| #1 - Posted 25 January 2011, 6:37 PM | |
Location: United States, NYC Join date: October 2009 Member #: 3761 Posts: 12112 | Iran Is Seeking Lebanon Stake as Syria Totters An international development that could have regional implications. The Arab street is possibly finally taking actions. And these could be as momentous as the 1989 Soviet collapse. Protests in Egypt and unrest in Middle East – live updates • Cairo a 'war zone' as demonstrators demand president quit • Protests continue in Tunisia and Lebanon clandestine ![]() Analysis Arab world's rattled leaders have to prove their worth to disaffected public The ball is in the governments' court as people demand the democratic voice they have been denied for too long o guardian.co.uk, Tuesday 25 January 2011 13.06 GMT Taking inspiration from Tunisia, Egyptians take to the streets against the regime of President Hosni Murabak Link to this video Angry demonstrations in Egypt, Tunisia and Lebanon today cast a spotlight on grievances throughout the Arab world that are often aired but rarely dealt with. For the first time in generations, dissidence is gathering momentum and many leaders seem rattled. Egypt's interior minister urged the country's intellectuals to impart their wisdom on the "young people" that he said were clearly behind the protest movement. The elders have shown no intention of stepping in. They know the Tunisian revolt was driven largely by a disaffected middle class, not by the rage of a dispossessed youth. They know also that in Egypt, the ball is very much in the government's court. Across the region, regimes are in the unusual position of having to prove their worth to people they have ruled over almost unchecked for decades. Two days after the Tunisian revolt, the Syrian government announced a social aid fund that would pay around $300m to the country's low earners and unemployed. The scheme, talked about for many years, was launched by presidential decree and accompanied by a tripling of a heating fuel subsidy for Syrian families, from $12-$35 per month. The sudden burst of generosity has not been lost even on government-controlled media in Damascus, which described the timing as "a coincidence". Jordan's rulers have held a series of urgent meetings to discuss the implications of the Tunisian revolt, but have yet to announce any economic measures to placate the population. "They are on a nervous watching brief," said a Jordanian official. "They know that if Tunisia spreads, there are a few steps before it gets to here." In Lebanon, a "day of rage" has been called today by supporters of the ousted prime minister Saad Hariri, who faces an impossible task of forming a new government after his fragile coalition was abandoned earlier this month by the opposition bloc. Hariri won an ostensibly democratic election 18 months ago but has been plagued ever since by power plays and regional wrangling that has left the country and its institutions in turmoil. His largely Sunni Muslim supporters claim their democratic will has been subverted by a creeping revolution launched three years ago by the Syrian and Iranian-backed Hezbollah opposition. Their anger has so far been contained to the country's Sunni strongholds, but it contains a counter-revolutionary zeal prompting observers to fear that today's civil disobedience could be the start of something far worse. All of today's protests – both on the streets and in cyberspace – share a broad common theme: that people in this part of the world have been denied a democratic voice for too long. They also share a realisation that nepotism in government, scelrosis of institutions and lack of accountability need not be a given. Edited on 5/25/2012 6:33 AM by Atabey. "If you want to sleep well at night, it's best to avoid watching the making of sausages or politics." Otto Von Bismarck |
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| #2 - Posted 25 January 2011, 8:32 PM | |
Location: United States, NYC Join date: October 2009 Member #: 3761 Posts: 12112 | RE: Cairo a 'war zone' as demonstrators demand president quit Mubarak's time may be drawing to a close! This has the markings of a historical break in the Middle East. If Egypt's government should fall, many other similar governments in the region may follow. For US/Western and Israeli interests this may have troubling consequences. Iran and Hamas must be delighted at this development. The Saudi's must be thinking: If Egypt Falls are we Next? 10.58pm: Tim Marshall, who is reporting in Egypt for Sky News, tweets: Live blog: Twitter @ITwitius Cairo Protestors split up and chased towards bridges and side streets. Sirens everywhere. Occasional tear gas still being fired. 10.19pm: My colleague Jack Shenker is still on the ground in Cairo, but reports that his phone access has been blocked, as has internet access in many areas. Here's his latest file from the Egyptian capital: Jack Shenker byline. As midnight approaches in Cairo thousands of protesters are still occupying the Tahrir Square, vowing to remain in place until the government falls. News has reached Egyptians here of deaths in Suez and the capital, as well as unconfirmed reports that Gamal Mubarak – the president's wildly unpopular son and presumed heir apparent – has fled to London, and they appear more determined than ever to hold their ground. "We will stay here all night, all week if necessary," said Youssef Hisham, a 25 year old filmmaker. "There are too many people on the streets for the police to charge – if they did, it would be a massacre. I came here today not as the representative of any political party, but simply in the name of Egypt. We have liberated the heart of the