Live: Al Jazeera coverage of Egypt’s growing revolution

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

Postby AlicetheKurious » Tue May 17, 2011 7:13 am

Latest tactic of the counter-revolution: disappear diesel fuel from the domestic market for no discernible reason. Nobody knows why there is suddenly a drastic shortage of diesel, but now transport trucks can't deliver food and other essential products to markets all over the country. Are they counting on starving people into submission? How very Israeli of them.

In other news: a newspaper has published a request for "forgiveness" by Mubarak. I don't have details yet. Of course, that was after he claimed not to have stolen any money at all, and threatened to sue anyone who said otherwise, in his last communique broadcast on Saudi Arabia's "Al Arabeya" channel. Even if Egypt could do without all the billions he and his gangs stole, who will "forgive" him for the tens of thousands of innocent people tortured and murdered and wrongfully imprisoned over 3 decades? Who will "forgive" him for systematically destroying Egypt's industries, agriculture, education and health systems, and for running a brutal police state, on behalf of Egypt's enemies?

Here's an interesting interview by Norman Finkelstein:

    Norman Finkelstein on revolution, counter-revolution and Israel-Palestine
    Valentina Cattane
    Mon, 16/05/2011 - 16:46


    Image

    Norman Finkelstein, an American political scientist who specializes in the Holocaust and the Israel-Palestine conflict, is in Egypt for the first time today for a lecture at the American University in Cairo.

    Finkelstein’s political and scholarly commitment to the Palestinian issue started with the Israeli invasion of Lebanon in 1982, and continued through the first Intifada in 1987, which he experienced first hand.

    However, his personal commitment was born earlier. His parents, both Jewish Holocaust survivors, taught him not to be silent in the face of atrocities committed by Israel against Palestinians, which are in essence, they said, a repetition of the atrocities committed by the Nazis against the Jews. It is a lesson he frequently mentions.

    After visiting Tahrir Square, and before attending a protest in front of the Israeli Embassy to Cairo, Finkelstein sat with Al-Masry Al-Youm to discuss how the Egyptian revolution and the changing Middle East might affect the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

    Al-Masry Al-Youm: What are your fears and expectations about the future of Egypt?

    Norman Finkelstein: Obviously, everybody is hopeful about what’s happened, but I think everybody understands that a lot more needs to be done. I guess the main concern is that the counter-revolution has a clear idea of what it wants. It wants to keep the essentials of the old system and make just superficial changes. There does not seem to be a consensus among those who managed to get rid of Mubarak of what they want next. That to me is the most worrying.

    Al-Masry: How do you analyze the current situation in the Middle East and its impact on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict?

    Finkelstein: The first revolts – because I am not really convinced with the term "revolution" – went pretty quickly in Tunisia and Egypt, but now the counter-revolution is pretty well organized. In my opinion, the big disaster was Libya, because it raised the threshold dramatically and it gave to Western media an excuse not to look at what was going on in places like Bahrain and elsewhere. Before, death counted. Now that it turned into an armed struggle, life has become much more cheap, and that made non-violent struggle more difficult.

    The good thing is that now Egypt is playing an active role in trying to resolve the [Israeli-Palestinian] conflict. I was heartened when I read the statement last week by the Egyptian Foreign Ministry that [Egypt] does not want to talk about the "peace process" anymore; it wants to talk about peace. That seems to be transmitting the message that the Egyptians do not want to talk anymore – they want action.

    The Turks have pretty much the same attitude, as well as Europe – which wants the end of the conflict – and other movements in South America. So I think there is reason to be hopeful. If Egypt applies pressure now, maybe something will happen.

    Al-Masry: Some segments of the population considered the demonstrations in support of Palestine a dangerous distraction from the internal situation and the need to achieve stability.

    Finkelstein: I kind of feel that a little, too. The focus has to be internal. The gains have to be consolidated, and there is a danger, because the other side is looking to reverse those gains. And there has to be a little care not to invest the whole thing in the Palestine issue.

    But of course, some people are telling me that there are Egyptians who say this was their revolution, it was not Arab revolution. There is an element of chauvinism by some Egyptians in this desire to separate themselves out, which is very silly, because it is quite obviously an Arab revolution. Revolutions have been confined to the Arab world and not spilled over into Pakistan.

    Certainly, the spirit of the revolution was unity. Young people do not want to have anything to do with these sectarian divisions between Copts and Muslims. My guess is that there are some sectarian elements – some but not as significant – and there are a lot of people who are stirring up a lot of troubles. Israelis are stirring up troubles.

    If someone asks me if they are behind one of the church bombings, I would say that I believe that. Israel has a history of that. Think about the Lavon affair in 1954. That wouldn’t surprise me. I think Israelis are part of the internal counter-revolution because they are very upset about what is happening in Egypt.** They were so close with Mubarak that for sure they have connections with the internal security and with the main counter-revolutionary elements.

    Al-Masry: What is the role of Egypt in the Egypt-brokered reconciliation between Hamas and Fatah?

    Finkelstein: I think this is very significant, because I do not think they would invest their energy in that unless they wanted there to be results. It could be decisive. If both Turkey and Egypt strongly come out for a settlement of the conflict, it could make a big difference. The other big factor is if the Palestinians would simply do what was done in Egypt, get together in millions and force the Israelis out. I am not optimistic about that, but if that happens it would be over for Israel, then they would have to withdraw. They could not get away with shooting a large number of Palestinians because they would look too much like Syria and Libya.

    Al-Masry: How do you see the future relations between Egypt, Israel and Palestine?

    Finkelstein: Egypt does not want to go to war with Israel. It wants its basic rights, as does Turkey. Both want to be treated with respect and not to be taken for granted and to be walked over. Egypt will defend its own regional interests, which are not the same as Israel’s interests. Now Egyptians and Turks want Israel to make room for other powers in the region. I do not think Egypt wants more than that.

