Live: Al Jazeera coverage of Egypt’s growing revolution

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Re: Live: Al Jazeera coverage of Egypt’s growing revolution

Postby Jeff » Fri Feb 18, 2011 2:45 pm

via FB,

We are all Khaled Said wrote:Wow! Libyan in Benighazi are saying they have now taken control of Benighazi & have controlled Benighazi radio station! :) They have started broadcasting the voice of real Libyans not Ghadaffi's propaganda. You can listen to the radio live online now (in Arabic).

http://libya.blog-video.tv/


update:

We are all Khaled Said wrote:More Libya updates: Reports that tens have been killed by Libyan authorities and Ghaddafi's non-Libyan mecenaries (reminds me of Mubarak thugs). Hospitals in Benighazi needs blood donations ASAP. Commander of a Libyan army unit in Benighazi joins protesters. Protesters take control of the city's airport & the local radio (see previous post on this page).
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Bahrain protests a worry for US and its fifth fleet

Postby DevilYouKnow » Fri Feb 18, 2011 3:31 pm

American naval presence in the Gulf is headquartered in the capital, Manama, where deadly clashes are taking place

Bahrain has been the headquarters of US naval activity in the Gulf since 1948, with the fifth fleet's area of responsibility covering the Gulf, Red Sea, Gulf of Oman, parts of the Indian Ocean and several important shipping lanes. During the 1991 Gulf war US and Bahraini aircraft flew thousands of sorties against Iraq. At the start of the Afghanistan war Bahrain provided extensive basing and overflight clearances for US aircraft, and the Bahrain monetary agency moved quickly to restrict funds controlled by suspected terrorists.

In 2003, Bahrain was named by George Bush as a major non-Nato ally. The US secretary of state, Hillary Clinton, during a visit to Manama in December, called Bahrain "a model partner", not only for the US but other countries in the region.

"I am impressed by the commitment that the government has to the democratic path that Bahrain is walking on," Clinton said. "It takes time; we know that from our own experience. There are obstacles and difficulties along the way. But America will continue working with you to promote a vigorous civil society and to ensure that democracy, human rights and civil liberties are protected by the rule of law."


http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/feb/17/bahrain-protests-us-fifth-fleet
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Re: Live: Al Jazeera coverage of Egypt’s growing revolution

Postby Plutonia » Fri Feb 18, 2011 4:51 pm

Keep those lines open:
telecomix Telecomix
by ioerror
Uncensored free internet for Libya: +494923197844321 - User:telecomix/Password:telecomix - 12 lines for lybians only, respect that #libya

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[the British] government always kept a kind of standing army of news writers who without any regard to truth, or to what should be like truth, invented & put into the papers whatever might serve the minister

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Re: Live: Al Jazeera coverage of Egypt’s growing revolution

Postby vanlose kid » Fri Feb 18, 2011 7:57 pm

Egyptians celebrate but military starts talking tough

Egypt's ruling military council says it will not tolerate any more strikes which disrupt the country's economy.

State television carried a statement in which the military said strikers would be "confronted".

Egypt's huge public sector has been hit by stoppages by groups including policemen and factory workers.

The army statement came at the end of a day in which millions of Egyptians had celebrated the victory of their revolution one week ago.

Cairo's Tahrir Square was again at the centre of events, with an estimated two million people gathering there to celebrate the removal of Hosni Mubarak and to pay tribute to the 365 people who died in the uprising.

The demonstration was also intended as a show of strength - a reminder to the current military rulers to keep their promise of a swift transition to democracy

By evening, the gathering had become a huge party, with music, singing, dancing, fireworks and food.

But the military statement struck a more sober tone.

Economic damage
The weeks of protests had already damaged the country's economy, with banks, offices and shops frequently closed, and the tourism sector badly affected.

Workers, inspired by the political protests, have also been staging strikes to demand better pay and conditions.

The military statement pointed to "some sectors that have... organised stoppages and protests, disrupting (economic) interests, halting the wheels of production and creating difficult economic conditions that could lead to the deterioration of the nation's economy."