country, and Mubarak now knows that his people want him gone." As fresh waves of protesters broke through police cordons to join the throng in Tahrir, a festival atmosphere took hold – groups were cheered as they arrived carrying blankets and food, and demonstrators pooled money together to buy water and other supplies. "The atmosphere is simply amazing – everyone is so friendly, there's no anger, no harassment, just solidarity and remarkable energy," added Hisham. Drums were banged and fires started as night moved in; having established their lines, hundreds of security forces stayed put and kept their distance, although alarmingly police snipers were seen to be taking up position on nearby buildings. "They are waiting for numbers to dwindle, and then they will switch off the street lights and charge," warned Ahmed Salah, a veteran activist. "We must hold Tahrir through the night and tomorrow, so that every corner of Egypt can take us as an inspiration and rise up in revolt," claimed Salah. "It's a matter of life and death now – what happens over the next 24 hours will be vital to the history of this country. It's a very emotional moment for me." Pamphlets widely distributed amongst protesters declared that 'the spark of intifada' had been launched in Egypt. "We have started an uprising with the will of the people, the people who have suffered for thirty years under oppression, injustice and poverty," read the Arabic-language texts. "Egyptians have proven today that they are capable of taking freedom by force and destroying despotism." They went on to call for the immediate removal of President Mubarak and his government, and urged Egyptians nationwide to begin a wave of strikes, sit-ins and demonstrations across the country until these demands were met. "Long live the struggle of the Egyptian people," the pamphlets ended. "If you want to sleep well at night, it's best to avoid watching the making of sausages or politics." Otto Von Bismarck |
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| #3 - Posted 27 January 2011, 7:38 PM | |
Location: United States, NYC Join date: October 2009 Member #: 3761 Posts: 12112 | Egypt protests: Can Mubarak be toppled? ![]() 27 January 2011 Last updated at 09:28 ET Egypt protests: Can Mubarak be toppled? By Jon Leyne BBC News, Cairo Poster of Hosni Mubarak defaced in Alexandria. 25 Jan 2011 Protesters in Alexandria targeted posters of President Mubarak Anti-government demonstrations have been continuing in Egypt despite efforts by the government to close them down. But so far they have not risen to a level to threaten President Hosni Mubarak. On Wednesday, the interior ministry declared all demonstrations illegal and the police moved in quickly to break up any gatherings. Security officials say 1,000 demonstrators have been arrested. The protesters refuse to be deterred but they have had trouble assembling large crowds. Clashes continued into the night in several cities across Egypt. Some of the most violent scenes have been in Suez, where three demonstrators were killed on Tuesday. Continue reading the main story “Start Quote Across the Middle East, the situation is so unpredictable and events are moving so fast that almost anything can happen” End Quote When the authorities refused to release one of the bodies on Wednesday, the crowd set fire to a government building. So far, despite everything, normal life is continuing in most parts of the country. The vast majority of Egyptians are too busy scratching a living to join the protests. There is widespread anger and disillusionment with the government, but there are probably not more than a few thousand people actively expressing their anger. That will give some reassurance to the government. The former UN nuclear chief and Nobel Peace Prize winner Mohamed ElBaradei arrives back in Egypt tonight. That may provide some focus for the protests, but his support is more from the middle class than the masses. There have been calls for more demonstrations after Friday prayers, but so far the banned Islamist movement, the Muslim Brotherhood, has stepped back from endorsing the protests. They are the one movement that could bring out really large numbers. So far, though, these protests have been largely leaderless, rallied by messages posted on Facebook or Twitter, not by conventional politicians. As for the government, to date the response has been very familiar. A political and social protest movement has been treated simply as a security threat. Mohamed ElBaradei leaves Vienna for Egypt. 27 Jan 2011 Opposition figure Mohamed ElBaradei is supported mostly by Egypt's middle classes But this morning the Egyptian papers are full of reports that a series of emergency meetings are going on behind the scenes, as the government considers responding with wage increases, offers of new jobs, and other ways to try to answer the many grievances being expressed by the demonstrators and ordinary Egyptians. That might relieve pressure on the very poorest in society but it is not going to satisfy the more middle class young people who have been coming out on the streets. Their grievances are not just economic. They complain of a much wider malaise in Egyptian society, with a government they believe is taking the people for granted. Egyptians will tell you that this is a country that needs a dream, a vision. But for 30 years, President Mubarak's message has been much less ambitious - all about safety and security. By all accounts, this government and system is not nearly as fragile as the Tunisian government, which collapsed so spectacularly. The military, the West, and many powerful and rich people here have a big investment in keeping President Mubarak, or at least ensuring an orderly transition to another leader friendly to the West and to business. There is no sign yet that these protests have the momentum to overcome that. But across the Middle East now, the situation is so unpredictable and events are moving so fast that almost anything can happen. "If you want to sleep well at night, it's best to avoid watching the making of sausages or politics." Otto Von Bismarck |