    Al-Masry: Will the current international position toward Israel remain the same after the presidential elections?

    Finkelstein: It depends on who will be elected. Personally, I think the best candidate for Egypt is ElBaradei, even though there are a lot of problems. But he has to work with the makers of the revolution. He has the wisdom and the expertise, but he needs a popular base, which he does not have.

    Al-Masry: He is often accused of being a foreigner.

    Finkelstein: ElBaradei is a proud Egyptian and he wants to restore Egypt to its rightful place in the region, so I do not consider him to be a foreigner. The bigger problem is that he comes from the elite and he does not feel comfortable being among the people. But the youth has the energy and it is not afraid of being among the people. They do not really have the knowledge when they are maneuvering with the big powers, therefore they need someone who knows what is going on and who feels confident. ElBaradei has that confidence.

    So there has to be a partnership, and each has to be humble.Young people cannot work for him but with him, and he has to understand that.

    When I kept asking the youth what’s next, they told me there are too many distractions. That is what worries me about the Palestinian issue. If you say there are too many distractions, do not create another distraction.

    Behind the closed doors, the whole Clinton administration is working with all the remnants of the Mubarak administration and intelligence forces, along with the Israelis, on how to freeze this. It makes me a little nervous that the revolution does not know how to proceed now.

    Al-Masry: How is the "third Intifada", called on May 15, related to the ongoing uprisings in the Middle Eastern countries?

    Finkelstein: First of all, you cannot call for an Intifada, as you cannot call for a revolution. People do not like to be given orders. It has to be something spontaneous, even if, of course, you need people to organize the energy once it has been released.

    My impression with Palestinians is that the spirit is still not there yet. The only place where there was a pro-Mubarak demonstration, organized by the Palestinian Authority, was the West Bank. Palestinians became quite cynical about politics. For now they watched what happened in Egypt, but they did not do anything.

    Al-Masry: How is the counter-revolution preventing real change and democratic transition in Egypt, and to what extent is this related to the key position Egypt has in the area?

    Finkelstein: Egypt is a strange place, because you can never tell whether they are naïve or hopeful. There seems to be a lot of faith in the army, but I am not sure where that comes from. Is it naïve or are they just hoping they will not have to enter into a conflict with the army to achieve their goals? The Egyptians seem to have forgotten what the American role was during the revolution. The US was completely against it until they could not do anything anymore. Link

Not naive at all (how could we be?). Hopeful, because we know who the Egyptian people are, and what they can do.

** Flashback: Ben-Eliezer: Americans Don't Realize What They've Done
"If you're not careful the newspapers will have you hating the oppressed and loving the people doing the oppressing." - Malcolm X
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Re: Live: Al Jazeera coverage of Egypt’s growing revolution

Postby AlicetheKurious » Tue May 17, 2011 7:41 am

How Israel celebrated Nakba Day:

    Israeli PM boasts national unity “unlike Egypt”
    May 11th, 2011 | By Heba Hesham | Category: Palestine

    CAIRO:
    Israel has started massive celebrations in most cities and settlements on the 63rd anniversary of the Israeli occupation of Arab territories in 1948 as part of the country’s Independence Day celebrations.

    According to Israeli public radio, the celebrations began on Monday in the centers of many Israeli cities, where they set up a number of art shows and fireworks.

    Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu sent a congratulatory message to the people where he said that “Israel is an isle of progress, democracy, development and freedom, in a region stretching from western India to the Atlantic Ocean across the Middle East and North Africa.

    “At this moment Israel has been able to put an end to the differences within its community. We must be proud of the achievements of the Jewish state and above all must feel the strength of the national unity which is the opposite of what is happening in some neighboring countries,” he added in an indirect reference to what happened in Egypt from the sectarian strife in recent days.


    The Speaker of the Israeli Knesset, Reuven Rivlin, delivered a speech during the ceremony, saying that any party, whether from the right or left, is not worth boycotting and that no center deserves ostracism from the community.

    “During the last year, we have seen repeated attempts to empty the political controversy from its real content either through the removal of certain groups or through the fatwas calling for the rejection of certain categories by the society. The differences between the various groups do not cause fear, because there is a partnership in the fate of all,” said Rivlin.

    He pointed out that Israeli democracy has faced difficult tests and passed through successfully despite the fact that the Israeli society lives in an atmosphere saturated with tension.

    In a provocative step to the feelings of Egyptians, Israeli newspaper, Ha’aretz, published photographs of Israeli soldiers directing their weapons towards Egyptian prisoners of war (POWs) in the 1956 war and taking pictures next to them. This was part of the commemoration of Israeli soldiers who were killed in the country’s wars.

    Ha’aretz also published other photos of Egyptian POWs soldiers in the war of June 5, 1967, or the “6 days” war and other pictures of Palestinian prisoners in the war of 1948.

    In its album “Israel’s wars since the 1948 war until operation Cast Lead in 2008,” the newspaper published photographs of the occupation of Sinai in 1956, as well as the image of the ship “Bat Yam,” while sinking in the War of Attrition.

    Ariel Sharon, former Israeli Prime Minister, who served as commander of armored forces in the war of June 5, was not absent in the pictures. The paper published two photos of him; the first was while he met with soldiers in Sinai, 1976, and the second was showing Menachem Begin, former Israeli Prime Minister, by his side.

    Ha’aretz also published a collection of rare photographs of the former Minister of Defense Moshe Dayan as he visited troops in Sinai; beside him was the Chief of Staff at the time Abraham Tamir.

    This is in addition to a photo of a soldier raising the Israeli flag on Sinai during the June 5 war. Moreover, there were photographs of Israeli soldiers next to the bodies in the massacres committed by Israel in Sabra and Shatila, the Palestinian refugee camps in Lebanon, 1982, and photos of the Qana massacre in 1996.


