Jan 31 (Reuters) - Egyptian Vice President Omar Suleiman said on Monday President Hosni Mubarak has asked him to start a dialogue with all the political parties as protesters stayed on the streets for the seventh straight day against Mubarak's rule.
Will Egypt protesters succeed at winning a negociated transition? Of course, Tunisia copycat with the ousting of the president, did kind of, set the standard and in a way give the appearance of a failure, should the issue be different. Ans that's all the challenge. History has rarely seen the ousting of a president changed itself into civil rights and a progress of economic freedoms. Tunisia has ousted the president but hasn't yet proved otherwise. Of course, in a country, the president is held responsible for the situation and the first slogan to come out from an angry crowd has to be for him to go, but further, what are the rights, the freedoms, Egyptians want?
True change, deep and promising into institutions comes with negociations and negociations have more to offer with someone not willing to go and a system chilly to change than the promises of the newly incoming. No doubt it is a main street point of view and after 30 years who could blame the crowd sayin they have had enough?
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