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[Dunia] Morsy digulingkan: President Mesir bertukar lagi!

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Post time 4-7-2013 06:58 AM | Show all posts |Read mode
tak boring ke arr orang mesir ni asyik arab spring every year??

source/ http://edition.cnn.com/2013/07/03/world/meast/egypt-protests/index.html?hpt=hp_t1

Cairo (CNN) -- Egypt's military toppled the country's first democratically elected president Wednesday night, installing the country's chief justice as an interim leader as the deposed Mohamed Morsy insisted on his legitimacy.

In a nationally televised announcement, Gen. Abdel-Fatah El-Sisi said Morsy "did not achieve the goals of the people" and failed to meet the generals' demands that he share power with his opposition.

The country's constitution has been suspended, new parliamentary elections will be held and Adly Mansour, head of the country's Supreme Constitutional Court, will replace Morsy, El-Sisi said.


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Mansour will have the power to issue constitutional declarations during the interim period and will "establish a government that is a strong and diverse," said El-Sisi, head of the country's armed forces.

He said the military was fulfilling its "historic responsibility" to protect the country by ousting Morsy, a Western-educated Islamist elected a year ago.

In a taped statement delivered to the Arabic satellite network Al Jazeera, Morsy remained defiant and insisted he was Egypt's proper president.

"The world is looking at us today," he said. "We by ourselves can bypass the obstacles. We, the sons of Egypt, the sons of this country -- this is the will of the people, and cannot be canceled."

Shortly after the statement aired, Al Jazeera reported its Egyptian offices had been raided and some of its staff detained. And the Muslim Brotherhood, the political movement that propelled Morsy to office, said its outlets had been shut down.

Morsy said he remains open to negotiations and dialogue, and he called on supporters to demonstrate peacefully.

But at least four people were killed in clashes between Morsy's supporters and security forces in the northern city of Marsa Matrouh, and dozens more were hurt in Kafr El-Sheikh, where at least 43 Morsy supporters were arrested, the state-run newspaper Al-Ahram reported.

Morsy opponents who packed Tahrir Square, now the epicenter of two Egyptian upheavals, erupted in jubilation and fireworks when El-Sisi made his announcement. But across the Nile River, his supporters chanted chanted "Down with military rule" and "The square has a million martyrs" at another rally.

Before Wednesday night's announcement, troops moved into key positions around the capital, closing off a bridge over the Nile River and surrounding Rabaa Adawya Square, where Morsy's supporters were gathered.

Military had demanded reforms

Morsy was elected president in June 2012. But his approval ratings have plummeted as his government has failed to keep order or revive Egypt's economy. The chaos, including open sexual assaults on women in Egypt's streets, has driven away tourists and investors, while opponents say Morsy's rule was increasingly authoritarian.

Mohamed ElBaradei, the former head of the International Atomic Energy Agency and a leading opposition figure, said the plans announced Wednesday were "a correction for the way of the revolution" that drove longtime strongman Hosni Mubarak from office in 2011.

Opinion: In Egypt, rage must lead to game plan

"The road map guarantees achieving the principal demand of the Egyptian people -- having early presidential elections through an interim period through which the constitution will be amended," he said. "So all of us build it together and agree on a democratic constitution, so we can guarantee our freedoms."

The Egyptian military dominated the country for six decades and took direct power for a year and a half after Mubarak's ouster. On Monday, after a previous demand that Morsy offer concessions to the opposition, it gave him 48 hours to order reforms.

As the hour of the ultimatum neared, Morsy offered to form an interim coalition government to oversee parliamentary elections and revise the constitution that was enacted in January.

Egyptian demonstrations from above


"One of the mistakes I cannot accept -- as the president of all Egyptians -- is to side with one party over another, or to present the scene from one side only. To be fair, we need to listen to the voice of people in all squares," he said.

Rand Paul: Stop using U.S. taxpayer money to aid Morsy

But shortly after the deadline, Morsy aide Essam El Haddad said in a Facebook posting that a coup was under way and warned that the generals risked bloodshed by moving against Morsy.

"In a democracy, there are simple consequences for the situation we see in Egypt: The president loses the next election or his party gets penalized in the upcoming parliamentary elections. Anything else is mob rule," he wrote.

But Naguib Abadeer, a member of the opposition Free Egyptians Party, said what was under way "is not by any means a military coup. This is a revolution."

