Live: Al Jazeera coverage of Egypt’s growing revolution

Moderators: Elvis, DrVolin, Jeff

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

Postby crikkett » Wed Feb 02, 2011 12:21 pm

They got out.
http://twitter.com/BloggerSeif

# Again, we are out of Tahrir, close by though. Waiting to be united with some Lebanese we lost. Child will stay with us tonight. less than a minute ago via Twitter for BlackBerry®

Do not link our Facebooks to our twitter accounts please, we will be in trouble if they find out. #Jan25 3 minutes ago via Twitter for BlackBerry®

Thanks all of you for abdeen info and Mogama tips. I can't help but thank. Our lives we owe to you all. Child will go with us to Rushdi's 6 minutes ago via Twitter for BlackBerry®

@SarahKaram1, Rushdi, his sister, Shant, and Yassir with the child are together and out with us. @TrellaLB ... I can't help but be grateful
crikkett
 
Posts: 2206
Joined: Sun Sep 09, 2007 12:03 pm
Blog: View Blog (5)

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

Postby gnosticheresy_2 » Wed Feb 02, 2011 12:22 pm

crikkett wrote:They got out.
http://twitter.com/BloggerSeif

# Again, we are out of Tahrir, close by though. Waiting to be united with some Lebanese we lost. Child will stay with us tonight. less than a minute ago via Twitter for BlackBerry®

Do not link our Facebooks to our twitter accounts please, we will be in trouble if they find out. #Jan25 3 minutes ago via Twitter for BlackBerry®

Thanks all of you for abdeen info and Mogama tips. I can't help but thank. Our lives we owe to you all. Child will go with us to Rushdi's 6 minutes ago via Twitter for BlackBerry®

@SarahKaram1, Rushdi, his sister, Shant, and Yassir with the child are together and out with us. @TrellaLB ... I can't help but be grateful


yeah was just about to post that, been following his tweets all day
User avatar
gnosticheresy_2
 
Posts: 532
Joined: Mon Jan 01, 2007 7:07 pm
Blog: View Blog (0)

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

Postby vanlose kid » Wed Feb 02, 2011 12:24 pm

RT @Lujee: Caller on AJ says that some pro Mubaraks changed sides, crying that they were under a lot of pressure to do what they're doing #jan25 #Egypt

RT @ianinegypt: More gun fire, molotov cocktails. Fighting is the worst I've seen it. #egypt, #jan25

Asking Obama to pull his aid to Egypt? Yalahwy l2a e7na mish Iraq. #Egypt

RT @bencnn: White House issues pale, weak statement on situation in Cairo. Imagine if Tahrir were in Tehran. #Jan25 #Egypt

Tahrir is on fire, its far worst then you can imagine. #egypt

Live on #Aljazeera: XDirector of #Mubarak's office for 18 years quoting his former boss. #Egypt #Tahrir #Jan25 #1M #Feb1

Witnesses : Mubarak Thugs Throw Molotov Bombs on The Egyptian Museum - f*** You #Mubarak #Egypt #Tahrir

RT @bencnn: All indications are that what is happening in Tahrir Square is government-sanctioned. #Jan25 #Egypt

RT @JoeKubrick: A physician friend in Tahrir just told me that injuries are quite grave. #egypt #jan25

RT @ianinegypt: Right now it looks like the anti-Mubarak protesters have the upper hand on my street. #jan25 #egypt

RT @ianinegypt: Today is the first day as a journalist, I've feared for my safety. #egypt #jan25

Jpost - ElBaradei: Mubarak's speech was trick to retain power http://cot.ag/hCXJu3 #israel #egypt #mideast #ElBaradei #mubarak #jan25

RT @Gsquare86: Every thug we confiscate we find that his I.D. says 'police' those r the only pro-Mubarak supporters in #Egypt

RT @justimage: US taxpayers are funding the thugs attacking unarmed children, women and men protesters in Tahrir Square right now. #Egypt #jan25

RT @bencnn: People in Tahrir square begging Obama to intervene. They are terrified a bloodbath is about to occur. #Jan25 #Egypt

Dear @zahihawass f*** you; no dignity whatsoever, seriously f*** you #Jan25 #Egypt