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| #4 - Posted 27 January 2011, 9:59 PM | |
Location: United States, NYC Join date: October 2009 Member #: 3761 Posts: 12112 | Egypt unrest: Alert as mass protests loom Quote: generoso previously said: Mubarak senior is sick and frail, and Jr. does not seem to be able to continue the Mubarak dynasty in Egypt for long I agree. And here's the guy who might come out the winner: ![]() 27 January 2011 Last updated at 20:48 ET Egypt unrest: Alert as mass protests loom ![]() Egypt unrest: Friday could see the biggest protests yet * Guide: Egypt opposition demands * In pictures: Egypt protests * Egypt protests: Your stories Egyptian security forces are on high alert, with thousands of people expected to join anti-government rallies after Friday prayers. The government says it is open to dialogue but also warned of "decisive measures" as the fourth day of violent protests loomed. Widespread disruption has been reported to the internet and mobile phone messaging services. There are also reports of arrests of opposition figures overnight. The reported crackdown on the largest opposition movement, the Muslim Brotherhood, came after it said it would back the Friday protests. On Thursday, Egyptian opposition figure and Nobel laureate Mohamed ElBaradei returned to Cairo, promising to join the street protests. At least seven people have died since the protests began on Tuesday. They follow the so-called "Jasmine Revolution" in Tunisia, which saw President Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali flee into exile. 'Security sweeps' Friday's rallies in Egypt are expected to be the biggest so far, with people being urged via internet sites to join the protests after attending prayers. Continue reading the main story Analysis image of Jeremy Bowen Jeremy Bowen BBC Middle East editor, Cairo This is going to be a test for the demonstrators - and the authorities. The government is expected to deploy thousands of police and plainclothes security men. If the day passes relatively quietly, they will claim a victory. But if big demonstrations materialise - in Cairo and elsewhere in Egypt - and if the security forces struggle to control them - then the protest movement will gain a lot of momentum. Arabs across the region are looking closely at what is happening here - as are big foreign powers and Israel. Egypt is the traditional leader of the Arab Middle East - and despite an unpopular peace with Israel, is still highly influential. Protesters in other Arab countries will feel bolder if enough Egyptians decide to defy the power of the state. The protest organisers have urged people to come out in force, stressing that the religion of protesters is not relevant. Late on Thursday, the Facebook and Twitter social websites had been disrupted along with mobile phone messaging, followed by loss of many internet services. One internet user in Cairo, who wanted to remain anonymous, told the BBC the 3G was not working and SMS messages were not being received. He said: "Tomorrow's protest may exceed Tuesday's numbers, and I think tension will be high. People are trying to stay safe and are moving around in groups." Associated Press news agency reported that the elite special operations counterterrorism force, which is rarely seen on the streets, had been deployed to key locations in Cairo, including Tahrir Square, where earlier protests have been held. Egypt's interior ministry has warned it will take "decisive measures" against the protesters. Reuters news agency reported that a number of people associated with the Muslim Brotherhood were detained overnight. It quoted a security source as confirming the authorities had ordered a crackdown. The source was quoted as saying: "We have orders for security sweeps of the Brotherhood." Despite an official ban, the Muslim Brotherhood remains Egypt's largest and most organised opposition movement. BBC Middle East editor, Jeremy Bowen, in Cairo, says political sources are saying that President Hosni Mubarak's security chiefs are telling him they can handle any trouble. Mr Mubarak, 82, has not been seen in public since the protests began on Tuesday. The Egyptian government tolerates little dissent and opposition demonstrations are routinely outlawed. On Thursday, Mr Mubarak's ruling National Democratic Party said it was ready for dialogue, but did not offer any concessions. Safwat el-Sherif, the party's secretary general, said: "The NDP is ready for a dialogue with the public, youth and legal parties. But democracy has its rules and process. The minority does not force its will on the majority." He also warned protesters to remain peaceful. "I hope that all preachers at Friday prayers tomorrow are calling people to be peaceful in a clear, ritual way that never plays upon people's feelings to achieve an undesirable target." 