The following is a post from my Facebook page on January 25, 2015:
Bombs placed by Muslim Brotherhood have been going off all over Egypt today. Eleven have been killed so far, and 30+ injured. That’s not counting how many police have been killed and injured. Police guarding downtown Cairo are being shot by Muslim Brotherhood snipers shooting down from rooftops as I write this.
Bombs have been exploding throughout Cairo—a giant metropolis—almost no district has been left unharmed.
Small Muslim Brotherhood groups (of 50-200 persons) have mobbed various districts destroying property and are committing vandalism and violence against those who try to stop them.
In Giza and Alexandria, police have been injured by Muslim Brotherhood who are firing shots from automatic weapons from inside the Muslim Brotherhood crowd.
A large Muslim Brotherhood mob attacked the Journalism Building downtown and police are trying to stop the violence there.
Bombs are going off everywhere.
Five energy towers have been blown up, two transportation buses, the telephone building in en-Shems has been attacked, a gas pipeline has been blown up, two bombs went off in Ramadan city (a large suburb of Cairo), two bombs were found at St. Georges church during services, but people were evacuated in time and a bomb squad dismantled the bombs.
A bomb went off in Maadi (a large suburb), eleven Muslim Brotherhood members were arrested downtown—they had 40 weapons and several boxes of police and security uniforms (very scary—they were going to impersonate police!).
Two Muslim Brotherhood members conducted suicide bombings and blew up another electricity tower, two police are dead and two injured in Matariya trying to stop the violence there.
Muslim Brotherhood attacked the jail at abu Zabal--they had 17 bombs on them; they were captured thankfully.
The violence is escalating as I write this.
Sadly, Egyptians are not only blaming the Muslim Brotherhood, but are blaming America, for backing the Brotherhood and not helping the Egyptian people when the violence began back in 2012. They are also angry that America has not declared the Muslim Brotherhood terrorists and allows them to organize in America.
Muslim Brotherhood have been causing violence almost every Friday after the noon prayer since 2012. Every single one of their so-called "protests" have turned violent.
The Muslim Brotherhood are NOT peaceful—they pretend to be peaceful while their numbers grow.
Here’s a good example of what happened when the Muslim Brotherhood had "political" power in 2012:
During Morsi’s first 100 days in power, there were over 150 torture cases, more than one per day. These were only torture cases that were brought to trial, thousands more were filed that were dropped due to fear of repercussions (entire families were beaten and harassed when someone tried to file a case).
The Arabic Network for Human Rights did a study and found that during Morsi’s first 200 days in office the number of documented torture cases was four times greater than during the entire length of Mubarek’s presidency (which was 30 years!). Give that some thought: during the first 200 "days" in power there were more torture cases than during Mubarek’s entire 30 years.
Bombs placed by Muslim Brotherhood have been going off all over Egypt today. Eleven have been killed so far, and 30+ injured. That’s not counting how many police have been killed and injured. Police guarding downtown Cairo are being shot by Muslim Brotherhood snipers shooting down from rooftops as I write this.
Bombs have been exploding throughout Cairo—a giant metropolis—almost no district has been left unharmed.
Small Muslim Brotherhood groups (of 50-200 persons) have mobbed various districts destroying property and are committing vandalism and violence against those who try to stop them.
In Giza and Alexandria, police have been injured by Muslim Brotherhood who are firing shots from automatic weapons from inside the Muslim Brotherhood crowd.
A large Muslim Brotherhood mob attacked the Journalism Building downtown and police are trying to stop the violence there.
Bombs are going off everywhere.
Five energy towers have been blown up, two transportation buses, the telephone building in en-Shems has been attacked, a gas pipeline has been blown up, two bombs went off in Ramadan city (a large suburb of Cairo), two bombs were found at St. Georges church during services, but people were evacuated in time and a bomb squad dismantled the bombs.
A bomb went off in Maadi (a large suburb), eleven Muslim Brotherhood members were arrested downtown—they had 40 weapons and several boxes of police and security uniforms (very scary—they were going to impersonate police!).
Two Muslim Brotherhood members conducted suicide bombings and blew up another electricity tower, two police are dead and two injured in Matariya trying to stop the violence there.
Muslim Brotherhood attacked the jail at abu Zabal--they had 17 bombs on them; they were captured thankfully.
The violence is escalating as I write this.
Sadly, Egyptians are not only blaming the Muslim Brotherhood, but are blaming America, for backing the Brotherhood and not helping the Egyptian people when the violence began back in 2012. They are also angry that America has not declared the Muslim Brotherhood terrorists and allows them to organize in America.
Muslim Brotherhood have been causing violence almost every Friday after the noon prayer since 2012. Every single one of their so-called "protests" have turned violent.
The Muslim Brotherhood are NOT peaceful—they pretend to be peaceful while their numbers grow.
Here’s a good example of what happened when the Muslim Brotherhood had "political" power in 2012:
During Morsi’s first 100 days in power, there were over 150 torture cases, more than one per day. These were only torture cases that were brought to trial, thousands more were filed that were dropped due to fear of repercussions (entire families were beaten and harassed when someone tried to file a case).
The Arabic Network for Human Rights did a study and found that during Morsi’s first 200 days in office the number of documented torture cases was four times greater than during the entire length of Mubarek’s presidency (which was 30 years!). Give that some thought: during the first 200 "days" in power there were more torture cases than during Mubarek’s entire 30 years.