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Saturday, January 29, 2011

Israhelli embassy staff evacuate Egypt, ambassador flees, Mossad spy network busted by Egyptian Intelligence


Israhell has pulled its embassy staff out of Egypt as the outpouring of public protest against the Israhelli Snake Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak's government shows no sign of remission. Helicopters evacuated the embassy staff to an Egyptian airbase, where they were flown back to Tel Aviv. The evacuation came after a group of Egyptian demonstrators passed by the embassy building, according to the daily al-Quds al-Arabi newspaper. Reports also said the Israhelli ambassador, himself, has fled Egypt after the discovery of a Mossad spy network in the capital Cairo by Egyptian security.

The Israhelli embassy on the top floor of a tower block in Cairo

On Thursday, an Israhelli minister, whose name was withheld, said Egyptian government forces will have to exercise force to rein in public protests as the country teeters on the brink of a Tunisia-style revolution. Egypt, which is widely regarded as the first Arab nation to seal a peace agreement with Israhell three decades ago, thanks to Israhelli snake Hosni Mubarak, remains one of Tel Aviv's most important allies. Israhell's Deputy Prime Minister Silvan Shalom told reporters on Thursday that Tel Aviv is closely monitoring the still-unfolding crisis in Egypt, and does not see a threat in its ties with the African state. The two sides have cooperated in imposing restrictions on Palestinians living in the impoverished occupied territories.

الثورة المصرية قادمة - The Egyptian Revolution is Coming

Tens of thousands of demonstrators have flocked the streets of Cairo and other parts of Egypt since Tuesday as part of the biggest anti-government protests in years, demanding the ouster of Israhelli Snake Mubarak after three daces of feeding at Egyptian and Palestinian blood. Despite a night-time curfew in major cities across Egypt, protesters spilled out into the streets of several cities and were seen in significant numbers even in the early hours of Saturday morning. On Friday, the Israhelli Snake Mubarak sacked his cabinet and called for national dialogue in an attempt to staunch the flow of public outcry over poverty, high unemployment rates and rampant corruption. Medical sources say at least 27 people have so far been killed and over a thousand injured in clashes in Cairo, Suez and Alexandria.

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