We had been granted an exclusive interview with the new Vice President of Egypt, Omar Suleiman. We had to take a route that ran through a neighborhood where there were pro-Mubarak supporters in the streets were setting up their own check points.
When we got stuck in a crush of traffic, we were surrounded by an angry mob.
For about an hour, we worked on negotiating our way out of the situation by talking and staying extremely calm. At one point a solider came up to us. We explained what we were doing and showed him papers that were an official invitation to the interview.
Very, very, slowly the crowd started to fall back and our car was able to move. The other two cars in our convoy were taken to a nearby police station for safety. Nobody was hurt, nobody was attacked, but it was clearly an uncertain and unsettling hour.
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When we got to the palace, as our as our cameraman was setting up for our exclusive interview with Vice President Suleiman, I asked if I could see President Mubarak.
Within what seemed like just minutes, I was whisked into a reception room where he was waiting. He greeted me warmly, and we started to talk. He looked tired, but well.
He told me he felt strong and that he was relieved he had made his decision and that speech on Monday to step down. I asked him afterwards whether I could report our conversation. He said yes.
He told me that he is fed up with being president and would like to leave office now, but cannot, he says, for fear that the country would sink into chaos.
When I asked him what he thought seeing the people shouting insults about him and wanting him gone, he said, "I don't care what people say about me. Right now I care about my country, I care about Egypt."
Mubarak remains for now in the presidential palace with his family, heavily guarded by armed troops, tanks and barbed wire. We were joined by his son Gamal, who was once widely considered to be his successor. Mubarak told me it was never his intention to have his son follow him into office.
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