    It is noteworthy that in 2008 the Israel’s Channel Two published a video of Benjamin Ben-Eliezer** killing Egyptian POWs in cold blood, giving rise to feelings of anger among Egyptians. Yet, Tel Aviv did not provide any apology, although former Egyptian Foreign Minister Ahmed Aboul Gheit submitted a formal protest on the video.

    On the other hand, Dozens of students from the Ain ​​Shams University in Egypt organized a march in support of a third Palestinian Intifada, Tuesday, and demanded the stoppage of exporting Egyptian gas to Israel and the expulsion the Israeli ambassador to Cairo.

    A group calling for a “third Palestinian Intifada” from May 13 to May 15 has been launched on Facebook after the series of uprisings and revolutions in the Arab world. Although a large number of Facebook users joined the page, the administration of the social networking site closed the group on claims from the Israeli information Minister Yuli Edelstein that the page is inflammatory.

    Yet, the creators of the page denied any inflammatory activity saying that they only call for peaceful protests and declared that they will launch another website that would be hard for anyone to close.

    Aluf Ben, Head of reporters department in Ha’aretz, wrote in an article that “if the Palestinians decide to go out to the streets in thousands to the Old City of Jerusalem, Israel will not be able to control them, even Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu will be unable to stop them even if he committed a massacre similar to that by Muammar Gaddafi.” Link

** In the days before Hosni Mubarak was forced out of the presidency of Egypt, when he was incommunicado and refused to accept even US President Obama's phone calls, he was frequently on the telephone with his good friend Benjamin Ben Eliezer. I wonder what they really talked about?
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Re: Live: Al Jazeera coverage of Egypt’s growing revolution

Postby JackRiddler » Tue May 17, 2011 4:13 pm

crikkett wrote:http://english.ahram.org.eg/NewsContent/1/64/12294/Egypt/Politics-/Ousted-pres-Mubarak-to-ask-Egypt-for-forgiveness-o.aspx

Ousted president Mubarak to ask Egypt for forgiveness on air

Egypt's ousted president is expected to address the nation soon to ask for forgiveness, offer to return money to the country and plead for amnesty
Ahram Online, Tuesday 17 May 2011

Former ousted president Hosni Mubarak is expected to apologise to the nation soon, according to media reports, and is aiming for amnesty.

According to the Shorouk newspaper, the speech is currently being prepared and will be aired on several Egyptian and Arab channels. Mubarak will apologise for his or his family’s wrongdoing against the Egyptian people, which he is expected to blame on bad advice and misinformation given to him by his consultants.

During the speech Mubarak will also express his willingness to return most of his wealth to Egyptians. He will also stress the fact that he was once a member of the country’s armed forces and fought to protect Egypt during the 1973 war against Israel.

The ousted president will also say that he never expected to ever hold the position of president and did his best to perform his duties, as did his wife, Suzanne Thabet, who did a lot of humanitarian work for the country.

The purpose of the speech would be to ask the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces for amnesty and to not put him on trial.

The speech is expected to be written by the same speech writer who wrote his emotional address to the nation on 1 February where he promised reforms and urged the protesters in Tahrir Square to go home.

Mubarak, who stepped down from power on 11 February, has been detained in the Sharm El Sheikh International Hospital after suffering a heart attack while being questioned on 13 April. His wife is also in the hospital after she suffered from a nervous breakdown on 13 May hours after the Illicit Gains Authority ordered her detention for 15 days on charges of illegal acquisition of wealth.

Thabet has also reportedly already handed over some of her assets to the state.


Hope he remembers to throw the CIA GID AID Mossad IMF and his other foreign friends and sponsors into the list of "consultants."

My philosophy generally with such figures is that they should be tried and assuming conviction imprisoned forever, but in greater luxury than usually accorded to prisoners, as long as they're permanently dishing out full unvarnished disclosure on fucking everything they know and everything they did. That's their job, and if they do it they get nice meals, visits, TV time, fine health care, videos of their greatest hits, old sashes and uniforms, access to documents to jog their memory, etc. Call it "The Fletcher Memorial Home For Incurable Tyrants and Kings" (is everyone in?). I say so because full historical truth is an indispensable condition for a future that breaks out of the past's patterns. The less they're willing to say, or the more they try to get away with lies and omissions, the fewer privileges they should have.

What he shouldn't get is an opportunity to solicit the people with an emotional hard-sell for amnesty on his own terms. He already had the chance to say anything he wanted for 30 years, and he didn't. The speeches should be saved for his defense at trial. However, I would guess the reception this stunt will get from the people (and the AFC) will be very telling for the future course of the Egyptian revolution. It might be a clarifying moment, a boost or a bust.

.

By the way, AlicetheKurious, I've been hesitant so far to say it for fear of disturbing the harmonies on this topic, but it's a nice surprise not to be fighting with you (maybe we should just avoid engaging each other directly on certain subjects on other threads) and I can't express enough appreciation for your highly informative reports and analysis of the Egyptian situation, which I always look forward to.

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

Postby AlicetheKurious » Wed May 18, 2011 7:53 am

Re: Mubarak's request for forgiveness -- turns out it was pure disinfo and has been denied by unnamed sources extremely close to Mubarak himself, to some of the few journalists who still enjoy the public's trust. Unfortunately, as I've mentioned before, the Egyptian media, like the police and the business class and the military are full of termites and rats, especially at the highest levels, working incessantly to reverse the revolution.

Almost certainly this false information was released as a trial balloon, to gauge the public reaction if Mubarak were to make such a move. Mubarak and his advisers are so incredibly out of touch with the Egyptian people, they've been listening only to their own bullshit for so long, and are so oblivious to the contempt for the people that they betray with every action and every word, that they literally have no idea how to communicate with the public without alienating it even more and further inflaming the public against them. Each attempt to do so, or to garner sympathy for Mubarak or his wife, have backfired dramatically, so he and his advisers must be very wary of making any move now, without testing it first.

