
NEWARK, New Jersey, U.S.A. β People around the world have been watching in horror as hundreds of protestors clashed with Egyptian police in an uprising that began January 25.
Marina Youssef, a 19-year-old Rutgers University student from Alexandria, Egypt, Β has been cut off from her family in Egypt since the uprising.
βI havenβt been able to communicate with my family,β she said. βNo cell phone service. Networks are down. House lines are working, but due to the heavy calls in and out the country, itβs difficult trying to reach anyone.β
Youssef has been following the protests on television from Kearny, New Jersey, where sheβs now living.
The Egyptian revolution, she said, started βin the right track.β
Demonstrations in Tunisia have had a huge influence on Egyptians, she said.
βWhen Egyptians saw that another country revolted against the authoritarian rule, they were hoping to do the same.β
It was βdue to decades of frustrationβ that people began the protests, Youssef said.
βMubarak has been the president for 30 years. Enough is enough,β she said. βIt is up to the people to lead Egypt into the New Year.β
Marina wants a brighter future for her country and her people.
βIf a better candidate steps up to be the president, Egypt might have a better future,β Marina said. βI have hope.β
Gokce Yurekli is a Reporter for Youth Journalism International.

