|
|||||||||
:: Issues > Reform Issues | |||||||||
![]() Crowd greets ElBaradei as hero during tour out of Cairo
Mohammed ElBaradei said he saw “an overwhelming and burning desire for change” among the more than 1,000 supporters who came to see and hear the former head of the UN nuclear watchdog.
|
|||||||||
Sunday, April 4,2010 08:58 | |||||||||
|
|||||||||
MENIYAT SAMANOUD // In his first public appearance outside the Egyptian capital, Mohammed ElBaradei said he saw “an overwhelming and burning desire for change” among the more than 1,000 supporters who came to see and hear the former head of the UN nuclear watchdog. Mr ElBaradei spoke to his supporters under the watchful eye of state security in Meniyat Samanoud, a town in Mansoura province in the Nile delta. As he emerged from Al Nour Mosque on Friday, he was greeted by people chanting his name and calling him a “hero”. Mr ElBaradei, 67, served as a director for the Vienna-based International Atomic Energy Agency for 12 years, and has spent more than 25 years living outside of his native Egypt before returning in February and injecting excitement into a stagnant political landscape. Mr ElBaradei, a Nobel laureate, is considered a potential candidate for president in the 2011 elections, although he is currently not allowed to run under the constitution because he is not a member of an established political party.
“We are 80 million Egyptians who have survived 7,000 years,” said Mr ElBaradei. “We have to move Egypt from pharaonic regime to a democratic rule.”
“I’m very happy of course,” Mr ElBaradei told The National before addressing scores that gathered to greet him in Meniyat Samanoud. “It’s very clear people are hungry for change.”
The group – which has almost 400 of its members, including senior leaders, in prison – said on Friday that it did not ask its supporters to meet Mr ElBaradei in Mansoura.
However, the editor of the oldest and largest state-owned daily took a new tone.
However the majority of the state-owned media are still waging a bitter campaign against him.
But his appearance on Friday went on without any problems. As Mr ElBaradei, without bodyguards, walked to a street near the mosque, he was surrounded by his supporters. Many people were eager to shake his hand, kiss him and take photos of him with their mobiles.
Amal Nasr, 20, a housewife, said: “People are so poor, they are selling their children. I hope he can change this.” |
|||||||||
tags: Baradei / Mansoura / Mubarak / Sucession / Egyptian People / International Atomic Energy Agency / Political Party / Democratic Rule
Posted in Reform Issues , Elbaradei Campaign |
|||||||||
|
|||||||||
|
|||||||||
Related Articles | |||||||||
|