American actor Egyptian riot

Bullets fired tear gas
apparatus Egyptian riot police evict the
protesters for the streets in a country
that is now overwritten the clash
proved to be an American-made.
The protesters submitted many photos of shell casings taken from Tahrir Square in Cairo,
on Tuesday, told ABC News.
Based on the label is shown on the sleeve, tear gas producer is
the Combined Systems International of Jamestown, Pennsylvania.
On its website, the company claims to market their "guns do
not kill" to foreign countries, without specifically saying by
Egypt's name.
When trying to create
dikubungi ABC News asked for an explanation, a company spokesman could not be contacted.
U.S. military funding to contribute as much as 1.3 billion dollars per year to Egypt.
According to the proposed budget of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs for 2010, funds were used to help strengthen and modernize the armed
forces of Egypt.
Egyptian citizens who
participated in street protests, told ABC News that the U.S.
evidence to make tear gas was sending a strong signal.
The Obama administration reportedly secretly give support to the leaders of the riots in Egypt.
As reported by the Telegraph, the U.S. has sought regime
change in three years.
Mentioned that the United States Embassy in Cairo to help a prominent opposition activists attended a conference in New York who sponsored
the U.S. and remain anonymous from the Egyptian police.
When returned to Cairo in December 2008, the activists
told U.S. diplomats that the alliance of opposition groups
have been making plans to overthrow President Hosni Mubarak and set up a new government in 2011, this year.
Since then, Egyptian security forces began arresting opposition figures that has to
do with the demonstrations.
But the identity of the activists was not disclosed by the
Telegraph.
The unfolding of this,
contained in documents released by the U.S. secret diplomatic WikiLeaks sites, showed that U.S. officials pressed the Egyptian government to release other opposition figures arrested by the police.
President Mubarak, who faced the biggest challenge to his rule for 31 years in power, ordered
the soldiers took to the streets of Cairo during the riots broke
out in Egypt.
Police fired rubber bullets and used tear gas and water cannon to disperse the crowd.
At least five people were killed in Cairo the day before yesterday while 870 others were injured, some of whom were wounded by a bullet.
Mohammad ElBaradei, the pro-reform leader and Nobel Peace Prize winner's grace, placed under house arrest after returning to Egypt to join the
resistance movement.
Riots also broke out in Suez, Alexandria, and other major cities throughout the country.

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