'No option' On Thursday, Mr ElBaradei arrived in Cairo and said he would join the protests. Riot police surround praying protesters in Suez (27 January 2011) Suez was among the cities that saw protests on Thursday "I wish we did not have to go out on the streets to press the regime to act," he said. Mr ElBaradei called on the government to "listen quickly, not use violence and understand that change has to come. There's no other option." The US government, which counts Egypt as one of its most important allies in the Arab world, has so far been cautious in expressing support for either side. President Barack Obama described the protests as the result of "pent-up frustrations", saying he had frequently pressed Mr Mubarak to enact reforms. He urged both sides not to resort to violence. On Thursday there were protests in Cairo, Suez and Ismailiya, while in the Sinai region, a young Bedouin man was shot dead by security forces. Up to 1,000 people have been arrested. In Suez, police fired rubber-coated bullets, tear gas and water cannon, witnesses said. A fire station was set alight by demonstrators. Edited on 1/27/2011 10:00 PM by Atabey. "If you want to sleep well at night, it's best to avoid watching the making of sausages or politics." Otto Von Bismarck |
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| #5 - Posted 27 January 2011, 10:04 PM | |
Location: United States, NYC Join date: October 2009 Member #: 3761 Posts: 12112 | RE: Egypt unrest: Alert as mass protests loom Here are the main opposition groups. 26 January 2011 Last updated at 11:32 ET Egypt's opposition pushes demands as protests continue Crowd in Tahrir Square, Cairo carrying signs against President Mubarak. Egypt's "day of anger" brought thousands of workers, students, members of opposition parties and other activists onto the streets. Anti-government demonstrations in Egypt on Tuesday were the biggest the country has seen since the bread riots of 1977. Inspired by the recent uprising in Tunisia, they involved thousands of Egyptians from a variety of opposition groups. But just who are these opposition movements and what are their demands? 6 APRIL YOUTH MOVEMENT April 6 Youth Movement "Day of Anger" promotion April 6 members make extensive use of Facebook, Twitter and Flickr to organise pro-democracy events. ![]() This youth opposition coalition was the main organising force behind Tuesday's demonstrations. It started the call for the "day of anger" on Tuesday, 25 January, citing a list of demands on its website. They included the departure of the interior minister, an end to the restrictive emergency law, and a rise in the minimum wage. The movement is urging Egyptians to "take to the streets and keep going until the demands of the Egyptian people have been met". The movement began as an Egyptian Facebook group in 2008 to support workers in the northern industrial town of Mahalla al-Kubra and called for a national strike on 6 April that year. Members, who include many young well-educated Egyptians, have shown a greater willingness than others to risk arrest and start public protests. They have successfully organised pro-democracy rallies and a large welcoming party for the former United Nations' nuclear watchdog chief, Mohamed ElBaradei, when he returned to his home country in February 2010. The group uses Facebook, Twitter and Flickr to alert its networks about police activity, organise legal protection and publicise its efforts. NATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR CHANGE (NAC) Mohamed ElBaradei meeting supporter in Cairo. Mr ElBaradei backed the protest but has tended to avoid directly confronting Egypt's government. This umbrella organisation for opposition groups was set up by Mohamed ElBaradei when he returned to Egypt after many years abroad, declaring his wish to be a "tool for reform". Mr ElBaradei did not participate in the latest protests but he did back them in a post on his Twitter feed: "Fully support call 4 peaceful demonstrations vs. repression & corruption. When our demands for change fall on deaf ears what options remain?" Several members of his group were summoned by security services in the run-up to demonstrations. Also on Tuesday, the NAC issued a statement calling on President Hosni Mubarak not to seek a sixth term in September's presidential election and opposing any succession of power by his son, Gamal. It also demanded dissolving the newly elected parliament where the ruling NDP controls more than 90% of seats. In the NAC, leaders of liberal political parties like al-Ghad and the Democratic Front are represented alongside Islamists from the Muslim Brotherhood. The loose coalition also includes prominent intellectuals and veteran activists, among them members of Kefaya, the Egyptian Movement for Democratic Change, which organised unprecedented rallies ahead of elections in 2004. Poster of President Mubarak being torn down by protester. The NAC says President Mubarak, 82, should not run in the next elections. The NAC has demanded an end to the state of emergency and democratic and constitutional reforms. Efforts to collect a million signatures in support of its programme were significantly boosted by the active involvement of the Muslim Brotherhood. However divisions grew when the Islamist group would not join its boycott of last year's parliamentary elections. The groups were already at odds over strategy, with many activists advocating more direct confrontation of the regime than Mr ElBaradei was prepared to countenance. MUSLIM BROTHERHOOD Demonstrator confronts riot police. Egyptian officials blamed the Muslim Brotherhood for causing riots but it has not played a big role in protests so far. ![]() Despite an official ban, the Muslim Brotherhood is Egypt's largest and most organised opposition movement. The interior ministry blamed the organisation for rioting that took place on Tuesday, saying that a number of protesters "particularly a large number of those affiliated with the Muslim Brotherhood… began to riot, damage public property and throw stones at