Morsy lost his legitimacy in November, when he declared courts could not review his decrees and ousted the country's prosecutor-general, Abadeer said. And the Muslim Brotherhood "hijacked the vote of the people" by running on a religious platform, "so these were not democratic elections," he said.

Egypt's anti-Morsy protestors -- in their own words

Coup followed massive protests by two sides

In Washington, State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki said the U.S. government -- Egypt's leading ally -- could not confirm reports of a coup. Psaki said the United States is not taking sides and urged all parties to come to a peaceful resolution to the "tense and fast-moving" situation.

Opinion: Egyptians are fed up with Morsy

Washington has supplied Egypt's military with tens of billions in support and equipment over more than 30 years. Under U.S. law, that support could be cut off after a coup, though a senior Obama administration official told CNN that any decision would require thorough analysis.

The opposition said it had collected more than 20 million signatures on a petition to remove him -- millions more than the number who voted Morsy into the presidency.

Tuesday night, Morsy had vowed that he would not comply with the ultimatum and demanded that the armed forces stand down, even "if the price of upholding this legitimacy is my own blood." But political analyst Hisham Kassem told CNN the speech was Morsy's "final bluff."

"He was trying to give the impression 'We are there in numbers, and we are going to retaliate, we are not going to allow this to happen.' However, with almost 24 hours since his message, it's clear his supporters will not dare challenge the crowds on the street," Kassem said.

And faced with the throngs that filled Cairo's Tahrir Square, "the military had to intervene. Otherwise this crowd was going to get Morsy from his palace."

CNN spells the deposed president's name with a 'y' in accordance with what his spokesman said is his personal preference, his own e-mail and the country's Foreign Ministry.

Wednesday's events capped days of massive demonstrations for and against Morsy. The demonstrations were largely peaceful, but health officials said 23 people died in clashes overnight at Cairo University, the state-funded Al-Ahram news agency reported, and anti-Morsy demonstrators have ransacked Muslim Brotherhood offices around Egypt in the past several days.

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El-Haddad, the Muslim Brotherhood spokesman, said Wednesday that tanks and armored vehicles -- accompanied by thugs carrying knives, pistols and ammunition -- had been moved to the northern and southern entrances of the square in an apparent attempt to drive them out.

The military fired warning shots into the air, and shot one Muslim Brotherhood member in the leg, El-Haddad said, but the remaining protesters were standing in defiance in front of the tanks. The military denied any shots had been fired.

Morsy's government was already crumbling before the coup. Five cabinet ministers resigned this week, including Foreign Minister Mohamed Kamel Amr. And former Prosecutor General Abdel-Meguid Mahmoud will meet Thursday with the Supreme Judicial Council to be confirmed in the job.

Mahmoud had originally been installed in the job by Mubarak, shortly before he left. One of the goals during the 2011 revolution had been to oust him, which Morsy did through last November's constitutional declarations.

Mahmoud's return appeared to signify a tilt toward Mubarak-era officials over Muslim Brotherhood loyalists.

In addition, 30 members of the Shura Council, the upper house of parliament, have resigned, state-run Nile TV reported.


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 Author| Post time 4-7-2013 07:00 AM | Show all posts
Source: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/ ... ebrate-streets.html

'Morsi is no longer president': Millions explode with joy on streets as Egyptian army seizes power in people's coup following protests
Thousands celebrate after military chief says president has been forced out
General Abdel Fattah al-Sisi effectively declares removal on TV
Morsi moved to undisclosed location as military chief calls for elections
Military pledges to put civilian government in place quickly
Troops had been deployed near protest sites and key military sites
President's office describes movement as 'full coup' on Twitter
Four people killed following clashes in northern city of Marsa Matrouh
Nearly 40 people have died since protests began on Sunday
By DAVID WILLIAMS and JAMES RUSH
PUBLISHED: 17:31 GMT, 3 July 2013 | UPDATED: 22:54 GMT, 3 July 2013
   392 shares 262 View
comments
Celebrations were taking place across Egypt this evening after the military chief said President Mohammed Morsi had been forced out.
The head of Egypt's armed forces issued a declaration suspending the constitution and appointing the head of the constitutional court as interim head of state.
In a televised broadcast, flanked by military leaders, religious authorities and political figures, General Abdel Fattah al-Sisi effectively declared the removal of elected Islamist President Mohamed Morsi.
The president's aide has said the Egyptian leader Morsi has been moved to an undisclosed location.
SCROLL DOWN FOR VIDEO

Fireworks light the sky as opponents of President Mohammed Morsi celebrate in Tahrir Square

