11.02.2011, 10:15 4929

Hosni Mubarak refuses to step down

President of Egypt, Hosni Mubarak, announced he would not step down from the presidency but would hand his powers over to Vice President Omar Suleiman, Kazakhstan Today reports.

Almaty. February 11. Kazakhstan Today - President of Egypt, Hosni Mubarak, announced he would not step down from the presidency but would hand his powers over to Vice President Omar Suleiman, Kazakhstan Today reports.

Hosni Mubarak has provoked fury among Egypt's protesters by handing over some powers to his deputy but pledging once again to stay in office, The Telegraph reported.

At the end of a dramatic day which saw the powerful army pledge to give Egypts protest movement all it wanted and and so fired expectations that the president would end his 30 year rule, Mr Mubarak instead said on TV again that he would stay on till September.

The protesters were chanting in dismay even midway through the speech as they realised they had been feeding on false hopes all afternoon.

Earlier in the day, the army appeared to be enacting a military coup and announced that the people's wishes would be met. The main demand of the crowds, however, has been the departure of Mr Mubarak.

When they gathered around the television in Tahrir Square not long before midnight, the democracy protesters were sure Mr Mubarak was about to step down. Most had been celebrating for hours, and many had brought their children to witness history being made.

Arabic television had already told them that the army would step in to provide an interim president.

But in a long statement the president ceded unspecified control to his vice-president and repeated that he would remain in his post until elections could be organised in September.

The Egyptian ambassador to the United States said Omar Suleiman is now the "de facto head of state".

Western powers were once again caught off guard by rapidly changing events in Egypt.

"Too many Egyptians remain unconvinced that the government is serious about a genuine transition to democracy, and it is the responsibility of the government to speak clearly to the Egyptian people and the world."

Immediately after Mr Mubarak's speech, Mr Suleiman called on the protesters to "go home" and asked Egyptians to "unite and look to the future".

But Mr Mubarak's stubborn failure to change the corrupt and authoritarian political system he inherited finally caught up with him when he surrendered his powers to Mr Suleiman.

Ten days earlier he had been forced to promise he would step down before a presidential election due in September and to name a deputy for the first time since he took office.

This was the third time that President Mubarak has disappointed anti-government protesters since this uprising began by refusing to step down, BBC reported.

In his address, Mr Mubarak said: "I express a commitment to carry on and protect the constitution and the people and transfer power to whomever is elected next September in free and transparent elections."

He apologised to the families of protesters killed in clashes with the security forces in recent weeks, and said those responsible for their deaths would be punished.

Mr Mubarak added that the country's emergency laws would only be lifted when conditions were right, and said he would ignore "diktats from abroad".

He also appeared to call for the end of protests against his 30-year rule that began on 25 January.

In the last 17 days of tumultuous protests in Cairo and across the country, up to 300 people may have been killed, most of them by Mr Mubarak's riot police, The Telegraph informed.

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