RT @bencnn: I was not injured. Harassed? Yes. Appears the pro-government "demonstrators" have been given instructions to target press. #Jan25 #Egypt

Dumbfounded shocked and worried as night falls on Cairo the situations clearly appears to be getting significantly worse. Anarchy! #Egypt

RT @bencnn: The only way out of Tahrir is thru army lines to the right of the mosque next to the Mogamaa. #Jan25 #Egypt

RT @NotHungryCuzI8: Government owned petrol companies calling their citizens, promising salary raises if they rally for #Mubarak in #Tahrir #25jan #egypt

*
"Teach them to think. Work against the government." – Wittgenstein.
User avatar
vanlose kid
 
Posts: 3182
Joined: Wed Oct 17, 2007 7:44 pm
Blog: View Blog (0)

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

Postby Nordic » Wed Feb 02, 2011 12:34 pm

I was always worried this would turn into a Tianammen Square type of thing. I was hoping I was just being pessimistic.

They have to make it difficult. The PTB that is. Even if they know they're losing, they'll make it difficult so that other people around the world know that if they want to go this route, they'll pay with blood and flesh and bodies.

Keep in mind at this point, Israel is behind Mubarek, the last thing Israel wants is for this to succeed.

And the United States? Whose side do you think they're really on?

The money is with the PTB everywhere. They're going to make this extremely expensive.
"He who wounds the ecosphere literally wounds God" -- Philip K. Dick
Nordic
 
Posts: 14230
Joined: Fri Nov 10, 2006 3:36 am
Location: California USA
Blog: View Blog (6)

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

Postby vanlose kid » Wed Feb 02, 2011 12:38 pm

everybody loves hosni

*

AMERICANS: CALL THE WH AND TELL THEM #MUBARAK MUST GO, VIOLENCE IN #EGYPT MUST STOP! #202-456-1111 #jan25 #tahrir square PLEASE RETWEET!

RT @etharkamal: chant: NO TO INJUSTICE, NO TO GREED, NO TO THE MAN WHO CANNOT LEAD! #jan25 #egypt #tahrir

*

THE BLOOD OF THOSE DEMANDING DEMOCRACY IS BEING SHED IN THE STREETS OF CAIRO AT THE HANDS OF ARMED GANGS AMIDST THE SUSPICIOUS NEUTRALITY FROM THE ARMY AND THE PROTESTERS INCREASE THEIR INSISTENCE ON THEIR RIGHT TO PEACEFUL CHANGE

posted on: February 2, 2011


An urgent appeal from the Arabic Network for Human Rights to all honorable people and all those who defend democracy in Egypt and the world to extend their assistance and work to provide protection for the protesters demanding democracy in Egypt, who are being subjected to criminal attacks from gangs armed with knives and cudgels and sticks, and who are dealing with the protesters in a hysterical manner, as a final step to protect President Hosni Mubarak.

Only 8 hours after Mubarak claimed that he intended to enact reform, criminal gangs armed with knives and cudgels and sticks and riding on horses and camels were launched in an attempt to invade Tahrir Square and attack the peaceful protesters, in order to make it appear that there is a battle between supporters and opponents of the regime, as if there is anyone left who wants any further continuation of the regime which monopolized political power for 30 years.

Despite the occurrence of violent attacks in full view of the army forces, they have not intervened, which puts into question the “neutrality” shown by these forces!


And despite increases in the number of injured among the peaceful protesters at the hands of these gangs, the number of protesters calling for democracy is becoming much larger, and they are becoming more angry and more insistent on extracting their rights to democratic rule.

The democracy protesters have exposed the identity cards and membership cards of some of the members of these gangs, which make clear that many of them are members of the secret police.

