Wednesday, March 2, 2011

Melina Velba's Big Boobs

fever does not cease to rise

By Thierry Doors
The anti-Saleh marched Monday through the streets of Sanaa, Yemen. Photo Credits: Muhammed Muheisen / Associated Press


clashes between opponents and police continue to Tehran in the streets of Sana'a (Yemen), Oman and Bahrain.

• Violence in Iran
Clashes erupted Tuesday between protesters and security forces deployed in large numbers on the main squares and streets of Tehran. These clashes have occurred particularly around the university, where police used tear gas. Several appeals were launched to support the two leaders opposition, and Mehdi Mousavi Karoubi. Iran's judiciary denied on Tuesday that former prime minister and former president of Parliament have been imprisoned, this assertion their families without news of two men for several days.

• Five governors sacked Yemen
The heart of the Yemeni capital, Sanaa, was blocked Tuesday by tens of thousands of demonstrators, who chanted in particular: "The people want the regime fell, the people want the Ali Abdullah Saleh's departure. "The influential preacher Abdel Majid Zendani, suspected of supporting terrorism, has harangued la foule, plus nombreuse que jamais, en affirmant qu'il «soutenait les revendications des jeunes». Devant des journalistes, le président Saleh, un allié important des États-Unis contre al-Qaida, a affirmé que les soulèvements qui agitent le monde arabe «sont une tempête orchestrée de Tel-Aviv, sous la supervision de Washington». Il a limogé les gouverneurs de quatre provinces dans le Sud et d'une cinquième dans l'ouest du Yémen.

• Une constituante en Tunisie
Le nouveau premier ministre tunisien, Béji Caïd Essebsi, aurait accepté la réunion d'une Assemblée constituante, idée phare du Conseil de la protection de la révolution, which brings together 14 political parties, the General Union of Tunisian Workers and several NGOs. This Constitution promulgating a new constitution before the next election of organizational setting. Two new ministers, the Higher Education and the Regional Development, resigned Tuesday. For its part, the current banned Islamist Nahda was allowed to reform a political party. • Oman

turn into turmoil
Armored broke up in Sohar demonstrators who blocked the port and a road leading to the capital, Muscat, 200 km further south, while smaller rallies were held in other cities of Oman to demand jobs, higher wages and the dismissal of several ministers. The government, which expected a fourth day of protests, has deployed troops and military vehicles vehicles around the capital and along the border with the UAE.

• Slamming Shiite-Sunni in Bahrain
Thousands of protesters again marched in Manama, affirming the unity of the small kingdom of Bahrain, where the Sunni minority alongside the Shiite majority. The opposition has so far refused to initiate a national dialogue proposed by King Hamad bin Isa al-Khalifa, and the Sunni dynasty, in power for over two hundred years. The opposition is demanding the resignation in advance of any government.

• An electoral calendar in Egypt
A constitutional reform will be submitted to a referendum March 19 in Egypt, ahead of parliamentary elections in June and a presidential election six weeks later, announced Tuesday to be within the army, in power since the fall of President Hosni Mubarak last February 11.

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