels, motels, at truck stops and just about anywhere else.


The nationwide operation over the weekend resulted in 150 arrests, with 105 children between the ages of 13 and 17 rescued, according to Ron Hosko, assistant director of the FBI’s Criminal Investigative Division.


Overall, the three-day undercover Operation Cross Country took place in 76 cities and involved 230 law enforcement units, Hosko told a news conference.


It was the largest such sweep to date, he said, with 28 searches and 129 seizures of cash, drugs, vehicles and firearms. Those arrested face a variety of federal and state charges, including pimping.


This seventh iteration of Operation Cross Country also was the most successful, with a 30% to 40% increase in “identifying both victims and pimps” compared with previous operations, Hosko said.


He credited the success in part to an expansion of the probe to websites such as www.backpage.com, which he called a forum “where pimps and exploiters gather.”


Watch: Fighting sex trafficking in the U.S.


Authorities also have learned more about how the market thrives. For example, Hosko explained that major sporting events such as the Super Bowl and the NCAA Final Four attract tens of thousands of visitors with money who want to party, and pimps with prostitutes ready to cash in.


“We have had children recovered from each of those events, multiple children from each of those events in the past,” he said.


While technology has changes methods of procurement, the underlying demographics of the child victims of the prostitution industry remain little changed — young girls around 13 to 16 years old with few or no family ties.


“That tends to be the age that many of us as loving and caring parents occasionally find some differences with our teenage daughters, and exploiters will exploit that gap,” Hosko said.


A breakdown of cities where the latest arrests took place, and where child prostitutes were recovered, reveals some unexpected findings.


The San Francisco-Oakland region in California had 17 arrests and 12 recovered child prostitutes, while Detroit, which just declared itself bankrupt, had 18 arrests and 10 rescued children.


Meanwhile, New York City had none of either, Las Vegas had one of each and New Orleans had five arrests and four recovered children, compared with 13 arrests and three child prostitute rescues in Oklahoma City.


“This operation serves as a reminder that these abhorrent crimes can happen anywhere,” Hosko said.


Opinion: Sex trafficking, an American problem too


Operation Cross Country is part of the FBI’s Innocence Lost National Initiative, which seeks to identify children lured or forced into prostitution and remove them from risk, according to Hosko.


The circumstances of the situation make finding victims especially difficult, he explained.


“Commonly some of these children have stepped away from their families,” he said, adding that “there is no one to call and report ‘my daughter is missing.’”


Other major problems are the culture of abuse, both physical and emotional, and the drug use prevalent in child prostitution.


“We have victims whose new normal is abuse and is drug-infected,” Hosko said, explaining there is an environment of instability in which “the expectation of somebody who cares about them may last for 30 minutes or an hour before the abuse starts again.”


Read about the fight to end modern-day slavery with CNN’s Freedom Project


CNN’s Virginia Nicolaidis and Bill Mears contributed to this report




CNN.com – Politics



FBI arrests 150 in child prostitution crackdown

Thursday, July 11, 2013

Infighting threatens Egypt transition plan, army orders arrests

CAIRO (Reuters) – Political infighting threatened to stall Egypt’s transition plans on Thursday, as the military cracked down on Muslim Brotherhood leaders it blames for inciting a clash in Cairo in which troops shot and killed 53 protesters.



Reuters: Top News



Infighting threatens Egypt transition plan, army orders arrests

Infighting threatens Egypt transition plan, army orders arrests




A poster of deposed Egyptian President Mohamed Mursi is seen as his supporters wait to break fast on the first day of Ramadan at the Rabaa Adawiya square where they are camping in Cairo July 10, 2013. REUTERS/Khaled Abdullah


1 of 4. A poster of deposed Egyptian President Mohamed Mursi is seen as his supporters wait to break fast on the first day of Ramadan at the Rabaa Adawiya square where they are camping in Cairo July 10, 2013.


Credit: Reuters/Khaled Abdullah






CAIRO | Thu Jul 11, 2013 4:46am EDT



CAIRO (Reuters) – Political infighting threatened to stall Egypt’s transition plans on Thursday, as the military cracked down on Muslim Brotherhood leaders it blames for inciting a clash in Cairo in which troops shot and killed 53 protesters.


Monday’s violence between supporters of ousted President Mohamed Mursi, Egypt’s first freely elected leader toppled by the army last week, and soldiers at a military compound has opened deep fissures in the Arab world’s most populous country.