If so, and if there was indeed a suggestion for Mubarak to apologize and seek amnesty, it's been tossed into the bin. The public reaction was pure rage. As so many have said, there is just too much: we're talking about 30 years in which Mubarak has supervised the systematic destruction of a great nation and its people, on so many levels. The internet and random callers to independent tv stations like the new Tahrir channel were filled with livid reminders of everything that had led up to the January 25th revolution. The parents and other family members of victims of the Mubarak regime's torture and murders over 30 years called in and cried on air, describing what they've been through.

Me, I flashed back to 2006, when one of a fleet of ferries owned by a crony of Mubarak's sank in the Red Sea. The ship, named "Salam 98" and registered under a Panamanian flag, was unfit to be used for human transport, but the crony had used his connections and bribery to neutralize inspections. It was packed tightly with passengers too poor to pay air fares to Saudi Arabia, where many had gone to seek work, unable to find employment in Egypt. Some were elderly people who wanted to make the pilgrimage to Mecca before they died.

A fire broke out on the ship, but there was no firefighting equipment on board. The ship's automatic distress signal was ignored for hours while people were forced to leap into the cold water. Even the few safety vests there were, were defective and useless. One thousand and fifty-four people drowned: men, women and children. Mubarak promised to investigate, but instead his crony, who enjoyed immunity as a member of parliament, was allowed to escape to England, which has no extradition treaty with Egypt, where he continues to live in luxury. The Mubarak crony had insured his death traps for millions of dollars, and collected the money. The desperate families who traveled to Safaga on the Red Sea coast, were treated like shit by the authorities. After three days of getting no answers to their pleas for information, they were led to the bodies of their loved ones wrapped in garbage bags and piled in the open.

There's a lot more, but you get the picture. The one thing that sticks in my mind is the contrast between the national outpouring of grief at this horrific crime, and the image of Hosni Mubarak enjoying a football game at the same time. Announcers and talk-show hosts were openly weeping on air, the public was in deep mourning, but Mubarak appeared oblivious. Much later, during one of Mubarak's contrived tv appearances, designed to show him interacting with ordinary people, a member of the public mentioned to him that he takes a ferry across the Nile to work each day. Chuckling at his own humor, Mubarak said to him, "Don't take a sinking ferry!" and laughed loudly.

He's done many even worse things, but personally, that's one of the things that really sickened me. I don't believe there's anything he could do now to evoke the kind of pity and sympathy that he's never shown for his fellow Egyptians, even as he and his friends were bleeding them dry and selling them out. He's done too much, over too long, for Egyptians to accept anything less than justice at this point.

JackRiddler wrote:By the way, AlicetheKurious, I've been hesitant so far to say it for fear of disturbing the harmonies on this topic, but it's a nice surprise not to be fighting with you (maybe we should just avoid engaging each other directly on certain subjects on other threads) and I can't express enough appreciation for your highly informative reports and analysis of the Egyptian situation, which I always look forward to.


Let me tell you something: when it comes to politics, there's no way to avoid conflict, and I think that's a good thing. Just to give you an example, my husband and I are both good-natured, calm people who are truly best friends. But just bring up Gamal Abdelnasser and watch as we both turn into the Incredible Hulk and Hulkess. We yell operatically, we gesture wildly, we (figuratively) aim for the jugular, you name it. It's quite a show. If anybody else is around, they invariably get dragged in. Five minutes later, if something else comes up, we're back to normal, with no rancor at all, on the contrary.

It's such a complex subject, with such important implications and new revelations emerging even today, that I believe it deserves no less than to be discussed this way. We might not show it, but even after all these years we're listening to each other and learning a lot and enjoying the challenge of having to defend our views and of exposing our knowledge and ideas to a well-informed, sharply critical point of view. You might think I'm argumentative and confrontational, but I'm really not -- it's just that I usually jump in only when I vehemently disagree and have something to say, to people worth saying it to. It's nothing personal and has no bearing on whether we can get along otherwise. That depends on other factors, like fundamental values, which in your case and mine, may well be identical.

In other words, the issue is not whether there is a difference of opinion, it's how deep the difference goes:

"If you're not careful the newspapers will have you hating the oppressed and loving the people doing the oppressing." - Malcolm X
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Re: Live: Al Jazeera coverage of Egypt’s growing revolution

Postby AlicetheKurious » Wed May 18, 2011 5:50 pm

Egypt’s activists turn tables on tormentors
By Michael Birnbaum,

Image
NASR CITY, EGYPT - APRIL 29: Hossam al-Hamalawy, an Egyptian activist and blogger,
is working on compiling information about the feared state security apparatus that helped
former president Hosni Mubarak stay in power.


CAIRO —
For years, President Hosni Mubarak’s feared security forces compiled secret files on anyone they deemed a threat to the regime.

Now, with Mubarak gone, activists are assembling dossiers on their old alleged tormenters — and they’re doing it in the harsh light of the Internet.

Names are linked to allegations and photos, which are posted online. Anyone who has something to add can post a comment, much like users do on Wikipedia. What had been a dark world of prisons and abuse is slowly surfacing, even though state security made a practice of blindfolding prisoners while in custody so that they couldn’t see what was happening.

“The tables are turned,” said Hossam al-Hamalawy, 33, an activist and freelance journalist who is the main force behind the online work. “We will be doing investigations on you; we will be profiling you,” he said of the activists’ former nemeses.

The activists got a lucky break in March when they unearthed a trove of photographs inside state security headquarters that amount to a secret policemen’s yearbook: records of officers at work and play. In some, security officials smile arm in arm at weddings and parties. In others, they glower at the camera while at work.

The photos are being posted online, one by one, alongside allegations about what the officers did during the Mubarak years. The charges include cutting off Internet service across the country during the protests earlier this year, tapping phones, beating and electrocuting people while they were in prison.