police forces". However, their numbers in the protests is unclear. The conservative leadership decided not to fully endorse the demonstrations to the anger of some younger supporters. A senior spokesman, Essam el-Erian, said he did expect large numbers of the organisation's members to participate of their own accord, and called on them to stick to peaceful methods. Leaflets outlining its political demands were distributed at the rally. Until last year, Muslim Brotherhood members (running as independent candidates) held one-fifth of seats in the last parliament. But it lost its representatives in the 2010 parliamentary election. After a first round of voting was marred by serious fraud and violence, it decided to boycott the second round. In the past, the group has proven able to draw large crowds out onto the streets but has mostly avoided directly challenging the government. It has organised large protests against Israel's war in Gaza and the US-led war in Iraq, for example. WAFD PARTY This well-established party does not enjoy popular support, but previously led the official opposition in parliament. It then boycotted the second round of the last elections because of widespread vote rigging. Along with its president, al-Sayed al-Badawi, it has often been accused of being too close to the government and giving it the cover of an official secular opposition. Like the Muslim Brotherhood, Mr al-Badawi did not join Tuesday's protests, but gave his approval for the youth of his party to participate in their personal capacity. He then announced his own demands on Arab satellite television for the dissolution of parliament, a new national unity government and new elections under a proportional representation system. AL GHAD PARTY Ayman Nur at 2004 political rally. Ayman Nour joined the popular protest but no longer has wide political support. ![]() The founder of the liberal al-Ghad (Tomorrow) party, Ayman Nour, spent over three years in prison on what were widely seen as trumped-up forgery charges after finishing a distant second to President Mubarak in the last presidential election. While he was behind bars, his party was taken over by government supporters. Its headquarters were then set on fire in a dispute between rival factions. Since his release in February 2009, Mr Nour has been a regular presence at anti-government demonstrations. His group set up a movement to oppose presidential succession before joining the National Association for Change. Mr Nour is still thought to harbour presidential ambitions but no longer has the high profile he did in 2004. He joined in Tuesday's protest. "If you want to sleep well at night, it's best to avoid watching the making of sausages or politics." Otto Von Bismarck |
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| #6 - Posted 27 January 2011, 10:43 PM | |
Location: United Kingdom, Dominican Republic Join date: August 2008 Member #: 1307 Posts: 10356 | RE: Egypt unrest: Alert as mass protests loom Quote: Atabey previously said: Here are the main opposition groups. 26 January 2011 Last updated at 11:32 ET Egypt's opposition pushes demands as protests continue Crowd in Tahrir Square, Cairo carrying signs against President Mubarak. Egypt's "day of anger" brought thousands of workers, students, members of opposition parties and other activists onto the streets. Anti-government demonstrations in Egypt on Tuesday were the biggest the country has seen since the bread riots of 1977. Inspired by the recent uprising in Tunisia, they involved thousands of Egyptians from a variety of opposition groups. But just who are these opposition movements and what are their demands? 6 APRIL YOUTH MOVEMENT April 6 Youth Movement "Day of Anger" promotion April 6 members make extensive use of Facebook, Twitter and Flickr to organise pro-democracy events. ![]() This youth opposition coalition was the main organising force behind Tuesday's demonstrations. It started the call for the "day of anger" on Tuesday, 25 January, citing a list of demands on its website. They included the departure of the interior minister, an end to the restrictive emergency law, and a rise in the minimum wage. The movement is urging Egyptians to "take to the streets and keep going until the demands of the Egyptian people have been met". The movement began as an Egyptian Facebook group in 2008 to support workers in the northern industrial town of Mahalla al-Kubra and called for a national strike on 6 April that year. Members, who include many young well-educated Egyptians, have shown a greater willingness than others to risk arrest and start public protests. They have successfully organised pro-democracy rallies and a large welcoming party for the former United Nations' nuclear watchdog chief, Mohamed ElBaradei, when he returned to his home country in February 2010. The group uses Facebook, Twitter and Flickr to alert its networks about police activity, organise legal protection and publicise its efforts. NATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR CHANGE (NAC) Mohamed ElBaradei meeting supporter in Cairo. Mr ElBaradei backed the protest but has tended to avoid directly confronting Egypt's government. This umbrella organisation for opposition groups was set up by Mohamed ElBaradei when he returned to Egypt after many years abroad, declaring his wish to be a "tool for reform". Mr ElBaradei did not participate in the latest protests but he did back them in a post on his Twitter feed: "Fully support call 4 peaceful demonstrations vs. repression & corruption. When our demands for change fall on deaf ears what options remain?" Several members of his group were summoned by security services in the