Egyptian Armed Forces Commander in Chief Abdel-Fattah al-Sissi called for presidential and parliamentary elections along with a panel to review the constitution

An army soldier (centre) cheers with protesters as they dance and react in front of the Republican Guard headquarters in Cairo

Fireworks and shouts of joy emanate from Tahrir Square after a broadcast by the head of the Egyptian military confirming that they will temporarily be taking over
Sisi called for presidential and parliamentary elections, a panel to review the constitution and a national reconciliation committee that would include youth movements.
He said the roadmap had been agreed by a range of political groups.
'The people and the army are one hand,' protestors cheered in the square, amid the roar of horns and chanting.
Two U.S. officials have said Egyptian defence leaders, who ousted the president, have assured the U.S. that they are not interested in a long-term rule.
The official says the leaders, in calls with Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel and General Martin Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, pledged to put a civilian government in place quickly.

Protestors cheered: 'The people and the army are one hand', according to reports

Celebrations broke out after the head of Egypt's armed forces issued a declaration suspending the constitution

The president's aide has said the Egyptian leader Morsi has been moved to an undisclosed location

Laser lights are flashed as protestors gather in Tahrir Square to celebrate the removal of President Morsi this evening

In a televised broadcast General Abdel Fattah al-Sisi effectively declared the removal of elected President Mohamed Morsi

A statement on the Egyptian president's office's Twitter account has quoted Mohammed Morsi as calling the military measures 'a full coup'

Egyptian President Mohamed Morsi has been overthrown by the military and has been moved to an undisclosed location
U.S. officials also say the Egyptian military has said it will take steps to ensure the safety of Americans in Egypt, including the diplomatic mission.
Four people have been killed in clashes between Morsi supporters and security forces in the northern city of Marsa Matrouh after the president was ousted by the army, Governor Badr Tantawi has said.
Meanwhile, a statement on the Egyptian president's office's Twitter account has quoted Mohammed Morsi as calling military measures 'a full coup'.
And it has been reported Egypt's descent into even deeper political turmoil will almost certainly put a multi-billion dollar international bailout on hold and lead to an even more painful economic crisis with worsening fuel shortages and higher prices on basic goods.

More...
NINETY-ONE women protesters raped and sexually abused in Tahir Square in just four days as military begins to take over
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An Egyptian military helicopter flies over Tahrir Square after a broadcast by the head of the military confirming they will temporarily be taking over

Army soldiers stand guard in front of protesters near the Republican Guard headquarters in Cairo

Army soldiers take their positions in front of anti-Morsi protestors near the Republican Guard headquarters in Cairo

An Egyptian army helicopter flies over protestors in Cairo's landmark Tahrir Square

Egyptian protestors demonstrating against President Mohamed Morsi, in Tahrir Square, Cairo today

Jubilant scenes in Tahrir Square as Egypt's Morsi is forced out

The Egyptian president’s national security adviser had warned earlier today that a military coup was underway and there would be ‘considerable bloodshed’ as millions of thousands of people took to the streets.
With troops and tanks taking up positions in keys part of major Egyptian cities and tensions high, there were unconfirmed reports that President Mohammed Morsi was under house arrest after the deadline set by the army for him to reach an agreement with opposition protestors expired.
His security advisor Essam El-Haddad said Mr Morsi was calling for peaceful resistance to the army’s ‘unlawful’ move against the democratically elected leader but stressed his supporters should not use violence.
However, he added : ‘In this day and age no military coup can succeed in the face of sizeable popular force without considerable bloodshed.
‘There are still people in Egypt who believe in their right to make a democratic choice. Hundreds of thousands of them have gathered in support of democracy and the presidency. And they will not leave in the face of this attack. To move them, there will have to be violence.’

A coup would mean ousting a democratically elected president, the first in Egypt's history