"They will be confronted and legal steps will be taken against them to protect the security of the nation and citizens
," the statement threatened.


For many thousands in Tahrir Square, it was a chance to celebrate the victory of people power.

The warning appears directed only at strikers - the military has previously promised not to take action against the political protests - but the tough words could mark growing impatience with the demonstrators as well.

In one sign of a possible return to normality, authorities on Friday re-opened the Rafah border crossing to Gaza for Palestinians who had been stranded in Egypt by the unrest.

It was open for a few hours on Friday and will open again over the next few days, according to officials.

The border crossing has been mostly closed since 2007 as part of a blockade of Gaza by Israel and Egypt, imposed after Hamas took control of the Palestinian territory.

Hamas authorities in Gaza are hoping the new regime will reopen the crossing more permanently.

Meanwhile, some Islamist websites have posted what is believed to be a response from al-Qaeda's number two, Ayman al-Zawahiri, to the uprising in his home country.

In an audio recording which appeared to have been recorded before the resignation of President Mubarak, Zawahiri said the "reality of Egypt" was one of "ideological, political, economic, financial, moral and social corruption".

He said Mr Mubarak's rule was based on violence and fraudulent elections, in contrast with an Islamic state which would focus on morals, justice and equality.

The recording could not be independently authenticated.


http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-middle-east-12512641

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Re: Live: Al Jazeera coverage of Egypt’s growing revolution

Postby vanlose kid » Sat Feb 19, 2011 2:53 am

the fears of a... what? no highlighting, there's too much to highlight. who is this guy?

Shafik Gabr: What Egypt's Top Tycoon Fears Most
by Lloyd Grove

The well-connected Cairo industrialist Shafik Gabr warns Lloyd Grove that Hamas, Hezbollah, and Iran are trying to destabilize Egypt and the country could descend into anarchy.

Egyptian industrialist Shafik Gabr was in Davos, Switzerland, when the revolution began. It was January 26, the second day of protests in Tahrir Square, and from 1,600 miles away at the World Economic Forum—teeming with financiers, celebrities, and heads of state in the crisp, Alpine air—it didn’t look much like a revolution.

But by the time Gabr arrived in Cairo on Friday the 28th—having cut short his schmoozing to rush home on his Gulfstream 200—the planet’s most populous Arab country had changed forever.

And not necessarily for the better.

“The stock market is closed, the banks are closed, transfers are delayed. The economy is in paralysis,” Gabr told me this week from Cairo, where he is chairman and managing director of the ARTOC Group, a real estate-engineering-consumer products-media conglomerate that employs 3,500 Egyptians. “I am a person who has always believed in the importance of orderly transition with law and order, because the minute you lose law and order is the minute you enter into a dark tunnel, a vicious circle…. If we do not have law and order—which as of yet we do not—then Egypt will become a very complex, dangerous, fluid place.”

The 58-year-old Gabr—who speaks idiomatic American and has degrees in business and economics from Cairo’s American University and the University of London—is a suave and gregarious world traveler. He is supremely well-connected, not only on the Egyptian power grid but also in Washington, where he boasts contacts in the White House, Congress, the Pentagon, and the State Department.

Except when it comes to making money, Gabr is a committed incrementalist. He has become a near-billionaire while walking a fine line—making friends and influencing people in the regime of deposed President Hosni Mubarak while insistently pushing democratic reforms and economic empowerment for ordinary Egyptians.

Image
Shafik Gabr at home in Cairo, Egypt on February 28, 2009. (Credit: Jason Larkin / Getty Images)

Now gradualism had given way to anarchy. The peril was apparent as soon as Gabr landed.

“Coming from the airport, I saw people in the street throwing stones, carrying weapons,” he said. “When I came back, my daughter was at home with her grandmother, and for six and a half hours I basically walked the entire neighborhood of Mokattam”—where his family lives in a fabulous hillside mansion overlooking the city—“just to make people appreciate how dangerous things were.”