run-up to demonstrations. Also on Tuesday, the NAC issued a statement calling on President Hosni Mubarak not to seek a sixth term in September's presidential election and opposing any succession of power by his son, Gamal. It also demanded dissolving the newly elected parliament where the ruling NDP controls more than 90% of seats. In the NAC, leaders of liberal political parties like al-Ghad and the Democratic Front are represented alongside Islamists from the Muslim Brotherhood. The loose coalition also includes prominent intellectuals and veteran activists, among them members of Kefaya, the Egyptian Movement for Democratic Change, which organised unprecedented rallies ahead of elections in 2004. Poster of President Mubarak being torn down by protester. The NAC says President Mubarak, 82, should not run in the next elections. The NAC has demanded an end to the state of emergency and democratic and constitutional reforms. Efforts to collect a million signatures in support of its programme were significantly boosted by the active involvement of the Muslim Brotherhood. However divisions grew when the Islamist group would not join its boycott of last year's parliamentary elections. The groups were already at odds over strategy, with many activists advocating more direct confrontation of the regime than Mr ElBaradei was prepared to countenance. MUSLIM BROTHERHOOD Demonstrator confronts riot police. Egyptian officials blamed the Muslim Brotherhood for causing riots but it has not played a big role in protests so far. ![]() Despite an official ban, the Muslim Brotherhood is Egypt's largest and most organised opposition movement. The interior ministry blamed the organisation for rioting that took place on Tuesday, saying that a number of protesters "particularly a large number of those affiliated with the Muslim Brotherhood… began to riot, damage public property and throw stones at police forces". However, their numbers in the protests is unclear. The conservative leadership decided not to fully endorse the demonstrations to the anger of some younger supporters. A senior spokesman, Essam el-Erian, said he did expect large numbers of the organisation's members to participate of their own accord, and called on them to stick to peaceful methods. Leaflets outlining its political demands were distributed at the rally. Until last year, Muslim Brotherhood members (running as independent candidates) held one-fifth of seats in the last parliament. But it lost its representatives in the 2010 parliamentary election. After a first round of voting was marred by serious fraud and violence, it decided to boycott the second round. In the past, the group has proven able to draw large crowds out onto the streets but has mostly avoided directly challenging the government. It has organised large protests against Israel's war in Gaza and the US-led war in Iraq, for example. WAFD PARTY This well-established party does not enjoy popular support, but previously led the official opposition in parliament. It then boycotted the second round of the last elections because of widespread vote rigging. Along with its president, al-Sayed al-Badawi, it has often been accused of being too close to the government and giving it the cover of an official secular opposition. Like the Muslim Brotherhood, Mr al-Badawi did not join Tuesday's protests, but gave his approval for the youth of his party to participate in their personal capacity. He then announced his own demands on Arab satellite television for the dissolution of parliament, a new national unity government and new elections under a proportional representation system. AL GHAD PARTY Ayman Nur at 2004 political rally. Ayman Nour joined the popular protest but no longer has wide political support. ![]() The founder of the liberal al-Ghad (Tomorrow) party, Ayman Nour, spent over three years in prison on what were widely seen as trumped-up forgery charges after finishing a distant second to President Mubarak in the last presidential election. While he was behind bars, his party was taken over by government supporters. Its headquarters were then set on fire in a dispute between rival factions. Since his release in February 2009, Mr Nour has been a regular presence at anti-government demonstrations. His group set up a movement to oppose presidential succession before joining the National Association for Change. Mr Nour is still thought to harbour presidential ambitions but no longer has the high profile he did in 2004. He joined in Tuesday's protest. US will send in the gunboats. His dictatorship suits the US very well. S. |
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| #7 - Posted 28 January 2011, 12:30 AM | |
Location: United States, NYC Join date: October 2009 Member #: 3761 Posts: 12112 | RE: Egypt unrest: Alert as mass protests loom http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/6cb07d40-29b0-11e0-bb9b-00144feab49a.html#axzz1CIiOEMD9 ElBaradei return raises stakes in Egypt By Roula Khalaf, Middle East editor Published: January 27 2011 01:59 | Last updated: January 27 2011 23:22 Mohamed ElBaradei, the Nobel laureate and reform advocate, warned Egypt’s president that the “barrier of fear” had been broken as he returned to Cairo ahead of renewed protests against Hosni Mubarak’s 30-year rule. Mr ElBaradei flew to Cairo from Vienna on Thursday evening following clashes between police and protesters in two Egyptian cities. Security forces reportedly shot dead one protester in the north of the country, the latest of several reported deaths. The 68-year-old Mr ElBaradei, a former Egyptian diplomat and ex-chief of the International Atomic Energy Agency, told reporters in Cairo