What is the classic sign of Louis vuitton bags?

What is the classic sign of Louis vuitton bags?

louis vuitton outletgive more reason to continue fighting to stay in power, no matter the cost, analysts say.While Iraq's former President Saddam Hussein was also put on trial and eventually executed in Iraq, he was overthrown by the U.S. invasion and not by his own people. Tunisia's ousted leader Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali, convicted on weapons and drugs charges in a one-day trial last month, has refused to attend the continuing proceedings and remains in exile in Saudi Arabia.The trial's venue in Cairo is likely to become the flashpoint of pro- and anti-Mubarak demonstrators on Wednesday. Groups of Mr. Mubarak's supporters said they would come in

 

louis vuitton outletforce to defend the former president, who still enjoys a degree of sympathy among parts of the population. "We are mobilizing people to attend the trial because judges nowadays are influenced by pressure from the street," said Alaa Abdel Nabi, an engineering student who runs one of several Facebook pages of Mubarak admirers. "When he came to power, Egypt had just come out of a war, and we progressed a great deal since then. Now, in the six months since the revolution, we have destroyed the country, dismantling one institution after the other."Relatives of revolutionary activists killed or maimed during the January and February unrest are also planning to converge at the Police Academy Wednesday morning, with many of

 

louis vuitton outletthem demanding a death sentence. More than 800 protesters were killed during the uprising. "I am happy because I expect to see Mubarak in a cage," said Hagga Sayeda Hassan Abdelrauf, a 42-year-old mother whose 18-year-old son Mustafa was shot through the heart in late January. "Blood should be punished with blood."That's the sentiment shared by many in the streets of Cairo. "Mubarak should hang—we'll throw a celebration party if he does," exclaimed Ahmed Rami, a 24-year-old hawker selling tamarind juice in the capital's middle-class Mohandeeseen district. "He didn't care for the people. Look at me—I have a law degree, and this is the only job I could find."Yet, the economic crisis that followed the revolution as tourism and foreign investment dried up has already prompted some Egyptians to reconsider their views of Mr. Mubarak. While his sons and the former interior minister, Habib el Adly, are widely reviled, some ordinary Egyptians are uncomfortable with seeing the deposed president on trial, and say they miss the relative security of the police state that crumbled after the revolution."Mubarak is an innocent victim. They've been hiding the truth from him," said 53-year-old driver Hussein Hassan, as he waited for the Ramadan fast to end across the street from Mr. Rami's juice stand. "Under Mubarak, there were no thugs, there was no bloodshed. And look at what's happened now—the thieves have come out everywhere."

 
Par mylovename le mercredi 03 août 2011

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