Just before the military's deadline expired, Morsi repeated a vow not to step down
Nearly 40 people have died so far since the unprecedented protests began in Sunday and last night there were reports of bloody clashes between Islamist supporters of Mr Morsi and his Muslim Brotherhood and troops in the capital Cairo.
With millions of anti-Morsi protestors on the streets of dozens of cities and towns celebrating in the belief the military is on their side and facing the president’s supporters, there were fears the death toll would rise significantly.
Mr Morsi had spent today working normally at a regular presidential office in a compound of the Republican Guard in suburban Cairo, officials said, while senior military figures held a series of meetings with opposition leaders aimed at ending the crisis.
POLITICAL TURMOIL COULD PUT MULTI-BILLION DOLLAR BAILOUT ON HOLD
Egypt's descent into even deeper political turmoil will almost certainly put a multi-billion dollar international bailout on hold and lead to an even more painful economic crisis with worsening fuel shortages and higher prices on basic goods, it has been reported.
After protracted negotiations that have stretched for more than a year, Egypt had been inching closer to securing a critical $4.8 billion International Monetary Fund loan.
The military's overthrow of President Mohammed Morsi will likely put the implementation of austerity measures needed to secure that loan into a dangerous limbo.
Much of the anger of the demonstrations grew from the country's dismal economic situation and the ever-growing burden it projects on already strapped Egyptians.
Analysts said Egypt could be moving toward a worst-case scenario economically - from increasing fuel shortages and blackouts, a sudden and sharp depreciation of the currency that will make everything more expensive, and a depletion of foreign currency reserves so severe it could make importing critical oil and food items difficult.
'I think they are sort of entering uncharted territory,' said Caroline Freund, an analyst at the Peterson Institute for International Economics in Washington.
'Without political stability and policy predictability, investors and tourists are not going to come back,' Freund said.
There had been no official word from the military, who had said repeatedly there would not be a coup, but soldiers were seen erecting barbed wire around the compound.
A military source said he expected the army to first call political, social and economic figures and youth activists for talks on its draft roadmap for the country’s future.
But observers said it certainly appeared to be a coup just one year after Mr Morsi was elected at the ballot box.
In a further sign of the extent of the military control, airport officials said a travel ban had been issued against Mr Morsi and Brotherhood leader Mohammed Badie as well as his deputy Khairat el-Shater.
Officials said the travel ban is linked to Mr Morsi’s escape from prison with more than 30 other Muslim Brotherhood figures during the 2011 Arab Spring uprising against autocrat ex-president Hosni Mubarak.
As the afternoon ultimatum set by the army approached, the military had moved to tighten its control on key institutions, even putting officers in the newsroom of state TV with neither side prepared to compromise.
Crack troops were deployed in news-production areas. Officers from the army’s media department moved inside the newsroom and were monitoring output, though not yet interfering, staffers said, speaking on condition of anonymity because they were not authorised to talk about the arrangements.
Military chiefs, vowing to restore order in a country racked by demonstrations against Mr Morsi’s Islamist policies, issued a call to battle in a statement headlined ‘The Final Hours’. They said they were willing to shed blood against ‘terrorists and fools’ after Mr Morsi refused to give up his elected office.
The president’s spokesman countered that it was better that he die in defence of democracy than be blamed by history.
In an emotional, rambling midnight television address, Mr Morsi insisted he was democratically elected and would stay in office to uphold the constitutional order, declaring: ‘The price of preserving legitimacy is my life.’
‘There is only one thing we can do: we will stand in between the tanks and the president,’ Mr El-Haddad said at the movement’s protest encampment in a Cairo suburb that houses many military installations and is near the presidential palace.
‘We will not allow the will of the Egyptian people to be bullied again by the military machine.’

Thousands of Egyptian protesters gathered gin Tahrir Square as the deadline given by the military to Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi passed today

The president gave a defiant speech last night and vowed to stay in power despite the military threats
Prime Minister David Cameron earlier today issued a plea for an end to violence in Egypt, as The Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO) warned against all but essential travel to most parts of the country.
Mr Cameron said Mr Morsi must show he is responsive to the concerns of its citizens, adding : ‘These are deeply disturbing scenes, the level of violence is appalling. We should appeal to all sides to calm and stop the levels of violence, and particularly sexual assaults.'
Mr Cameron continued : ‘It is not for this country to support any single group or party. What we should support is proper democratic processes and proper government by consent.
‘Very clear messages have been sent to president Morsi - including by President Obama who spoke to him directly, and we have also been communicating through our ambassadors - that, yes, he has a democratic mandate and we respect that, but democracy also means ensuring that everyone has a voice and that leaders have a responsibility to represent all Egyptians and show they are responsive to their concerns.
‘That’s what the government needs to do in order to bring about peace and stability in that country.’
Meanwhile, the FCO is advising against travel to all regions of Egypt except resorts on the Red Sea in South Sinai and in the Red Sea Governorate on the Egyptian mainland.
There are no travel restriction warnings for destinations in the region of Sharm el Sheikh, Taba, Nuweiba and Dahab which are popular with sun-seeking British tourists.