The Arabic Network for Human Rights reaffirms that there is no power which can stop the desire of the Egyptian people to achieve democracy, especially since it is has become completely clear that the power of the dictatorship has begun to crumble, and that it is trying hysterically to save itself in the last moments, relying on the shameful complicity of the American government which has never supported democratic rule in Egypt, instead supporting a regime which protected its interests in a continuation of its experience in supporting the dictatorships of Latin America. But the U.S. has forgotten that these dictatorships fell and the falsely democratic mask of the U.S. government fell with them.

http://www.anhri.net/en/?p=2029

*
"Teach them to think. Work against the government." – Wittgenstein.
User avatar
vanlose kid
 
Posts: 3182
Joined: Wed Oct 17, 2007 7:44 pm
Blog: View Blog (0)

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

Postby vanlose kid » Wed Feb 02, 2011 12:41 pm

Belgian reporter arrested and beaten, still held
Published on Wednesday 2 February 2011.

Reporters Without Borders firmly condemns today’s arrest of Belgian journalist Serge Dumont in Cairo. The Middle East correspondent of three newspapers – Belgium’s Le Soir, Switzerland’s Le Temps and France’s La Voix du Nord – was arrested and beaten by men in plain-clothes at midday while in the central neighbourhood of Choubra. He was then taken to a military post, where he was accused of “spying” and was told he would be handed over to the security services

“We urge the Egyptian authorities to free Dumont immediately and to return all the equipment seized at the time of his arrest,” Reporters Without Borders said. “The accusation of spying is both false and utterly far-fetched. Dumont has been a well-known journalist for years, one who is widely respectly by his colleagues.”

The press freedom organization added: “Dumont’s arrest is one more example of the way the Egyptian authorities are violating the right to impart information and trying to silence international coverage. Foreign reporters, like their Egyptian colleagues, should be able to work freely. Harassing and arresting journalists is not going to help the Egyptian government to escape the crisis.”

In a phone call with Le Soir, Dumont said: “It was heavy-handed and violent. I was hit several times in the face. They claimed I was pro-Baradei. I was then taken to the military in one of the barracks on the outskirts of the city. I was given a glass of water from the Nile, they told me, so that I would catch diarrhea. I am being guarded by two soldiers with Kalashnikovs and bayonets. They say I will be taken before the intelligence services. They say I am a spy.”


http://en.rsf.org/egypt-belgian-reporte ... 39458.html

*
"Teach them to think. Work against the government." – Wittgenstein.
User avatar
vanlose kid
 
Posts: 3182
Joined: Wed Oct 17, 2007 7:44 pm
Blog: View Blog (0)

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

Postby Jeff » Wed Feb 02, 2011 12:42 pm

Nordic wrote:And the United States? Whose side do you think they're really on?


I think they're probably almost as pissed at Mubarak right now for messing up their "orderly transition" to the next managed regime as they are at Egyptians for demanding an end to it all. I don't think they care who dances on the end of their strings, so long as the strings remain, and it was obviously time to cut him loose to groom a replacement. But like Kissinger said yesterday, they expect the process to take a matter of months.
User avatar
Jeff
Site Admin
 
Posts: 11134
Joined: Fri Oct 20, 2000 8:01 pm
Blog: View Blog (0)

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

Postby barracuda » Wed Feb 02, 2011 12:44 pm

Aj, just now, shows large groups of people breaking paving stones into throwable size, disassembling the sidewalk in a calm, workmanlike manner.
The most dangerous traps are the ones you set for yourself. - Phillip Marlowe
User avatar
barracuda
 
Posts: 12890
Joined: Thu Sep 06, 2007 5:58 pm
Location: Niles, California
Blog: View Blog (0)

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

Postby Stephen Morgan » Wed Feb 02, 2011 12:48 pm

Ming Campbell was on the radio, who is the former leader of the Liberal Democrats (and deputy leader now, I think) in the coalition government. When everyone else was looking forward to a peaceful transition, and by default the assumption of power by Mubarak's son or the head of the secret police, Ming took the opportunity of a senior Egyptian army man telling the BBC that the army wouldn't fire on protesters to say that the protesters have to be very careful not to be violent and that the government would be perfectly in the right to use force if the demonstrations got out of hand. Being liberal, as everyone knows, means supporting the massacre of people with the potential to cause property damage.
Those who dream by night in the dusty recesses of their minds wake in the day to find that all was vanity; but the dreamers of the day are dangerous men, for they may act their dream with open eyes, and make it possible. -- Lawrence of Arabia
User avatar
Stephen Morgan
 
Posts: 3736
Joined: Thu Apr 19, 2007 6:37 am
Location: England
Blog: View Blog (9)

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

Postby Nordic » Wed Feb 02, 2011 12:51 pm

Jeff wrote:
Nordic wrote:And the United States? Whose side do you think they're really on?