Gabr went on: “People were starting to pack things to run out of their houses. So we started civil patrols, like Neighborhood Watch, with teams of neighbors walking through the neighborhood at all hours. We had machine guns fired at us. My speculation is that the criminals broke out of jail and some of them took weapons out of police stations.”

It was obvious to Gabr that there was method to the madness.

“If we do not have law and order—which as of yet we do not—then Egypt will become a very complex, dangerous, fluid place.”

“There was a serious plan to scare the populace, no question about it,” he said. “There was a huge number of police stations that were torched all at the same time, all in the same manner. I cannot attribute it to any party. I can say very honestly that there were factors playing a major role beyond the youths in Tahrir Square, to torch, attack, break cells in the prisons for prisoners to be released, to steal police uniforms, to steal armaments, in the very same exact manner across Egypt, not just Cairo. And that requires planning. It’s almost like one of those movies where you have sleeper cells.”

Among other possibilities, Gabr suspects the culprits might have been foreign agents: “Is it the Muslim Brotherhood? I do not know. Is it other vested interests?... I do not know. But it was definitely violent people,” he said. “Among the innocent, legitimate people who were demonstrating, there were definitely others who had their own agenda. Just ask yourself the question: Who’s interested in destabilizing Egypt? You tell me. It’s people right down here in our neighborhood. Hezbollah. Hamas. Iran. They publicly spoke in favor of the fall of Egypt.”

For the past three weeks, as Egypt’s military took control of the 85 million-person country with a promise to oversee the transition to a new constitution and democratic elections, Gabr has been working tirelessly to position himself on the right side of history.

“I have been all over Cairo. I have been walking the streets,” he told me, adding that he’s been urging young demonstrators to form a party of their own in order to make their presence felt in the Egyptian body politic. “I have always been frustrated by the slow pace of reform.”

Gabr said he, too, has been a victim of government corruption. "I personally suffered in the last six or seven years from people who denied our companies permits and denied our companies even the ability to build roads to our projects, and some of our property was confiscated," he told me. "So I saw that there was a lot of favoritism by government officials who had their own agenda. I don’t know if they wanted bribes, but that’s something we’ve never done in the 40 years of our being in business. And it’s something we will never do.” ARTOC, which was founded by Gabr's father, turns 40 in November.

In the early 2000s, Gabr helped start the Arab Business Council, a multinational group of capitalists that attempted to sell economic reform and greater freedom to the region’s traditionally autocratic regimes. “Across the Arab world some people listened politely and did nothing,” he said. “Some people worked on some of the issues, including Egypt, which worked on economic reform… but not quickly enough, and not across the board.”

Not everybody was receptive. “I was told by the prime minister of an Arab country that I will not mention, ‘Do not talk about this publicly. You will be condemned in our country. You will not be able to do business or even sit without us keeping an eye on who you’re talking to.’ ”

In the end the effort fizzled and the group disbanded. “Some of them had more interest in keeping their governments the same way because they benefited from it,” Gabr said. “Others were pushing for change and found themselves being pushed back in ways that were sometimes personal and sometimes generic.”

A decade later, the change agents had moved from the boardroom to the street, and the calcified Mubarak regime found itself woefully behind the curve. “There was mismanagement of the event,” Gabr told me. “If the Egyptian leadership had provided the proper response to the demands of the 25th of January, the rest would not have happened. From the 25th of January to the day Mubarak stepped down, they were always one step too late. After that, vested interests from inside Egypt and from outside Egypt decided that the regime had to go. There were parties that worked to undermine the regime locally and countries such as United States and the European Union that kept zigzagging about where the next step was.”

President Obama—whom Gabr still praises for his June 2009 Cairo speech to the Muslim world urging tolerance, diversity and free expression—wasn’t much help either.

“I believe, quite frankly and sadly, that the U.S. administration sometimes has the best of intentions, but in terms of its implementation it zigzags wildly,” Gabr told me. “My concern as an Egyptian is that we must have peaceful, periodical and legitimate transfers of power through the ballot box. Unfortunately, with the United States saying ‘Muburak has to step down,’ “he needs to stay,’ all that zigzagging truly took that specific goal off the table. By saying ‘Mubarak needs to leave right now,’ ‘No, Mubarak needs to stay,’ the focus became Mubarak when it should have been Egypt.”

