By Tom Perry, Marwa Awad
Reuters CAIRO: Thousands of Egyptians gathered in Cairo's Tahrir Square on Wednesday to mark the first anniversary of the revolt that toppled Hosni Mubarak with some seeking a new revolt against army rule and others celebrating the changes already achieved.
It is a year since protesters inspired by an uprising in Tunisia took to the streets in Egypt and the Jan. 25 anniversary has exposed divisions in the Arab world's most populous country over the pace of democratic evolution. Concerned that generals are blocking reform to protect their interests, activists behind the "Jan. 25 revolution" planned marches to Tahrir to demand that the army council which replaced Mubarak hand power to civilians immediately.
"Down with military rule" and "Revolution until victory, revolution in all of Egypt's streets" were chanted by one group of mainly youths in an area of Tahrir near a street where protesters clashed in November and December with police and the army.
But well-organised Islamist parties that dominated Egypt's most democratic election since army officers overthrew the king in 1952 are among those who oppose a new uprising.
"Today we will celebrate the revolution as a people's achievement but also push for the rest of the revolution's demands that must be met," said Farid Ismail, a member of the Muslim Brotherhood's Freedom and Justice Party, banned under Mubarak but now with the biggest bloc in parliament. There were signs of friction late on Tuesday as hundreds of people had already begun to congregate in Tahrir, pitching tents in winter rain and hanging the national flag from buildings. "The military council is Mubarak," said Amr al-Zamlout, a 31-year-old protester clutching a sign declaring "there is no change" and stating his aim was to topple the army rulers. Mohamed Othman, an accountant, stopped to put forward a different view based on the idea that Egypt needs stability for economic recovery, not more protests. "The council will leave power in any case. Sure, the revolution is incomplete, but it doesn't mean we should obstruct life," he said. His criticism quickly drew a crowd and touched off an argument. Grocery stores were unusually busy as shoppers stocked up, reflecting concern at the prospect of a repeat of last year when protests went on for 18 days, disrupting normal life, before Mubarak was forced to step down on Feb. 11.
The United States, a close ally of Egypt under Mubarak, praised "several historic milestones in its transition to democracy" this week, including the convening of parliament. "While many challenges remain, Egypt has come a long way in the past year, and we hope that all Egyptians will commemorate this anniversary with the spirit of peace and unity that prevailed last January," a White House statement said. Headed by Field Marshal Mohamed Hussein Tantawi, the military council has said it will cede power to an elected president by the end of June, thus completing a democratic transition.
Yet pro-democracy activists doubt their intentions, pointing to a surge in military trials and the use of violence against protesters as signs of autocratic ways similar to Mubarak's era. They fear the army wants to cling on to power behind the scenes.
Tantawi, for two decades Mubarak's defence minister, again defended the military from such accusations during a televised speech on Tuesday. "The nation and the armed forces had one aim: for Egypt to become a democratic state," he said. In an apparent attempt to appease reformist demands, the military council has in recent days pardoned some 2,000 people convicted in military courts since Mubarak was deposed. On Tuesday it announced a partial lifting of a state of emergency. But it kept a clause saying emergency laws in place since 1981 would still apply in cases of "thuggery", a vague term that triggered calls for clarification from Washington and more criticism from human rights groups. The activist movement, a coalition of groups united in calls for deeper and faster reform, has been fighting back in the run-up to the anniversary against what they describe as state efforts to present them as foreign-backed trouble-makers. The leader of the Muslim Brotherhood, the Islamist group which won nearly half the seats in the parliament, said last week he was against calls for a new revolt against the military. "I hope we will go down together to be joyful at what we have accomplished, to guard our Egypt and to complete the demands of the revolution," Mohamed Badie said in an interview with Egypt's Dream TV.
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