I think they're probably almost as pissed at Mubarak right now for messing up their "orderly transition" to the next managed regime as they are at Egyptians for demanding an end to it all. I don't think they care who dances on the end of their strings, so long as the strings remain, and it was obviously time to cut him loose to groom a replacement. But like Kissinger said yesterday, they expect the process to take a matter of months.



Yes, that's basically what I meant, but you put it far more clearly and artfully than I ever could.

The U.S. is on the side of the PTB, whoever they are, and as long as the PTB are "friends" of the U.S. PTB.
"He who wounds the ecosphere literally wounds God" -- Philip K. Dick
Nordic
 
Posts: 14230
Joined: Fri Nov 10, 2006 3:36 am
Location: California USA
Blog: View Blog (6)

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

Postby seemslikeadream » Wed Feb 02, 2011 1:11 pm

The Empire's Bagman


look close that reptile tongue is there
Image
Frank Wisner
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
User avatar
seemslikeadream
 
Posts: 32090
Joined: Wed Apr 27, 2005 11:28 pm
Location: into the black
Blog: View Blog (83)

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

Postby vanlose kid » Wed Feb 02, 2011 1:20 pm

5.11pm: We've recieved a couple of very enlightening first person accounts of today's events that I would urge you to read. Thank you to both contributors.

The first is an anonymous account sent by email:

They came into the square and we blocked them peacefully, forming a human line and peacefully pushing them back . A number of thugs had infiltrated behind our human line and all of a sudden 70 people from behind us started running towards us from behind the line and started throwing rocks and stones and picking up pieces of wood from their side. This was the signal for other 'Pro-Mubarak' side to start reponding by throwing rocks. Our people retreated, they came forward - the point of stopping was where the army tanks were [next to the Egyptian Museum] and as we came forward people started throwing stones at us from the side of those tanks. This is significant because the only way you can get there is with the permission of the army. Stone throwing was happening - then suddenly someone gets up on the tank shouting "People, stop stop stop, we can't behave like this! ' - and immediately another guy comes straight up holding a picture of Mubarak and the tank is swarmed with Mubarak supporters as if they're trying to stop violence! That was clearly a photo op. Once that photo opportunity had happened the 'Mubarak Protesters' got down from top of the tanks all of a sudden. Suddenly a whole load of camels and horses with people on top of them with whips came through the entrance right by the tanks. It was so clearly orchestrated that some of the young guys from the army were breaking ranks because they were so disillusioned and didn't want to be part of this bullshit. We managed to pull people off camels, and they all went back and it all returned to a vague normality and calmed down.


And this is from the comments section, from marwaa:

The first act of violence I saw was a family crossing street into Tahrir Square and a car passed by with a group of women and suddently they got out of the car and started cursing, intimidating and throwing stones as they ran after the family harassing them and other people. We started creating human chain around the square and inside the square we were putting signs calling it "Shuhada Square" (Martyr Square) to remember the 300 people who died so far. Peace was maintained inside the square. We decided to take a break and go home. As we are walking away from the square, suddenly I see pro Mubarak protesters on horses and camels riding down from Talaat Harb Square toward us, cursing me and my husband. They had whips and all kinds of weapons on them. I called to check on my friends who'd stayed in Tahrir Square and they began to shout that they are being beaten – my friend described to me what she was seeing: a 7-year-old-boy was wounded by stones thrown at him by the pro Mubarak campaigners. The anti Mubarak camp kept chanting: Peaceful. Peaceful. Peaceful but the pro camp kept pushing in and they had all kinds of weapons on them and the stone throwing fight began. In the meantime, all they have on national TV is a broadcast of peaceful protesters chanting pro-mubarak [slogans] and callers calling in blaming everything on the anti-Mubarak protests and saying that they deserve whatever happens to them because they didn't stop.


