for instance, on the first day, the protests were being blamed on the muslim brotherhood, although it was really the young activists and the internet users who had actually organized the protests, the 6th of april movement, named after the young man who was brutally beaten and killed by police in alexandria. so i felt very uneasy about all of this. shahira, what things got worse sorry? i m sorry, what you ve done is not an easy thing to do. are you fearful of repercussions? i wasn t really thinking of that. all i was thinking about were the anti-regime protestors in tahrir square who were demonstrating peacefully, and they were making very legitimate demands, anderson. they re calling for freedom.
follow the rules and never cross the line. and that meant we focus on the pro-mubarak rallies. also we had to read press releases from the interior ministry, which were at times questionable. for instance, on the first day, the protests were being blamed on the muslim brotherhood, although it was really the young activists and the internet users who had actually organized the protests, the 6th of april movement, named after the young man who was brutally beaten and killed by police in alexandria. so i felt very uneasy about all of this. shahira, what sorry? i m sorry, what you ve done is not an easy thing to do. are you fearful of repercussions?
security for tarnishing the country s image, quote unquote. this time there were very strict instructions that we had to follow the rules and never cross the line. and that meant we focus on the pro-mubarak rallies. also we had to read press releases from the interior ministry, which were at times questionable. for instance, on the first day, the protests were being blamed on the muslim brotherhood, although it was really the young activists and the internet users who had actually organized the protests, the 6th of april movement, named after the young man who was brutally beaten and killed by police in alexandria. so i felt very uneasy about all of this. shahira, what sorry? i m sorry, what you ve done
time as when something happens in tunisia and they are inspired in egypt and it spreads to jordan and saudi arabia and to yemen this cannot be stopped anymore and does it behoove the united states to consider stopping, backing dictator regimes that repress their people? guest: i think it is very, very much in our interests to take the hard look at each of our relationships. we do have real costs. if the things and the rulers thing they can control the media by simply beating up journalists, they have never seen one of these things, and they don t have any idea how the people react to one another and so on. there is the 6th of april movement, young people in egypt that helped stimulate this outpouring. you cannot criminal it. and, so, maybe that is a good thing for the future, too, though. shepard: stay with us. the leaders are coming in prime minister harper of canada, the president, our president, as well. prime minister harper will speak in french, first, so let s
dug. there was another seismic run that was done and the 26th of april following the event, itself. we did one in advance of this event. the seismic run was not as clear as the original one, because there is a lot of other obstructions out there, and all of the vessels that are there and all of the simultaneous operations going on but it was good enough for us to understand that there were not any developments on the sea floor or formations that are problematic with proceeding with the integrity test, so the goal is after 48 hours to do another seismic test, and that involves sophisticated sensing with the vessels and the scientific team is working on that right now, so we want to know if we can detect any kind of oil that may be coming up from the sea floor or methane gas that is escaping in advance of oil moving forward. the man in charge of administering the bp s fund is hearing firsthand of people s lives who have been turned upside down by the disaster. ken feinberg is holding a