And some people are shifting uncomfortably in their seats. Hamalawy said that when he first posted the photos on Flickr, the popular photo-sharing service, someone immediately alerted the company, and the pictures were deleted within 48 hours. Flickr e-mailed him saying he could post only photos that he had taken.

“I stayed in absolute living terror for two days after those pictures were taken down,” Hamalawy said. “I was worried that something would happen to me before we got them up again.” Ultimately he was fine, he said, and he hasn’t received blowback from other sources.

Neither Flickr nor Yahoo, its parent company, responded to requests for comment.

Some prominent Egyptian figures said they worried that the project could put innocent people at risk.

The State Security Investigations agency “deserves a lot of criticism,” said Nabil Fahmy, a former envoy to the United States who is now dean of the School of Public Affairs at the American University in Cairo and an ambassador at large in the Foreign Ministry. But it’s tricky when anyone can post allegations, he said. “You don’t want to be repeating something that’s untrue.”

The Egyptian Interior Ministry did not respond to requests for comment about Hamalawy’s project. Hamalawy said he was not aware of anyone who had been physically harmed as a result of being featured on the Web site. He drew comparisons to “Wanted” posters in the Old West. And he said that after some officers had been featured in an earlier iteration of the site, they had dropped out of sight.

The state security agency was officially dissolved in March and replaced by a national security organization, according to Interior Minister Mansour el-Essawy. Activists say many of the people they hold responsible for the abuses of the past are still on the job.

Even before the revolution earlier this year that ended Mubarak’s nearly 30-year rule, Hamalawy and others were working on compiling information about the state security officers who would monitor protests, sometimes undercover, and arrest activists. These activists made a habit of photographing security forces at each protest and posting the pictures online, regardless of whether they knew the names. Sometimes they would get lucky — they would find a name, or someone would post it as a comment on an entry.

“It’s useful if you are trying to figure out who tortured you or who beat you up,” said Noha Atef, 26, a human rights activist and blogger who has worked with Hamalawy on the project.

The pace of the activists’ work has sped up since March, when protesters stormed the state security headquarters just outside Cairo and found files as well as DVDs containing profile photos of State Security Investigations officers. Hamalawy is looking for other researchers to expand his efforts.

None of the officials he has featured who got jobs in the new regime has been pushed out, and a feeling of insecurity on the streets has led many people to call for keeping the much-hated emergency law, which lent the old state security agency much of its power, at least for now.

Meanwhile, Hamalawy, a rail-thin journalist who has worked at the Los Angeles Times’s Cairo bureau and at several Egyptian publications, mostly recently at Al-Ahram Online, the English-language Internet version of the state-owned daily newspaper, is continuing his efforts to compile dossiers on the people whose pictures he posts online.

“Our strongest weapon before the revolution was always naming and shaming. We didn’t have any other way,” he said. “You blindfold us so as not to let us know your face, but we’ll let people know you cannot go to these torture chambers and then back home to your normal life. Your wife should know you’re a torturer, your parents should know, your friends should know.”

The climate, however, is still not totally safe for bloggers and activists. Criticizing the interim military rulers can still land people in jail, as blogger Maikel Nabil Sanad discovered last month when he was convicted of insulting the military and disturbing public security and sentenced to three years in prison.

“The revolution is definitely not over,” Hamalawy said. “They want to get away with as much as they can.” Link
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Re: Live: Al Jazeera coverage of Egypt’s growing revolution

Postby vanlose kid » Thu May 19, 2011 10:39 am

The Second Egyptian Revolution Has Been Scheduled For May 27
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/19/2011 09:58 -0400


To all who have studied the French revolution, the most prominent part is not the actual revolt: only a regime so in love with itself is unable to realize that when you have a massive social schism between the haves and the have nots without any well-funded government safety net would result in anything but beheadings and a popular uprising (right Tim Geithner?), but the Thermidorian Reaction imminently following the first wave of discontent. And as we wrote back in March sharing our outlook on the (first) Egyptian revolution, that very soon we would see the imminent second "revulsion" part in Cairo, as it happened in Paris over 200 years ago, so it seems that a second Egyptian revolution is now on the docket. From the Middle East Media Research Institute: "In response to reports that the Supreme Council of the Egyptian Armed Forces is considering pardoning Mubarak and his family in exchange for the transfer of all their property and fortune to the state, Facebook pages have been launched calling for a second Egyptian revolution, on May 27, to replace the Council with a civil presidential council." This next time it will be different. We promise.

Full report:

"May 27, 2011 – The Second Revolution of Egyptian Rage"; "We Don't Sense [Any] Change, [So] We'll Return To Al-Tahrir [Square]"

In response to reports that the Supreme Council of the Egyptian Armed Forces is considering pardoning Mubarak and his family in exchange for the transfer of all their property and fortune to the state, Facebook pages have been launched calling for a second Egyptian revolution, on May 27, to replace the Council with a civil presidential council.

The pages also call for purging the state institutions of corruption and freeing those arrested during the revolution.

One of the pages has 22,000 members, and the April 6 party expressed its support for it.


In contrast, the Muslim Brotherhood has announced its support for the military, and its opposition to another revolution – a position expressed on other Facebook pages.


The military council itself stated that it is not interfering at all in the question of the punishment for Mubarak or anyone else from the previous regime.

Source: Facebook.com, Al-Ahram, Egypt, Al-Sharq Al-Awsat, London, May 18, 2011


http://www.zerohedge.com/article/second ... led-may-27


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

Postby AlicetheKurious » Thu May 19, 2011 6:13 pm

vanlose kid wrote:From the Middle East Media Research Institute [MEMRI]: "In response to reports that the Supreme Council of the Egyptian Armed Forces is considering pardoning Mubarak and his family in exchange for the transfer of all their property and fortune to the state, Facebook pages have been launched calling for a second Egyptian revolution, on May 27, to replace the Council with a civil presidential council." This next time it will be different. We promise.