The result was a de facto military coup; transition to a civilian democracy is not a sure thing.

“Today we’re under military rule,” Gabr said. “You have no constitution. You have military laws.”

What—and who—is next? How about Shafik Gabr?

“I have never been interested and am not interested now in having a political role,” he insisted in the Egyptian equivalent of a Sherman-like statement. “My focus remains on my work and on my staff—which is, as I call them, my constituency.”

He predicted that the Muslim Brotherhood—which has been variously described in the Western media as reasonable moderates open to compromise or else Islamic radicals bent on imposing Sharia law—will likely enjoy a major role in the new Egypt.

“I believe political parties should be based on secular programs and not religion,” Gabr said. “The Muslim Brotherhood should form a political party or align with an existing one. In terms of support, I forecast that they would secure a minority position. However, they are exceedingly well organized while everybody else isn’t. Their minority position can be much more if it’s cleverly leveraged by them.”

He was dismissive of Mohamed ElBaradei, the Nobel Peace Prize winner and would-be opposition leader who has been living in Switzerland. “Some people who have been living outside Egypt have tried to position themselves—ElBaradei and others whose biggest track record is visiting Egypt,” he said. “What I really hope is that people will start getting serious and put programs on the table, not just sound bites.”

For the moment, Gabr remains “realistically optimistic,” he told me. “And by ‘realistic’ I mean there are a lot of challenges around, more than what meets the eye, that need to be dealt with. Right now we remain in this vicious circle. We’re in the twilight zone right now.”

He added: “What I’m seeing today is lack of order and lack of law. People have taken law in their own hands. People have thrown order out of the window. No society on earth has improved itself without having law and order that applies to everyone…. The worst would be if the autocracy of the regime is replaced by the autocracy of the street. Then we really have a problem.”

http://www.thedailybeast.com/blogs-and- ... and-order/


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Re: Live: Al Jazeera coverage of Egypt’s growing revolution

Postby JackRiddler » Sat Feb 19, 2011 9:09 am

Andrew Grove in the Daily Beast Interview with Gabr the Billionaire wrote:“There was a serious plan to scare the populace, no question about it,” [Gabr] said. “There was a huge number of police stations that were torched all at the same time, all in the same manner. I cannot attribute it to any party. I can say very honestly that there were factors playing a major role beyond the youths in Tahrir Square, to torch, attack, break cells in the prisons for prisoners to be released, to steal police uniforms, to steal armaments, in the very same exact manner across Egypt, not just Cairo. And that requires planning. It’s almost like one of those movies where you have sleeper cells.”

Among other possibilities, Gabr suspects the culprits might have been foreign agents: “Is it the Muslim Brotherhood? I do not know. Is it other vested interests?... I do not know. But it was definitely violent people,” he said. “Among the innocent, legitimate people who were demonstrating, there were definitely others who had their own agenda. Just ask yourself the question: Who’s interested in destabilizing Egypt? You tell me. It’s people right down here in our neighborhood. Hezbollah. Hamas. Iran. They publicly spoke in favor of the fall of Egypt.”


This is a joke, right? I mean Gabr's pretend-naivete about who had the means and motive to appropriate police gear, torch "many" police stations (without casualties or arrests reported from the incidents, neat) and break open all of the prisons on the same day, following procedures so internationally well-known and practiced that you could write an industrial how-to guide for dictators staging crack-downs, as the CIA no doubt has.

Also surely a joke are Gabr's pretend suspicions about the, hm, usual suspects. Maybe next he'll declare it's a mystery who dispatched the pro-Mubarak thugs with the Interior Ministry and police IDs to attack the protesters. (Was it an Iranian thing?! Dam, I thot Stuxnet stopped those guys!)

