kaopectate stops it fast. powerful liquid relief speeds to the source. fast. [ male announcer ] stop the uh-oh fast with kao. at the beginning, i thought tuesday was the happiest day in my life. there were people for the first time gathering in huge numbers. this is the start of the rest of my life, of a new happy life, honestly, as cheesy as it sounds, that s exactly how i feel right now. i m ayesha, at cnn headquarters joined by anderson cooper and wolf blitzer. we continue to follow the results in egypt where reports of widespread looting and lawlessness are rampant. we received word of a mass serve
the curfew. they ve been a little forceful and not allowing people to demonstrate the way they did two days ago. so far, they are allowing people to move around. what s interesting the neighborhood watch groups who have sprung up that have taken it upon themselves to stop cars and search them. in the educated night they ve done this, these are not people trained to be security officer, doing things like setting up their own signal systems, using whistles so they can call for help from one block to another. i was talking to one man who said they had already been attacked at 9:00 p.m., people trying to climb over the walls of their compound and break in and they were scaring off these types of criminals. more from ivan in this hour and days ahead in cairo and joined by wolf blitzer in washington and ayesha in
it has not done that yet and you see the crowds growing in the streets of cairo and alexandria. that would be the best scenario from the u.s. and egyptian perspective. everything right now president mubarak is saying doesn t indicate he is ready to give up, at least not yet. thanks very much for joining us. thank you. ayesha, back to you. wolf, coming up, a walk through the dangerous streets of alexandria and cairo. our cnn reporters take you straight to the scene of what is becoming a lawless situation with looting and gunfire. plus, cnn senior international correspondent nic robertson is in the ancient city of alexandra where egyptians marched through the streets after curfew with gunshots providing a scary soundtrack.
streets, calling for freedom and end to the mubarak regime and how long these protests can continue before something gives is not clear. day seven has already begun here. ayesha. anderson, no doubt about it. they re went forward at lightning speed but the seeds of unrest were planted long ago. indeed, the revolt has spread across three countries in the middle east. suzanne malveaux tells us where the spark was lit. reporter: starting with tunisia, where an unemployed graduate student sets himself on fire after a city inspector confiscates his unlicensed fruit card and allegedly slaps him, causing protests against the government forcing the long time
at the beginning, i thought tuesday was the happiest day in my life. there were people for the first time gathering in huge numbers. this is the start of the rest of my life, of a new happy life, honestly, as cheesy as it sounds, that s exactly how i feel right now. i m ayesha, at cnn headquarters joined by anderson cooper and wolf blitzer. we continue to follow the results in egypt where reports of widespread looting and lawlessness are rampant. we received word of a mass serve prison break near cairo. cnn went there saturday to investigate what was leaderly a dangerous and deadly situation.