Defiance: Protesters hold up their shoes following a defiant speech by President Morsi last night. At least 23 people are thought to have been killed in clashes in the capital last night

Out in force: Tens of thousands of protestors gathered again on the streets of Cairo last night in the worst night of violence in the city yet

Trying to keep control: Plain-clothes policemen walk with protestors opposed to Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi at the site of clashes with opposing protestors in the Kit Kat neighborhood of Giza, Egypt
TWO YEARS OF TURMOIL AND TRANSITION: TIMELINE OF EVENTS
Key events from when the Arab Spring began to the current protests:
Jan. 25-Feb. 11, 2011 - Egyptians stage nationwide demonstrations against the rule of autocrat Hosni Mubarak, who led the country for nearly three decades.
The 18-day 'revolution,' launched by secular and leftist youth, draws in a wide spectrum, including the Muslim Brotherhood and other Islamists. Hundreds of protesters are killed as Mubarak and his allies try to crush the uprising.
Feb. 11 - Mubarak steps down and turns power over to the military. Two days later, the body of top generals, the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces, dissolves parliament and suspends the constitution, meeting two key demands of protesters.
June 16-17 - Egyptians vote in the presidential runoff between Morsi and Shafiq. The generals issue a 'constitutional declaration' giving themselves sweeping authorities and limiting the powers of the next president. Morsi emerges as the victor, with 51.7 percent of the vote.
June 30 - Morsi takes his formal oath of office before the Supreme Constitutional Court, a day after reading a symbolic oath in Cairo's Tahrir Square, birthplace of the revolution.
Aug. 12 - In a bold move, Morsi orders the retirement of the top Mubarak-era leadership of the military and cancels the military's last constitutional decree, taking back the powers that the generals gave themselves. The move was seen as way to curb the military's role in political affairs but it also gave Morsi the power to legislate in the absence of parliament.
Nov. 22 - Morsi unilaterally decrees greater authorities for himself, giving his decisions immunity from judicial review and barring the courts from dissolving the constituent assembly and the upper house of parliament. The move came just ahead of court decisions that could have dissolved the bodies. The move sparks days of protests, with clashes between Morsi's supporters and opponents. At one point, some 200,000 people rally in Tahrir Square, with some of the first chants for Morsi to 'leave.'
Dec. 4 - More than 100,000 protesters march on the presidential palace, demanding the cancellation of the referendum and the writing of a new constitution. The next day, Islamists attack a peaceful anti-Morsi sit-in outside the palace, sparking all-out street battles that leave at least 10 dead. Days later, Morsi rescinds his initial decrees, but maintains the date of the referendum.
Jan. 25, 2013 - Hundreds of thousands hold protests in Tahrir Square and nationwide against Morsi on the 2-year anniversary of the start of the revolt against Mubarak, and clashes erupt in many places.
Jan. 26 - Residents of the city of Port Said stage protests, angered by a court ruling convicting and sentencing to death a group of local soccer fans for a 2012 stadium riot. Police crack down hard in Port Said, killing more than 40 protesters, and in outrage the city and others nearby go into near revolt. Much of the anger is focused at Morsi, who praised the police for their crackdown.
Feb.-March - Protests continue in Port Said and other cities for weeks, with dozens more dying in clashes, and some police units around the country go on strike. Brotherhood youth and their opponents fight in the streets outside the group's main Cairo headquarters.
June 23 - A mob beats to death four Egyptian Shiites in their home in a village on the edge of Cairo. Morsi condemns the attack, but critics blame virulent anti-Shiite rhetoric by his hard-line Islamist allies, fueled by Syria's civil war. A week earlier, Morsi shared a stage with hard-line clerics at a rally, sitting silently as they denounced Shiites as 'filthy.'
June 30 -- Millions of Egyptians take to the streets in Cairo and other cities calling for Morsi to step down in a massive display of anger and frustration with the Islamist leader. The demonstrations are largely peaceful, although 16 people, half of them in clashes outside the Muslim Brotherhood's Cairo headquarters, are killed in protest-related violence nationwide. Organisers vow to keep up the protests until Morsi resigns.
July 1 - Demonstrations continue and Egypt's military issues an ultimatum for the two sides to come to a resolution within 48 hours or it will impose its own solution.#
July 2 - A night of clashes outside Cairo University sees at least 16 people killed, with unofficial sources saying that more than 23 people died.
July 3 - Egyptian media reports that President Morsi will either be sacked or forced to stand down as the army's deadline for a resolution approaches.