4.56pm: We mentioned the New York Times Pulitzer prize winning columnist Nicholas Kristof earlier today (2.52pm). He has now blogged on what he saw in Tahrir:

In my area of Tahrir, the thugs were armed with machetes, straight razors, clubs and stones. And they all had the same chants, the same slogans and the same hostility to journalists. They clearly had been organized and briefed. So the idea that this is some spontaneous outpouring of pro-Mubarak supporters, both in Cairo and in Alexandria, who happen to end up clashing with other side — that is preposterous. It's difficult to know what is happening, and I'm only one observer, but to me these seem to be organized thugs sent in to crack heads, chase out journalists, intimidate the pro-democracy forces and perhaps create a pretext for an even harsher crackdown.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/news/blog/201 ... ve-updates

*
*
Last edited by vanlose kid on Wed Feb 02, 2011 1:21 pm, edited 1 time in total.
"Teach them to think. Work against the government." – Wittgenstein.
User avatar
vanlose kid
 
Posts: 3182
Joined: Wed Oct 17, 2007 7:44 pm
Blog: View Blog (0)

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

Postby beeline » Wed Feb 02, 2011 1:20 pm

.

RNN | News
Breaking News | The Demonstrators are now having control over Talaat Harb Square after driving the attackers away from it, and are calling youth for more support to ensure control over the rest of the squares.
User avatar
beeline
 
Posts: 2024
Joined: Wed May 21, 2008 4:10 pm
Location: Killadelphia, PA
Blog: View Blog (0)

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

Postby Elvis » Wed Feb 02, 2011 1:37 pm

thankyouthankyouthankyou, everyone posting updates. I don't have teevee and my web connection is too slow for AJ stream.

Frank Wisner

- recently Vice Chairman of AIG
- was on board of Enron subsidiary
- Bush envoy for negotiations on status of Kosovo
- on the board of Hakluyt & Company, private intel co.
etc.
“The purpose of studying economics is not to acquire a set of ready-made answers to economic questions, but to learn how to avoid being deceived by economists.” ― Joan Robinson
User avatar
Elvis
 
Posts: 7562
Joined: Fri Apr 11, 2008 7:24 pm
Blog: View Blog (0)

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

Postby vanlose kid » Wed Feb 02, 2011 1:43 pm

Image

Inception: Dreams of revolution
The idea of democratisation planted in Egyptian minds is beyond containment, yet Mubarak continues to resist.
Larbi Sadiki Last Modified: 02 Feb 2011 10:05 GMT

The realist terminology of the 'domino effect' does not capture the agency that Arabs are today assuming to unseat Arab hegemons, from Cairo to Sana'a.

This agency is unshackling itself from a threefold dynamic: the fear of the Arab police state; Orientalist constructions demoting Arab agency; and Euro-American democratisation theorists' obsession with structure, culture and top-down institution-building.


Similarly, this agency stumbles upon the structures of a world order driven by self-interest and impervious to the dreams of millions of Arabs to be free.

A precedent has been set in Tunisia, and Egypt is on the move. Whilst the challenges are awesome, the seeds for planting democratic dreams have begun by the display of people's power in Tunisia.

Planting a dream

"Once an idea has taken hold of the brain, it's almost impossible to eradicate," said Dom Cobb, played by Leonardo DiCaprio in Christopher Nolan's Inception.

And thus spoke the Tunisian people, ousting their dictator and unleashing shockwaves whose political reverberations will be felt for a long time. Today Nolan's leitmotif of inception has a powerful resonance in the Arab world.

The Tunisian flag showing in the riots witnessed by many Arab cities manifest both inspiration and admiration. But more importantly, Tunisia is a dream come true. The dictator who was once fearsome and thought to be invincible fell and fled rapidly.

From Tunis to Cairo, "people's power" represents a watershed, an Inception in the making. It now serves as a fount of democratic streams with a fierce and determined thirst for self-governance by the oppressed across the Arab geography.

The gimmicks seen since the ousting of Ben Ali are startling. Kuwaiti rulers offering free food, the Yemeni regime reducing prices by 10%, Jordan committing to maintenance of subsidies and raising wages, and similar measures in Egypt all did not appease the oppressed.

