Guardsman Bass wrote:I've got the live-blogging by both The Guardian and Al Jazeera English open in separate tabs. Interesting stuff.
The ruling party's headquarters was set on fire (unfortunately, it's close to the national museum), and Mubarak has extended the curfew to the entire country as well as sending the army into several of the cities.
We'll have to see what the Army's main reaction is. If they side with the protestors, then Mubarak is finished - the police haven't been able to quell the protests. I'm keeping my fingers crossed that we'll see him flee the country in the next couple of days.
EDIT: It looks like the Army is still siding with Mubarak in Cairo. The Guardian is reporting that it drove off protestors attempting to seize the main building of the state television network in Cairo.
The army is a conscript one in Egypt, and those can usually be counted on to obey the government when putting down city dwellers, as they're a bunch of farm boys who regard people in the cities as distant from their own villages and concerns. If there was insurrection in the countryside the overthrow of Mubarak would be more plausible as the army would be much less likely to stay loyal.