Egyptian Activists Block Roads, Govt. Building in Cairo
After spending a second night in a tent camp in Cairo's Tahrir Square, the activists blocked surrounding roads and formed a picket line outside the adjacent Mogamma administrative complex on Sunday.
The reformists accuse the military council that has led Egypt since February of being reluctant to cleanse the government of Mubarak loyalists. The council is led by Mr. Mubarak's former defense minister, Field Marshall Mohamed Hussein Tantawi.
Egypt's military-appointed Prime Minister Essam Sharaf offered several gestures to the protesters in a nationally-televised speech Saturday. He said he ordered the suspension of all policemen accused of killing protesters and created a panel to speed up legal proceedings against the officers and officials suspected of corruption.
Many Egyptian reformists criticized Mr. Sharaf's speech as empty rhetoric and vowed to remain in Tahrir Square until their demands are met. Tahrir was the focal point of the much larger anti-Mubarak revolt that drew hundreds of thousands of people into Cairo's streets.
Hundreds of activists joined the new protest campaign in the canal city of Suez on Sunday, blocking a main road that links it with Cairo.