Waving the Tunisian flag in the ongoing uprisings represents more than an exhibitionist act of protest. It is a connection. It is an act of faith that shows that it is people's power, not dictators, that is invincible. It is an avowal to fight and not wait for democracy to come embedded in Western armies or armadas as it did in Iraq in 2003.

More potently, it is a manifestation of a budding dream to be free, and people's power is no longer an association to be made with Aquino's Philippines, Vaclav's Czechoslovakia or Walesa's Poland. In history as in the lived and lively film of life, giant steps often result from little but creative and self-empowering dreams.

The incapacity to dream is a slow death. Mohamed Bou'azizi's act of self-immolation on December 17 related to all those concerned with the human condition. The ensuing engagement through Twitter, Facebook, rap and fearless protest in Tunisia - and right now in Egypt - represent a united stand for popular sovereignty. Maybe more than that, it is akin to a text, or a manifesto, of life.

The right to dream cannot be entrusted to demagogues, megalomaniacs or leaders without the earnestness to be of import to their peoples.

The masses want to dream their own dreams, unhindered by the dreams of the collectors of baby tigers, gold diggers or junior Pharaohs. Here begins reclamation and assumption of lost agency.

Resurgence of a Renaissance

Egypt and Tunisia are the two states with the longest tradition of statehood in the Arab Middle East.

Both were a source of light in the Arab age of liberal thought from the mid-1800s. Both experimented with the first elected councils and both exercised intelligent syncretism in order to wed modernity and tradition.

Post-independence Tunisia adopted French dirigisme with some liberal secular brand of nation and state-building. Egypt fell under the spell of top-down socialist national-secular guided by a pan-Arab agenda. The latter was ruled by the military, the former by a Francophile lawyer.

However, there is one difference as far the current people's power protest sweeping the region. People's power in Tunisia has fanned the winds of popular protests in several Arab cities. Success of people's power in Egypt would change the entire Middle East region, if not the world.

It would have the effect of a collapsing house of cards; elites, policies, alliances, strategic doctrines, and Arab-Arab relations would be changed forever. It would re-write Egypt-Israeli relations as much as reposition the Palestinian question at the centre not only of Arab-Israeli relations, but also of Arab-Western relations.

This is not to say Egypt would renege on its agreements with Israel. Rather, Egypt would regain its status as the engine of the Arab world, dynamically championing fairness, legitimacy of Palestinian rights, and just solution as the only route to brave and just peace.


Democratising the Arab world would bring to power fiercely pro-Palestinian forces unencumbered by realpolitik and not desensitised by the diplomatic and ethical apologism on the question of Palestine - whether US, Quartet or UN-led. A dangerous cul de sac is obviously conspicuous.

Thus far the only party gaining from peace negotiations or absence thereof are the Israelis. This is why the democratic dream and winds of people's power blowing across the Arab world must no doubt worry Israel more than any other nation on earth.

Israel is ensconced in the knowledge that many of the existing delegitimised Arab ruling elites have more or less dropped Palestine from their foreign policy-making agendas.

Within the Arab World, should people's power succeed - and momentum is already in place for Mubarak to change his mind about running for a sixth term, and to abandon hereditary plans for his son to take over power - Libya's dynasty will be next to be swept away by the wrath of a people bored with Ghaddafi, worn out by his oppressive clan.

Egypt: What went wrong?

Mubarak has but himself to blame for the "day of wrath" that engulfed all of Egypt's metropolises, from Suez to Cairo.

After nearly 30 years in power, his Egypt lags behind in democratisation and economic development and distributive justice within. Without, Egypt's stature as a pan-Arab and global leader - particularly to its own national security, from Palestine to Sudan - has been blunted like the inept use of a water stone. Ahmed Abul Gheit has to be Egypt's worst foreign ministers in years.

It is son Gamal who, as de facto president, has been reordering the domestic agenda through key ministers and sycophantic allies of the ruling NDP.

The uncontrollable wrath expressed by millions of Egyptians today derives from the damage afflicted upon a whole nation by Gamal and his entourage of self-serving NDP stalwarts, whose corruption, nepotism and disregard for the intelligence of Egypt's people litter the pages of hundreds of opposition newspapers.