Full report: [from MEMRI]

"May 27, 2011 – The Second Revolution of Egyptian Rage"; "We Don't Sense [Any] Change, [So] We'll Return To Al-Tahrir [Square]"

In response to reports that the Supreme Council of the Egyptian Armed Forces is considering pardoning Mubarak and his family in exchange for the transfer of all their property and fortune to the state, Facebook pages have been launched calling for a second Egyptian revolution, on May 27, to replace the Council with a civil presidential council.

The pages also call for purging the state institutions of corruption and freeing those arrested during the revolution.

One of the pages has 22,000 members, and the April 6 party expressed its support for it.


In contrast, the Muslim Brotherhood has announced its support for the military, and its opposition to another revolution – a position expressed on other Facebook pages.


The military council itself stated that it is not interfering at all in the question of the punishment for Mubarak or anyone else from the previous regime.

Source: Facebook.com, Al-Ahram, Egypt, Al-Sharq Al-Awsat, London, May 18, 2011


http://www.zerohedge.com/article/second ... led-may-27



As I mentioned before, the "reports" in question were disinfo plants and have already been debunked. The Al-Shorouk newspaper that first published them printed a retraction today. Hmm. Maybe I was too hasty in attributing the disinfo to the Mubarak family. MEMRI/Mossad certainly seem poised and eager to exploit this bombshell to the max and beat the drums for the "second revolution" that is supposed to follow. I guess Israel didn't like the first revolution and wants a "take two", one that will serve only the interests of Egypt's enemies.

Take it from me (not from MEMRI): there will be no "second revolution". The first revolution is still very much a work in progress. It is not a coup, it is not an invasion, nor a phony baloney "color revolution", it is a genuine grassroots-based, nation-wide revolution, meaning that it necessarily comprises deep seismic changes whose scale, implications and consequences cannot begin to be captured or comprehended by the facile, snap analysis demanded by audiences with short attention spans and only the most superficial understanding. Nor can they be measured or fully appreciated until years from now, maybe decades.

That being said, we do expect a huge public demonstration tomorrow, May 19, in Tahrir Square under the banner "Saving the Revolution", just like the previous Friday demonstrations, which are by necessity an important vehicle for expressing the people's will and exerting pressure on the Armed Forces Council during this transitional period. But far beyond Tahrir Square, millions of other Egyptians are engaged in the hard work of dismantling an entrenched, corrupt, police state dictatorship that was and continues to be deeply penetrated by hostile foreign interests and their agents, and building a New Egypt that reflects the will and aspirations of its free people. It's a difficult, tedious, messy and sometimes ugly, demoralizing and exhausting job, but Egyptians are up to it and they're doing it, slowly but surely. Freedom is never given, but taken, usually by force. It's certainly not for the faint of heart or those who can only handle quick, painless solutions. Ironically, the suffering and grinding injustice that the mass of Egyptians have borne over the past decades, combined with a keen sense of their history and a vibrant cultural and national identity, have developed in them the very endurance and stamina (certainly beyond what you can imagine) that they now need to save themselves and their country.

BTW, I wish you could see and hear the constant messages coming from ordinary people in other Arab countries, Algeria, Libya, Tunisia, Syria, Palestine, Jordan, Iraq, the Emirates, etc., etc., whose hopes for a better future are literally hanging on the success of the Egyptian revolution. It's as though they understand, like the Israelis certainly do, that the entire Arab world rises and falls with Egypt. So many of them say exactly that. There are thousands, pouring in every day from across the region, but one stands out for me. It said, "I'm a Saudi citizen, born and raised in Saudi Arabia of Saudi parents, but in my heart I am a proud Egyptian. Long live Egypt and the free, united Egyptian people."
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Re: Live: Al Jazeera coverage of Egypt’s growing revolution

Postby vanlose kid » Thu May 19, 2011 9:07 pm

AlicetheKurious wrote:
vanlose kid wrote:...

As I mentioned before, the "reports" in question were disinfo plants and have already been debunked. The Al-Shorouk newspaper that first published them printed a retraction today. Hmm. Maybe I was too hasty in attributing the disinfo to the Mubarak family. MEMRI/Mossad certainly seem poised and eager to exploit this bombshell to the max and beat the drums for the "second revolution" that is supposed to follow. I guess Israel didn't like the first revolution and wants a "take two", one that will serve only the interests of Egypt's enemies.

Take it from me (not from MEMRI): there will be no "second revolution". The first revolution is still very much a work in progress. It is not a coup, it is not an invasion, nor a phony baloney "color revolution", it is a genuine grassroots-based, nation-wide revolution, meaning that it necessarily comprises deep seismic changes whose scale, implications and consequences cannot begin to be captured or comprehended by the facile, snap analysis demanded by audiences with short attention spans and only the most superficial understanding. Nor can they be measured or fully appreciated until years from now, maybe decades.

That being said, we do expect a huge public demonstration tomorrow, May 19, in Tahrir Square under the banner "Saving the Revolution", just like the previous Friday demonstrations, which are by necessity an important vehicle for expressing the people's will and exerting pressure on the Armed Forces Council during this transitional period. But far beyond Tahrir Square, millions of other Egyptians are engaged in the hard work of dismantling an entrenched, corrupt, police state dictatorship that was and continues to be deeply penetrated by hostile foreign interests and their agents, and building a New Egypt that reflects the will and aspirations of its free people. It's a difficult, tedious, messy and sometimes ugly, demoralizing and exhausting job, but Egyptians are up to it and they're doing it, slowly but surely. Freedom is never given, but taken, usually by force. It's certainly not for the faint of heart or those who can only handle quick, painless solutions. Ironically, the suffering and grinding injustice that the mass of Egyptians have borne over the past decades, combined with a keen sense of their history and a vibrant cultural and national identity, have developed in them the very endurance and stamina (certainly beyond what you can imagine) that they now need to save themselves and their country.

