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Cairo, Egypt (CNN) -- Egyptian
President Hosni Mubarak stepped down Friday and handed over
power to the military -- three decades of his iron-clad rule
ended by an 18-day revolution.
In a somber one-minute announcement on
state television, Vice President Omar Suleiman said Mubarak
had resigned and the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces
will "run the affairs of the country."
Tens of thousands of emotional Egyptians
exploded in deafening cheers on the streets of Cairo,
electric with excitement. It was a moment they had
anticipated throughout long days of relentless
demonstrations -- sometimes violent -- that demanded
Mubarak's departure.
It was also a moment that many had
thought unimaginable in the Arab world's powerhouse nation.
"Egypt is free!" and "God is Great," they
chanted in the honeymoon of the moment. They waved Egyptian
flags, honked horns and set off fireworks as they savored a
moment that just days ago had seemed unimaginable.
A source with close connections to
Persian Gulf government leaders told CNN that Mubarak had
fled to the Red Sea resort town of Sharm el-Sheikh.
The Swiss government has directed banks
to freeze all assets belonging to Mubarak and his family,
said Norbert Baerlocher, a spokesman for the Swiss Embassy
in Washington.
The banks do not as yet have a clear
picture of what Mubarak has but protesters on the streets
had worried that he would attempt to flee the country with
looted money.
In a televised speech Thursday night,
Mubarak had indicated he was delegating authority to
Suleiman, but Friday, deeply disappointed crowds calling for
his ouster kept swelling throughout Cairo and in other major
cities.
Friday night, they got what they wanted
all along.
Opposition leader Mohamed ElBaradei,
however, sounded words of caution amid the euphoria. He
urged Egyptians to stay united beyond the moment of
euphoria.
"We have challenges ahead of us," said
the Nobel laureate whom many believe could emerge as Egypt's
next leader. "I think we need to not worry about
retribution. Mubarak needs to go and we need to look
forward."
Wael Ghonim, the Egyptian activist who
became a reluctant hero of the revolution said only one word
would be used to describe Mubarak in history books:
"Dictator."
"I want to say: 'Welcome back Egypt," he
told CNN.
Ghonim -- a Google executive who is on
leave from his job and whose Facebook page is credited with
triggering the popular uprising -- was seized by security
forces and released Monday. His words and tears in a
television interview galvanized the protesters in Tahrir
Square.
He said he knew Mubarak would be forced
out after a revolt in Tunisia forced its leader out in
January, and he said he believed the military can be trusted
to respect the demands of the protesters.
Many of the anti-government protesters
had been calling for Egypt's powerful army, well-respected
within the country, to take over as interim caretakers.
Friday night, they voiced optimism that the military would
pave the way for free and fair elections.
But it's uncertain what will come next in
the most populous nation of the Arab world, and how Egypt's
revolution, that succeeded on the 32nd anniversary of
Iran's, will reverberate throughout the region.
U.S. President Barack Obama was notified
of Mubarak's decision Friday morning, said Tommy Vietor, a
spokesman for the National Security Council, and was closely
watching the extraordinary developments unfold in Egypt, a
key U.S. ally.
He will make a statement Friday
afternoon, the White House said.
Mubarak's decision to step down is
"obviously a welcome step," said a U.S. official involved in
the Egypt discussions. Now comes "an unpredictable next
chapter," the official added. It is "a sign the military
chose society."
Amre Moussa, the secretary-general of the
Arab League, said Egyptians are "looking forward to a
different (and) better future."
A high-ranking Egyptian military official
said the army's command was discussing whether to dismiss
Mubarak's government and parliament and also when the next
election would be held. An announcement was expected later
Friday.
But some analysts were already sounding
the alarm over a military takeover.
"Suleiman's statement is the clearest
indication thus far that the military has carried out a coup
led by Defense Minister Field Marshal Mohammed Hussein
Tantawi," analysts with the Stratfor global intelligence
company said in a statement.
"Egypt is returning to the 1952 model of
ruling the state via a council of army officers. The
question now is to what extent the military elite will share
power with its civilian counterparts," the statement said.
Amnesty International, whose staffers had
been among human rights workers and journalists detained by
Egyptian authorities during the uprising, congratulated
Egyptians for "their extraordinary courage and commitment to
achieve fundamental change."
But it warned that the departure of one
man did not mean an end to a police state.
"The repressive system that Egyptians
have suffered under for three decades has not gone away and
the state of emergency remains in place," said Salil Shetty,
Amnesty International's secretary general.
"Those in power must
grasp this opportunity to consign the systematic abuses of
the past to history. Human rights reform must begin now,"
Shetty said.
CNN's Amir
Ahmed, Nic Robertson and Caroline Faraj contributed to this
report.
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