He's doing a nathan28 (pretending to attribute the obvious to an obtuse sinister construct for the lulz) except that the stakes are not who gets the joke on the Internet, but whether this guy gets to crush the hopes of 80 million people so that his profits remain secure.

The key strategic messages in this article are the quoted passage and the attack on Baradei -- for being a frequent flyer, says Mr. I Was Just Minding My Business At Davos When This Weird Revolution Broke Out Back Home. (How do you like that for balls?!) Baradei's the only name among the pre-revolutionary opposition who's been floated as a new president, and so, regardless of his chances or real politics, everyone who is out to trash the revolution and restore "order," but who doesn't want to appear to be trashing the now-popular youth movement, is going to hit Baradei as the placeholder, call him the choice of the naive and detached, make him look like a Westernized foreigner. This would be true whether Gabr is having a presidential sash measured for himself, or for his preferred proxy general.

The rest of the piece is the hagiography to which A Man of His Honestly Earned Status is accustomed. If we're doing pretend mysteries, how about this one: How is it possible to become a "real estate-engineering-consumer products-media conglomerate" billionaire in Egypt during the decades that the country was run as a mafia state for Mubarak cronies and allies, and to have connections "not only on the Egyptian power grid but also... in the White House, Congress, the Pentagon, and the State Department" in the same decades that Egypt was the best-bribed client state within the US empire, without yourself being...

Oh. Right. Never mind. A gentleman journalist like Andrew Grove does not ask such questions, and besides, Gabr assured him that he spent the entire time "insistently pushing democratic reforms and economic empowerment for ordinary Egyptians." Anything untoward must have been due to Hezbollah in the parlor with a candlestick, surely.

.
Last edited by JackRiddler on Sat Feb 19, 2011 6:32 pm, edited 3 times in total.
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Re: Live: Al Jazeera coverage of Egypt’s growing revolution

Postby vanlose kid » Sat Feb 19, 2011 12:40 pm

Stealing Egypt's revolution
The people on the streets of Cairo got rid of their old enemy, Hosni Mubarak. Now they should be wary of new friends.
David Africa Last Modified: 18 Feb 2011 07:05 GMT

Western diplomacy - and dollars - have propped up regimes at odds with democracy, in the name of "stability", for decades. As dictators fall, citizens must be sure of whose advice they now listen to. [GALLO/GETTY]

How ironic! A regime that has been sustained since 1979 by US funds to the tune of $2billion annually - and functioned in the interest of Western governments - falls, and we see a sudden deluge of statements welcoming the long overdue change in the country, applauding the bravery of the Egyptian people and even demonising Hosni Mubarak.

One could be fooled into believing the transformation currently taking place in Egypt is one that has been fought for by Western governments for years already - a long-sought change finally materialising.

Who would say that successive US, British and European governments have long argued that Egyptians, indeed all Arabs, are not ready for democracy - that "special circumstances" demand the denial of democracy, and that the brutality visited on them for thirty years was better than the risk of a free vote?

Until just two weeks ago, the newfound friends of the Egyptian revolution claimed - through the person of Hillary Clinton, no less - that Mubarak was the right man to lead a transformation of Egypt's politics, being the "reliable and stable" figure he has been for the past thirty years. At the same time Tony Blair, Middle East envoy of these same Euro-Atlantic powers called Mubarak "immensely courageous and a force for good".

Pontius Pilate has surely washed his hands of the ancien regime, and has now thrown his arms wide open to the Egyptian people.

The revolution belongs to Egyptians

The expropriation of the Egyptian revolution by the Euro-Atlantic axis has begun, and the Egyptian people should be alert to the dangers of this underhand attempt to steal their revolution and blunt its transformative potential.

After Mubarak's forced departure - it was no resignation, the people kicked him out - one of the first speeches beamed to the protestors in Tahrir Square was a live feed of Obama's response to Mubarak's expulsion. Eloquent as ever, Obama - in one move - distanced the US from its faithful servant, and embraced the Egyptian revolution.