BTW, I wish you could see and hear the constant messages coming from ordinary people in other Arab countries, Algeria, Libya, Tunisia, Syria, Palestine, Jordan, Iraq, the Emirates, etc., etc., whose hopes for a better future are literally hanging on the success of the Egyptian revolution. It's as though they understand, like the Israelis certainly do, that the entire Arab world rises and falls with Egypt. So many of them say exactly that. There are thousands, pouring in every day from across the region, but one stands out for me. It said, "I'm a Saudi citizen, born and raised in Saudi Arabia of Saudi parents, but in my heart I am a proud Egyptian. Long live Egypt and the free, united Egyptian people."


gotcha AiK, was posting this in connection with the counterrevolution stuff we talked about earlier. didn't comment on it, just saving it as a data point for now.

seems to me some people are hard at work splitting up any viable opposition to (Go Tahrir!) the regime/junta/caretaker government and the remnants of the Mubarak regime out there. just keeping an eye on it, and believe me i'm reading everything you post. thanks.

*i think the 2nd revolution is part of the counter revolution play. emphasis on "think".

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

Postby AlicetheKurious » Fri May 20, 2011 3:30 am

Fascinating article in yesterday's opposition Wafd newspaper: it alleges that Mounir Thabet, Suzanne Mubarak's brother, who is under a travel ban and whose assets are frozen both in Egypt and in Switzerland, has managed to escape Egypt via Taba airport (on the Egyptian border with Israel), with documents incriminating an unnamed person who can only be Field Marshal Tantawy, the head of the Armed Forces Council that currently rules Egypt. The article claims that Thabet is using these documents to blackmail the AFC, threatening to release them to the international media unless all charges are dropped against his sister and the rest of the Mubarak family.

This is the only the most recent bombshell, and its source is the very controversial Omar Afifi, who lives in Virginia, happens to be associated with Soros' National Endowment for Democracy and has been bizarrely credited by outfits like FOX News, the US propaganda channel Al-Hurra and Voice of America with almost single-handedly launching the Egyptian revolution. Blink and you miss another bombshell, and another, each more explosive than the one before. On the other hand, for all I know, it could be true: Tantawy wouldn't have become Armed Forces Chief of Staff and Minister of Defence unless his loyalty to Mubarak was iron-clad, and the only guarantee of such loyalty would have been Mubarak's possession of seriously incriminating evidence against him. That makes sense, but there is no solid proof.

It's very difficult: on the one hand, unity between the Egyptian army and the people is essential for the revolution's success and turning them against each other is no doubt a core strategy of the counter-revolution. Both sides would lose, big time, and even as mutual wariness and hostility mount, both sides do seem to be keenly aware of the dangers. On the other hand, many decisions of the AFC make no sense whatsoever, unless it is understood that at least some members of the AFC itself are a big part of the problem, and are agents of hostile foreign interests. For many people, only this can explain the shocking contrast between the inexplicable passivity, to the point of covert collaboration, of the police and army when thugs are burning a church or a mosque or otherwise sowing chaos and destruction, and the incredibly rapid, overwhelming, brutal crackdown on protesters surrounding the Israeli embassy, just to name one example.

As the massive regime collapses it continues to release all sorts of debris into the air, some of it toxic, some in the form of jagged projectiles, others of inflammable and volatile materials, some booby-traps, and blinding dust is everywhere.

It's ok, only to be expected.
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Re: Live: Al Jazeera coverage of Egypt’s growing revolution

Postby JackRiddler » Tue May 24, 2011 5:49 pm



http://english.aljazeera.net/news/middl ... 15521.html

Death sentence for Egyptian policeman

Officer convicted of shooting dead 20 protesters during upheaval that led to Mubarak's fall.

Last Modified: 22 May 2011 17:02

Egyptians have continued to call for Mubarak-era officials to face prosecution over protester deaths [EPA]


An Egyptian police officer convicted of killing 20 protesters during demonstrations that brought down Hosni Mubarak's government in February has been sentenced to death.

Mohamed Ibrahim Abdel-Monem was found guilty in his absence on Sunday of shooting dead "at random" 20 protesters on January 28, one of the most violent days of the uprising that lasted 18 days.

The criminal court in Cairo referred the case to the Grand Mufti, Egypt's religious authority who must approve all death sentences. Abdel-Monem has evaded capture and his present location is unknown.


I see two reasons for suspicion: Awfully high number of fatalities attributed to one shooter, and he's in abstentia?

The sentencing follows long jail terms given to Mubarak-era officials who have been found guilty of corruption in an ongoing campaign by the military-led government to address protesters' demands, including swift trial for people accused of wrongdoing.

Mubarak himself, his wife Suzanne and his powerful sons are being investigated for abuse of power and amassing illegally acquired wealth.

In May, Habib al-Adly, Egypt's former interior minister, was sentenced to 12 years in jail for money laundering and profiteering.

Al-Adly is accused of ordering police to fire upon pro-democracy protesters and is one of the most senior ministers from the former government to be put on trial.

Another former minister, Zoheir Garranah, who headed the tourism portfolio, was sentenced to five years after he was found guilty of handing out tourism licences illegally.

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

Postby JackRiddler » Tue May 24, 2011 6:59 pm


http://english.aljazeera.net/news/middl ... 55534.html

Mubarak to be tried for deaths of protesters

Egypt's public prosecutor refers former president and two sons to stand trial in a criminal court.

Last Modified: 24 May 2011 15:20


Egypt's public prosecutor has referred former president Hosni Mubarak to stand trial in a criminal court for his alleged role in the killing of anti-government protesters during the country's uprising.

The charges included "intentional murder, attempted killing of some demonstrators ... misuse of influence and deliberately wasting public funds and unlawfully making private financial gains and profits", the prosecutor said in a statement on Tuesday.