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/ ... .html#ixzz2Y1gpg2Wv
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Post time 4-7-2013 07:07 AM | Show all posts
ok per guling2........
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Post time 4-7-2013 07:10 AM | Show all posts
takpe, tahun depan guling lagi

dh mcm raya plak, setahun sekali dpt presiden baru..
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Post time 4-7-2013 07:12 AM | Show all posts
bape puluh tahun punya karat bawah mubarak dulu, tiba2 berubah dok bawah mursi pulak, mana tahan.
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Post time 4-7-2013 07:17 AM | Show all posts
Rajin tol la urang mesir ni
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 Author| Post time 4-7-2013 07:35 AM | Show all posts
sebab tu la takut jgk tgk arab spring ni, sekali buat & succeed, , terus je buat tetiap tahun mcm tak ada undang2, haihh
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Post time 4-7-2013 08:59 AM | Show all posts
baik tak payah buat pilihanraya
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Post time 4-7-2013 09:27 AM From the mobile phone | Show all posts
Tentera terlebih kuat/ suka busy body hal2 internal...macam Thailand gak la... Rajin buat kudeta.
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Post time 4-7-2013 09:28 AM | Show all posts
inilah masalah negara islam.
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Post time 4-7-2013 09:29 AM | Show all posts
mcm berpesta je dorng ni
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Post time 4-7-2013 09:32 AM | Show all posts
Lejen posted on 4-7-2013 09:28 AM
inilah masalah negara islam.

Ini bukan masalah. Ini adalah demokrasi. Sesuatu yg belum dikecapi oleh rakyat Malaysia.
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Post time 4-7-2013 09:32 AM | Show all posts
mesir darul keparat dan darul guling... anak melayu belajar ugama sme dekat mesir... belajar kat malaysia Islam dia tk janji syurgawi...
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Post time 4-7-2013 09:35 AM | Show all posts
pakwetizzaqyah posted on 4-7-2013 09:32 AM
mesir darul keparat dan darul guling... anak melayu belajar ugama sme dekat mesir... belajar kat mal ...

Mesir ni bagaikan Indonesia masa dulu-dulu. Sekarang Indonesia semakin matang dan jauh melangkah berbanding Malaysia.
Guling2 ini adalah baik. Hanya org bodoh sahaja yg mahu pemerintah bodoh. Islam pun sokong.

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Post time 4-7-2013 09:36 AM | Show all posts
gogo2 posted on 4-7-2013 09:35 AM
Mesir ni bagaikan Indonesia masa dulu-dulu. Sekarang Indonesia semakin matang dan jauh melangkah b ...

kantoi... gogo2 ni orang Indonesia.. agent SBY
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Post time 4-7-2013 09:38 AM | Show all posts
pakwetizzaqyah posted on 4-7-2013 09:36 AM
kantoi... gogo2 ni orang Indonesia.. agent SBY

kekkeek...

I ckp betul nih.. guling2 is the way forward. Selepas ini, pemimpin yg dilantik takkan main2 dgn kuasa yg diberikan oleh rakyat.

Rakyat marah, pemimpin digulingkan. Yahoo!!!
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Post time 4-7-2013 09:42 AM | Show all posts
gogo2 posted on 4-7-2013 09:38 AM
kekkeek...

I ckp betul nih.. guling2 is the way forward. Selepas ini, pemimpin yg dilantik takk ...

iya pak gogo..terusin guling2 ya...gue nggak mau digulingin.. jangan gulingin DS Najib..dia adalah hero rakyat melesia...
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Post time 4-7-2013 09:42 AM | Show all posts
janvan posted on 4-7-2013 07:00 AM
Source: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2354953/Morsi-longer-president-Military-coup-forces- ...

NINETY-ONE women protesters raped and sexually abused in Tahir Square in just four days as military begins to take over


tu la birah sangat nak berdemo bagai. dok umah jer lg baik.
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Post time 4-7-2013 09:43 AM | Show all posts
gogo2 posted on 4-7-2013 09:32 AM
Ini bukan masalah. Ini adalah demokrasi. Sesuatu yg belum dikecapi oleh rakyat Malaysia.

Kalau kat Malaysia nak guling siapa? PM kita ka?

btw, perjalanan demokrasi di Mesir aku rasa belum berjalan sepenuhnya. tetapi bagi aku, masih terlalu awal untuk menggulingkan Morsy, tapi aku setuju itu adalah kehendak rakyat Mesir.
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