His offer of assistance to promote democracy in Egypt is telling. Soon we will witness the influx of Euro-Atlantic advisors, NGOs and all types of specialists telling Egyptians what "democracy" is, and how to practice it. The Egyptian people, who sacrificed themselves and their kin, refused to be cowed into submission by the violence visited upon them by the "stable and reliable" Mubarak regime - and who ultimately succeeded in expelling this servant of Washington - know perfectly well what democracy is, and how to practice it. They have just held the first real Egyptian people's plebiscite in more than thirty years, voting Mubarak out of office with their feet and voices.

Western fear of alternatives

The embrace of the West is reminiscent of a similar experience in South Africa in the early 1990s, as the surge toward democracy and an end to the brutal apartheid regime became unstoppable. Suddenly the revolutionary movement found itself embraced by new friends in the British, US and West German governments. These same governments had previously sustained the apartheid regime for forty years, claiming that black South Africans, like Egyptians, were not ready for democracy.

They also preferred the brutal regime to what they alleged to be the "terrible alternative of a communist-inspired resistance movement", even though the latter had the obvious and overwhelming support of South Africans. As in the case of Egypt, the Euro-Atlantic axis assisted the apartheid regime through training its security forces, providing it with intelligence - such as the CIA information that led to the arrest and incarceration of Nelson Mandela for 27 years - and providing the regime with diplomatic support in the United Nations.

The post-1990 embrace of the South African revolution took the same form as Obama's promised "democracy assistance" to the Egyptian people. Advisors, training courses and policy specialists told us that democracy equals Western liberal democracy and free market economics. Our political leadership, for the most part, returned the embrace of the West with an unqualified acceptance of its authenticity and sincerity - adopting the common wisdom of Washington Consensus political and economic policy.

The results are clear for all to see: South Africa has become an even more unequal society and economic growth has benefited local and international business, while unemployment remains exceptionally high.

The Egyptian people have shown the world that anything is possible when a united people are committed to the realisation of an idea. They should not listen uncritically to their newfound friends, who will first congratulate them on the enormity of their achievement - and then tell them that some things are just not doable; who will tell them they must not be unrealistic in their expectations, and must inevitably settle for less.

Unless the Egyptian movement for change remains alert and continues to assert its political independence, this embrace will squeeze the life out of the revolution and turn it into a polished version of the recently departed Mubarak regime - a new democratic order that, again, prioritises the interest of Washington, London, Berlin and Tel Aviv over that of the Egyptian people.


http://english.aljazeera.net/indepth/op ... 68629.html

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[noticed this more than a few times this past week, does anyone else have a problem with the use of "enormity" in the sense of "immensely large in size"?]

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Re: Live: Al Jazeera coverage of Egypt’s growing revolution

Postby DevilYouKnow » Sat Feb 19, 2011 3:05 pm

"Stop saying the word 'I'"

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Re: Live: Al Jazeera coverage of Egypt’s growing revolution

Postby DevilYouKnow » Sat Feb 19, 2011 3:47 pm

"Look Ma no ego"

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Re: Live: Al Jazeera coverage of Egypt’s growing revolution

Postby DevilYouKnow » Sat Feb 19, 2011 4:06 pm

Feb 20: Day of protests in Morocco...



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Re: Live: Al Jazeera coverage of Egypt’s growing revolution

Postby Laodicean » Sat Feb 19, 2011 5:45 pm

'Day of rage' called to protest US veto

By MOHAMMED MAR'I & HISHAM ABU TAHA | ARAB NEWS

Published: Feb 19, 2011 23:49 Updated: Feb 19, 2011 23:49

RAMALLAH/GAZA CITY: Palestinians on Saturday condemned a US veto in the UN Security Council of a resolution against Jewish settlements in Palestinian territories.

Nabil Abu Rudainah, spokesman for Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, said the US action "will further complicate the situation in the Middle East." The veto encourages Israel to evade the obligations of peace, he added.

Fourteen members of the UN Security Council voted for the resolution, which was blocked by the United States Friday. The draft called on Israel to stop building settlements on occupied Palestinian territories, including East Jerusalem.