that he would take part in protests that opposition parties and a youth protest movement have called for following Friday prayers. “The barrier of fear is broken and it will not come back,” he said. He was to meet with allies, including secular and Islamist parties and intellectuals, to try and co-ordinate a political response to the outburst of anger against the regime of Mr Mubarak, in power since 1981. Mr ElBaradei, who has been leading a campaign for political reform, said earlier that it was time for Mr Mubarak to step aside. While Mr Mubarak has remained silent since protests organised by youth activists erupted on Tuesday, the ruling National Democratic party met to discuss the unrest on Thursday and said it was prepared for dialogue but in a peaceful and legal manner. There were reports on Thursday night that the internet had been cut in the country. Abdel Gelil Mostapha, the co-ordinator of the ElBaradei-led National Association for Change, an alliance that includes youth activists and politicians , said that specific demands had already been issued. They include an end to Mr Mubarak’s rule and regime, the dissolution of parliament after last year’s rigged elections, and the formation of a transitional government. On the third day of unrest, police battled young protesters in the restive town of Suez . Witnesses in Suez, 133 km east of Cairo, told the FT that security forces used rubber bullets, tear gas and water cannon, in running battles with young men who set fire to buildings and vehicles linked to the government. Clashes were also reported in Ismailia, north east of the capital. The Cairo stock exchange plunged and Egyptian pound suffered heavy falls on political stability concerns. Joining mass movements by Tunisians and Egyptians, Yemenis demonstrating in Sana’a, the capital, urged Ali Abdullah Saleh, the president, to flee to Saudi Arabia, the destination of the ousted Tunisian leader Zein al-Abidine Ben Ali. “King Abdullah, take Ali Abdullah,” they chanted, in reference to the Saudi monarch. The protests in Yemen were the largest in a wave of daily rallies triggered by the ousting of Mr Ben Ali earlier this month in a revolt that has emboldened Arab populations across the region, and challenged autocratic regimes. International concern over the unexpected popular fury against Arab regimes has focused most intensely on Egypt, the Arab world’s most populous country and a strategic western ally. With Egyptian presidential elections due in September, and people demanding that Mr Mubarak not stand or try to impose his son Gamal, the heir apparent, Egypt, the Arab world’s most populous country and a strategic US ally, is now the focus of Arab and international attention. Politicians and public are scrambling to understand the knock-on impact of Tunisia. Essam El-Erian, a spokesman for the Muslim Brotherhood, the country’s main opposition group, said he expected to see more protests this week following the success of the youth activists. “I think it was a really big alarm for the regime,” he said. “It also created some new hope for the Egyptian people.” The state news agency quoted the interior ministry as warning on Wednesday that “provocative movements or protest gatherings or organisation of marches or demonstrations” would trigger “immediate legal procedures” and the handing over of participants to investigating authorities. Analysts in Cairo said this week’s unrest was an unprecedented crisis for Mr Mubarak’s regime because it involved ordinary people who had not taken to the streets before and were mobilised through social networking sites. But the impact will depend on the activists’ ability to sustain street action. Amr Hamzawy, an analyst at the Carnegie Middle East Centre, said the regime was facing a dilemma as it looks towards the presidential elections. “The last parliamentary elections [in 2009] discredited them [the regime] and now they are seeing a changing dynamic, with a big injection of young people who are not politicised, and a regional trend that demonstrates the Arabs’ ability to say ‘no’,” he said. Additional reporting by Michael Peel in Cairo and Abigail Fielding-Smith in Beirut Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2011. "If you want to sleep well at night, it's best to avoid watching the making of sausages or politics." Otto Von Bismarck |
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| #8 - Posted 28 January 2011, 12:31 AM | |
Location: United States, NYC Join date: October 2009 Member #: 3761 Posts: 12112 | RE: Egypt unrest: Alert as mass protests loom Washington’s Mideast policy under strain By Daniel Dombey in Washington Published: January 26 2011 22:35 | Last updated: January 26 2011 22:35 As unrest spreads from Tunisia to Egypt, the Obama administration’s Middle East policy is coming under increasing strain. The US has invested enormously in Egypt, providing it with more than $1.3bn in military aid a year and more than $28bn in development assistance since 1975. However, insiders in Washington concede the US has to work more on contingency plans for the scenarios in Egypt the administration dreads most: bloody repression of peaceful demonstrators or a rise to power of the Islamist Muslim Brotherhood party. “It’s one thing when this happens in Tunisia, a marginal Arab state, but you’re now talking about one of the two or three pillars of American security in the region being confronted with the ripple effects of the wave,” said Aaron David Miller, a former US Middle East diplomat now at the Woodrow Wilson Centre. The impression of an administration confused by how to respond was reinforced by President Barack Obama’s State of the Union