Mubarak's mistake is that he has increasingly given too much latitude to his son and his cabal, including people like Ahmed Ezz, Fathi Sorour, Safwat Sherif and Ali Eddin Helal.

Plus, the liberalising policies introduced completely ignored the question of distributive justice.

Gamal was trying to flaunt his economic chops to the tiny, global, corporate community, underestimating how dismantling the welfare state first introduced by Nasser could prove calamitous for Egypt's denizens, and for his own survival as a presidential hopeful.

But his assumption that Egypt's millions of inhabitants are happy being forever the down-trodden - what is called in Egyptian vernacular the ghalaba - that pay total deference to the effendi and pasha cast is now being disproved.

Gamal's political career is certain to meet its waterloo when the angry masses finally win the day.

It is always a gamble to play with an Egyptian's bread.

Tossing the dice

Gamal and his inner NDP circle undermined one of Mubarak senior's rules of political engagement: limited oppression with safety valves is preferable to total control of society.

This is where Gamal committed a cardinal sin by ignoring his father's coaching. He, and the likes of Ahmed Ezz and Ali Eddin Helal, gamble their futures by excluding the Muslim Brotherhood and other political parties.

This cabal premeditatedly rigged the November 2010 parliamentary elections. It thought it was the route to securing NDP domination over further constitutional gerrymandering and facilitating with little or no opposition either a sixth term for Mubarak senior or his a first term for Mubarak junior.

That was an unpardonable blunder. The 420 seats, including independents who contested the country's most openly and arrogantly rigged-in-truth NDP candidates, gave the ruling party an unprecedented majority in the newly expanded 518-seat parliament.

Mubarak senior knew his limits and devised mechanisms and safety valves for political decompression. He allowed the Muslim Brotherhood a margin of existence, knowing it was an important channel and forum for containing anti-regime anger.

He allowed the press a degree of free expression that was completely absent in Ben Ali's Tunisia. NGOs even if partly harassed were active. Kefaya, Egypt's "Movement for Change", staged many demonstrations and sit-ins that communicated messages to Mubarak and his regime.

Gamal would have been like most dictators: one who is awful at politics. But he did not have the cunning to understand these subtleties.

The end is nigh!

For Mubarak's era, the end is nigh.

Even if Mubarak - whose army far outweighs that of the ousted Ben Ali in size, strength and loyalty - prevents a repeat of the Tunisian scenario, the impending doom has already been decided in the streets of Egypt.

The NDP has been denuded and exposed for what it is - a party that draws crowds only when it bribes them with money, posts, or favours.

No NDP counter mass mobilisation has been possible in response to the riots; the usual rent-a-crowd tactic has not worked this time round.

Dismissals of cabinet members will not be enough if it will recycle old faces from the NDP to placate the masses, but holding new elections can go some way towards appeasement of the masses, political elites and civil society.

Mubarak has no option now but to announce - honourably - retirement and, against his wife's tenacity, order Gamal's own retirement from politics.

Mubarak has an advantage over the Tunisia Ben Ali ruled over: formidable political forces, strong judiciary and a long-standing tradition in free press.

They're also credible leaders, such El-Baradei, with whom he can seek an agenda to meet societal demands for urgent reform. Moreover, he has time, short as it may be, to draw the curtain on the NDP-failed-era or join Ben Ali in lonesome and humiliating exile.

The words uttered too little too late by Ben Ali were: "I have got the message."

Mubarak senior and junior have for long ignored two messages from civil society: no to prolonged rule by the father, and no to hereditary rule by the son.

The sooner they declare that, the better for Egypt and for the Mubaraks.

Larbi Sadiki is a senior lecturer in Middle East Politics at the University of Exeter, and author of Arab Democratisation: Elections without Democracy (Oxford University Press, 2009) and The Search for Arab Democracy: Discourses and Counter-Discourses (Columbia University Press, 2004), forthcoming Hamas and the Political Process (2011).

http://english.aljazeera.net/indepth/op ... 11887.html

*
"Teach them to think. Work against the government." – Wittgenstein.
User avatar
vanlose kid
 
Posts: 3182
Joined: Wed Oct 17, 2007 7:44 pm
Blog: View Blog (0)

PreviousNext

Return to General Discussion

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 53 guests