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protest begins
so many egyptian protesters got together and protested against the egyptian president.about tens of thousands of protesters gather up in cairo. and thousands more through oout the citys of egypt. -
day of rage
after the friday that they gathered of there prayers, hundred of thousand protesters gathered in cairo and other egyptian citys.the oppisition leader Mohammed ElBaradei, traveled over there to participate in the event.on that same day the government told the military to assit the police -
protest continues
as the protest continued in cairo, the amount of military increased. after three days of protest now, on this day they set up a curfew for the protesters, they ignored it and continued protesting over the night -
the start of the protest
it was started on the 25 of january. in the beginning of it, it stated out with a series of street demonstrations, marches, rallies, acts of civil disobedience, riots, labour strikes, and violent clashes in Cairo, Alexandria. millions of protesters also protested against the president of egypt called (Hosni Mubarak). -
wont run another term
Violence uprised a bunch of Mubarak supporters met anti-government protestors. as usual the military came and limited the violence. of whatt some news say, supposely mubarak said he is refused to step down.also as more violence came coming, it started going against the news agencies. -
mubarak addresses the crowd
mubarak addresses egypt amid reorts of a new military coup. also said that instead of resignation, he would pass his powers to the vice president Suleiman. another thing that he said was that he would stay in egypt as its head of state. -
Friday of Departure
The "Friday of Departure", massive protests in response to Mubarak’s speech continued in many Egyptian cities. At 6:00 p.m. local time, Suleiman announced Mubarak's resignation and that the Supreme Council of Egyptian Armed Forces would assume leadership of the country. -
Supreme Council
The Supreme Council of Egyptian Armed Forces dissolved Egypt’s parliament and suspended the Constitution. The council also declared that it would hold power for six months or until elections could be held, whichever came first. ElBaradei urged the council to provide more details to the Egyptian people regarding its plans. Major protests subsided but uncertainty remained, and many pledged to keep returning to Tahrir square until all demands had been met.