The prosecutor also referred Mubarak's two sons, Ala'a and Gamal, and a close confidant, Hussien Salam, to stand trial in a criminal court as well.

Salam, a businessman, has been blamed for a controversial deal to supply Israel with gas at lower than usual prices. He has fled the country.

'Direct involvement'

Al Jazeera's Ayman Mohyeldin, reporting from the Egyptian capital, Cairo, said there is a list of charges against the former president but the most severe charge includes the direct involvement in the killings of the protesters.

He said the charges include allegations that the former president gave the ok for senior officers of the police force as well as the former interior minister to use force in trying to suppress the protesters.

"It could very well lead to the prosecutor calling for the death penalty," our correspondent said.

"Whether or not that's going to happen is extremely premature as the case is still being formulated.

"But the general prosecutor now believes that there is enough evidence to implicate Mubarak and his two sons, as well as a fourth individual, Hussien Salam."

The decision was announced ahead of another demonstration planned in Cairo's Tahrir Square, the heart of the uprising, on Friday. Activists have called for a big turnout to demand faster reforms and a public trial for Mubarak and others.

"Every time the youth threaten to go to Tahrir Square again with a huge number of protesters, I think they make some concessions," Hassan Nafaa, a political scientist and long-time critic of Mubarak, told the Reuters news agency.

Mubarak was toppled on February 11 after an 18-day-long mass uprising from protesters demanding an end to his 30-year rule.

He was detained on April 13, a day after being hospitalised in the Red Sea resort city of Sharm el-Sheikh.


Source:
Al Jazeera and agencies

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

Postby JackRiddler » Tue May 24, 2011 7:02 pm

.

Question

How will the elections work?

Are deputies elected on a proportional basis or by one-per-district, with party lists or individually, or what?

Will there be a presidential run-off if no candidate has a first-round majority?

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

Postby AlicetheKurious » Thu May 26, 2011 7:42 am

JackRiddler wrote:.

Question

How will the elections work?

Are deputies elected on a proportional basis or by one-per-district, with party lists or individually, or what?

Will there be a presidential run-off if no candidate has a first-round majority?

.


Ah, Jack, nobody knows the answers to these burning questions but the Supreme Blah-Blah-Blah, who have not yet deigned to inform us, though parliamentary elections are only 3 months away and none of the secular or leftist parties has even been officially registered yet -- for one thing, the financial criteria are very difficult to meet, except, oddly enough, for the Muslim Brotherhood and other Islamist parties, who have seemingly endless funds and other resources. I'm in a deep funk these days, not for the first time. It's becoming all too obvious that the headquarters of the counter-revolution is the Supreme Council of the Supreme Divine Armed Stooges and their patrons, whoever they are.

Back to Tahrir Square tomorrow, but worried that the people are being worn down by this psychological and economic war of attrition. The numbers will have to be enormous in order to make a difference, but if they are, I believe they will. We'll see.
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Re: Live: Al Jazeera coverage of Egypt’s growing revolution

Postby JackRiddler » Thu May 26, 2011 9:33 am

AlicetheKurious wrote:
JackRiddler wrote:.

Question

How will the elections work?

Are deputies elected on a proportional basis or by one-per-district, with party lists or individually, or what?

Will there be a presidential run-off if no candidate has a first-round majority?

.


Ah, Jack, nobody knows the answers to these burning questions but the Supreme Blah-Blah-Blah, who have not yet deigned to inform us, though parliamentary elections are only 3 months away


Surprised and appalled. I thought I must have missed something.

and none of the secular or leftist parties has even been officially registered yet -- for one thing, the financial criteria are very difficult to meet, except, oddly enough, for the Muslim Brotherhood and other Islamist parties, who have seemingly endless funds and other resources.


...

Oof.

I'm in a deep funk these days, not for the first time. It's becoming all too obvious that the headquarters of the counter-revolution is the Supreme Council of the Supreme Divine Armed Stooges and their patrons, whoever they are.

Back to Tahrir Square tomorrow, but worried that the people are being worn down by this psychological and economic war of attrition. The numbers will have to be enormous in order to make a difference, but if they are, I believe they will. We'll see.


Stay strong, you and Egypt, is all I can say.

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

Postby 2012 Countdown » Fri May 27, 2011 12:23 pm

Video From The Second "Egyptian Revolution"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/27/2011

A week ago we disclosed that the second Egyptian revolution (because the first one apparently was a dud) was scheduled for May 27. As expected, this is precisely what has happened: "Thousands of Egyptians packed Cairo's Tahrir Square on Friday in what organisers called a "second revolution" to push for faster reforms and a speedy trial for ousted President Hosni Mubarak and his former aides. Activists complain of delays in putting Mubarak, his family and members of his ousted regime on trial and that the army has not restored order quickly enough to the country of 80 million. Egyptians are also demanding an end to endemic graft, one of the main grievances that drove thousands of protesters onto the streets in the uprising that began on Jan. 25. "After some 1,000 martyrs ... people do not see any change," said Mustafa Ali Menshawi, a 38-year-old accountant, who was helping marshal crowds flooding into the square." Granted there has been some change: "The only change we see is that the Mubarak metro station has been changed to the Martyrs station," he said." This is happening even as deposed president Hosni Mubarak could face the death penalty as he prepares to face charges of "pre-meditated killing" of protesters during the uprising that ousted him on Feb. 11. Yet the revolution was not a failure for all: in continuation of the tried and true "economic hitman" practice, whereby MNCs land in a country and generously provide it credit, merely to extract its resources, take control of its infrastructure, and subjugate people with unmanageable credit card interest payments, the IMF just announced it will lend $35 billion to Arab countries to "stabilize their economies." Oddly there was no reference to "humanitarian" intervention or doing god's work.

Video from the latest and greatest Tahrir square protest just as it is warming up:

http://www.zerohedge.com/article/video- ... revolution
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