Saeb Erekat, a member of Fatah's Central Committee, said the veto "is regrettable and cannot be justified or accepted in any way." He added that the US decision encourages Israel to build more settlements.

Tawfik Al-Tirawi, also a member of Fatah's Central Committee, called on the Palestinians to observe next Friday as "a day of rage" and demonstrations in the Palestinian territories to condemn the US vote against the resolution.

Yasser Abed Rabbo, secretary-general of the PLO's Executive Committee, said that after the US vote, the Palestinians won't consider the Americans a fair mediator in the peace process.

He said Palestinian leaders had decided to make a fresh attempt at the world body's General Assembly, which convenes in New York in September.

"Our decision now is to go to the General Assembly, to pass a UN resolution against the settlements and condemn them and to emphasize its lack of legitimacy.

"And then we will put forward a draft to condemn the settlements in the UN Security Council."

Hamas said the US veto was "arbitrary." Fawzi Barhoum, a Hamas spokesman, said: "The veto reveals the reality of the clear US support to what the Zionist enemy does against our people."

Barhoum called on the Palestinian Authority to cease negotiations and liaison with Israel. "Let's start a new phase to empower the internal Palestinian unity."

Egypt denounced the US veto, saying it damaged Washington's credibility as a peace broker. "The veto, which contradicts the American public stance rejecting settlement policy, will lead to more damage to the United States' credibility on the Arab side as a mediator in peace efforts," a Foreign Ministry statement said.


http://arabnews.com/middleeast/article273481.ece
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Butchers, green grocers slash prices in solidarity with revo

Postby DevilYouKnow » Sat Feb 19, 2011 5:48 pm

Butchers, green grocers slash prices in solidarity with revolution

Several butchers and green grocers have decided to lower their prices in solidarity with the 25 January revolution.

Traders raised banners with slogans such as “No to manipulation” and “In solidarity with our people, we discount our prices.” They cut the price of tomatoes to LE1-1.25per kilo and oranges to LE1.75.

The prices of vegetables dropped to a record low on Friday, with haricot beans and peas dropping to LE3 a kilo; taro, carrots and bell peppers to LE2; and potatoes, okra and onions to LE1.5. Butchers reduced the prices of local meat from LE70 to LE40-45 a kilo.

Traders said that the price cuts will reduce their profits, but said they will willingly absorb the loss.

Ahmed Ata, a retailer, said that the decision by several green grocers to lower prices has kept the prices of vegetables low, and that retailers have not abused the low supply of goods to raise prices.

Ata said he expects prices to remain low over the coming days.


http://www.almasryalyoum.com/en/news/butchers-green-grocers-slash-prices-solidarity-revolution
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Re: Live: Al Jazeera coverage of Egypt’s growing revolution

Postby DevilYouKnow » Sat Feb 19, 2011 5:59 pm

Laodicean wrote:
Egypt denounced the US veto, saying it damaged Washington's credibility as a peace broker. "The veto, which contradicts the American public stance rejecting settlement policy, will lead to more damage to the United States' credibility on the Arab side as a mediator in peace efforts," a Foreign Ministry statement said.


http://arabnews.com/middleeast/article273481.ece


Would we have heard this from Egypt a month ago?
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Re: Butchers, green grocers slash prices in solidarity with

Postby nathan28 » Sat Feb 19, 2011 6:01 pm

DevilYouKnow wrote:
Butchers, green grocers slash prices in solidarity with revolution


It that's the work of the CIA let me know when they're hiring.
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Re: Live: Al Jazeera coverage of Egypt’s growing revolution

Postby JackRiddler » Sat Feb 19, 2011 6:40 pm

vanlose kid wrote:[noticed this more than a few times this past week, does anyone else have a problem with the use of "enormity" in the sense of "immensely large in size"?]


Ah, forget it. I've heard fancy talkers and even academics like the writer of that article do that a million times. I see the neutral use of enormity to mean "big" has entered my Macintosh dictionary as a second definition, so it's another lost battle in the war on syntax. Enormousness is a word, but it sounds wrong. It's like how people confuse enervate and energize.

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