Egypt's military secures famed antiquities museum
The Associated Press, Cairo | Sat, 01/29/2011 8:51 AM
The Egyptian army secured Cairo's famed antiquities
museum early Saturday, protecting treasures including the famed gold
mask of King Tutankhamun from looters.
The greatest threat to the Egyptian Museum first appeared to come
from the fire enguling the ruling party headquarters next door on
Friday night as anti-government protests roiled the country.
Then dozens of would-be thieves started entering the grounds
surrounding the museum.
Suddenly other young men - some armed with truncheons taken from
the police - formed a human chain outside the main gates on Tahrir
Square in an attempt to protect the collection inside.
"I'm standing here to defend and to protect our national
treasure," said one of the men, Farid Saad, a 40-year-old engineer.
Another man, 26-year-old Ahmed Ibrahim, said it was important to
guard the museum because it "has 5,000 years of our history. If
they steal it, we'll never find it aain."
Finally, four armored vehicles took up posts outside the massive
coral-colored building in downtown Cairo. Soldiers surrounded the
building and moved inside to protect mummies, monumental stone
statues, ornate royal jewelry and other pharaonic artifacts.