On Wednesday, Egypt’s public prosecutor ordered the arrest of Muslim Brotherhood leader Mohamed Badie and several other senior Islamists, evoking memories of when the movement was repressed under autocratic former Egyptian leader Hosni Mubarak, who was ousted in 2011.


Mursi’s Muslim Brotherhood called for protest marches on Friday, when noon prayers are held in mosques, raising the risk of more violence after fighting between rival factions swept Egypt last week and killed 35 people.


Muslim Brotherhood spokesman Gehad El-Haddad said the leaders had not been arrested and some were still attending a protest vigil at Rabaa Adawiya mosque, where thousands of supporters have camped out for the past two weeks despite punishing heat.


He said the charges against them of inciting violence were “nothing more than an attempt by the police state to dismantle the Rabaa protest.”


“What can we do?” he asked. “In a police state, when the police force are criminals, the judiciary are traitors and the investigators are the fabricators, what can one do?”


Egypt’s 84 million people are increasingly divided between those who rallied on June 30 to demand Mursi’s resignation and angry Islamists who say their democratic rights have been crushed in what they call a military coup.


Separately, the youth-led Tamarud group, which coordinated the mass protests against Mursi centered in Cairo’s Tahrir Square, invited its followers to rally there, also on Friday, in a festive celebration of the Muslim fasting month of Ramadan.


Ramadan, normally a time of celebration, falls this year under the dark shadow of a crisis that has left Egyptian society more divided than at any time in its modern history.


The situation in Cairo and other cities has calmed significantly since last week’s protests and Monday’s clash in which four security personnel were also killed.


Hazem el-Beblawi, the interim prime minister, told Reuters he expects the transitional cabinet to be in place early next week as he seeks to implement the military-backed “road map” that envisages new parliamentary elections in about six months.


Beblawi acknowledged that it will be a challenge to find a cabinet line-up with universal support. “I don’t believe that anything can have unanimous approval,” he said.


The economist has indicated he would be open to offering cabinet posts to Islamists, including Muslim Brotherhood figures. The Muslim Brotherhood says it will have nothing to do with a government of what it calls a fascist coup.


WORDING OF A NEW CONSTITUTION


Another potential stumbling block in a political process vital to restoring stability is wrangling among Islamist and liberal parties over the wording of a new constitution, in particular articles defining the role of Islamic sharia law.


The liberal National Salvation Front may be willing to compromise in order to prevent further delays to the process, a senior party leader said.


The unrest after Mursi’s ouster on July 3, initially greeted with jubilation by hundreds of thousands of people across the sprawling capital, has alarmed Western donors and Israel, which has a 1979 peace treaty with Egypt.


The United States, treading a careful line, has neither welcomed Mursi’s removal nor denounced it as a coup. Under U.S. law, a coup would require the United States to halt aid, including the $ 1.3 billion it gives the army each year.


The Brotherhood’s downfall has been warmly welcomed by three of the rich Arab monarchies of the Gulf, who showered Cairo with aid to prop up the collapsing economy.


Kuwait promised Egypt $ 4 billion in cash, loans and fuel on Wednesday, a day after Saudi Arabia pledged $ 5 billion and the United Arab Emirates offered $ 3 billion.


In the early hours of Thursday, several hundred Islamist protesters marched to the presidential palace. Demonstrators and police remained calm and the two sides engaged in conversation.


“It is our right to say we don’t acknowledge the military coup,” said one of the protesters, addressing soldiers outside the palace in a good-natured exchange.


Both sides in Egypt have become more anti-American in recent weeks. Mursi’s opponents say President Barack Obama’s administration supported the Muslim Brotherhood in power, while Mursi’s supporters believe Washington was behind the plot to unseat him.


“Obama supports democracy, but only if it goes to those who aren’t Islamists,” the heavily bearded El-Sayyed Abdel Rabennabi said at the Rabaa vigil.


On Tahrir Square, the animosity appears just as fierce.


“America made an alliance with the Brotherhood against the Egyptian people,” said Tawfiq Munir, waving a placard reading “We are the coup” at one recent rally there.


“Now the Brotherhood are fighting us in the streets, fighting to take back power, and America is sitting on the fence,” said the aircraft mechanic.


(Reporting by Alexander Dziadosz, Maggie Fick, Mike Collett-White, Tom Perry, Peter Graff, Yasmine Saleh, Ali Saed, Seham el-Oraby and Shadia Nasralla; Editing by Will Dunham)





Reuters: Top News



Infighting threatens Egypt transition plan, army orders arrests