speech, in which he declared that the US “stands with the people of Tunisia, and supports the democratic aspirations of all people” but made no mention of Egypt’s demonstrations. By contrast, six years earlier, George W. Bush, Mr Obama’s predecessor, had called on Egypt to “show the way toward democracy in the Middle East”. Speaking on Wednesday, Hillary Clinton, the secretary of state, urged the Egyptian government “not to prevent peaceful protests or block communications including on social media sites”. The US also called on Cairo to release detained journalists. The day before she appeared to align herself more closely with the government of Hosni Mubarak, saying the Egyptian government was “looking for ways to respond” to those needs and interests and describing it as “stable”. Anne-Marie Slaughter, policy chief at the state department, said: “We have to be engaging in relations with states and societies at the same time. We do not support people without engaging with their governments; it’s a world of states and we have all sorts of interests that have to be advanced working with states.” She added: “We don’t deal with governments regardless of the state of their people, of how they treat their people.” Washington is facing a related conundrum over Lebanon, after the nomination of a prime minister put forward by Hizbollah, which Washington classifies as a terrorist group. US diplomats say its aid there is likely to be halted, since the new Republican leadership of the House of Representatives will be even less willing to help a Hizbollah-led government than the state department. The US has seen another key ally receive a battering, with the leak of documents showing the Palestinian Authority of Mahmoud Abbas making concessions to Israel – without any result. Some US diplomats would like Washington to issue the outlines of a deal later this year as a way to kick-start the stricken peace process. "If you want to sleep well at night, it's best to avoid watching the making of sausages or politics." Otto Von Bismarck |
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| #9 - Posted 28 January 2011, 12:54 AM | |
Location: United States, NYC Join date: October 2009 Member #: 3761 Posts: 12112 | Mohamed ElBaradei: I am not the new Pharaoh Mohamed ElBaradei: I am not the new Pharaoh ![]() From Ben Wedeman, CNN August 11, 2010 -- Updated 1131 GMT (1931 HKT) Egypt's reluctant leader STORY HIGHLIGHTS * Nobel Peace Prize winner Mohamed ElBaradei may run for presidency of Egypt next year * The former UN official says President Mubarak's regime lacks legitimacy * Many Egyptians see him as the person to lead the country into a new area of democracy * A distinguished international civil servant, ElBaradei head IAEA for three consecutive terms Editor's note: Every week CNN's African Voices highlights Africa's most engaging personalities, exploring the lives and passions of people who rarely open themselves up to the camera. This week we profile Nobel Peace Prize-winner Mohamed ElBaradei who has emerged as a possible contender for Egypt's presidential elections. Watch the show on Saturdays at 1130 and 1830 GMT and Sundays at 1700 GMT. Cairo, Egypt (CNN) -- The arrival of Mohamed ElBaradei on Egypt's political scene has electrified a country where autocracy is as old as the pyramids. Nobel Peace Prize winner ElBaradei, one of Egypt's most prominent figures on the world stage, has emerged as a possible contender for the presidential elections scheduled for the autumn of 2011. Many Egyptians look to the distinguished former head of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) as the man who will shift the Arab world's biggest nation into a new era of democracy, after nearly three decades of Hosni Mubarak's authoritarian rule. "I didn't tell them I am coming to lead," he told CNN. "I'm coming to lend a hand, well, it turned out that they want me to lead. I told them I am ready to lead and I'm not going to let them down, provided that when I lead I have the people behind me." ElBaradei has yet to form a political party but hundreds of hundreds Egyptians have set up Facebook groups supporting his candidacy, joining their voices to his call for democratic change. He says he's going to run as long as he could be assured that there will be free and fair elections. "I'm not ready to give the regime the only thing they lack, which is legitimacy," ElBaradei says. "They would love that I would run and that I would get 30 or 40 percent and shake my hand and say, 'well, hard luck, next time.' That's not what I am going to do. I would only do it when there's absolutely a level playing field and if people want me to do it, of course I will do it." Egypt's aging and ailing leader, Hosni Mubarak has been in power since 1981, succeeding Anwar Sadat following his assassination by Islamic militants. In 2005, he opened up the presidential election to multiple candidates for the first time but under him Egypt remains, in essence, a one-party state. Now, a series of health issues -- including gall bladder surgery in Germany earlier in the year -- have made it unclear if 82-year-old Mubarak will run for presidency next year. I'm not ready to give the regime the only thing they lack, which is legitimacy. --Mohamed Elbaradei Cairo-born ElBaradei began working in Egypt's diplomatic service in the early 1960s. In 1980 he joined U.N. and in 1997 he became head of the IAEA, taking on some of the world's most uncompromising regimes -- including Iraq, Iran and North Korea -- over their nuclear programs. The list of his high-profile adversaries also includes former U.S. President George W. Bush. As storm clouds gathered over Iraq in 2002, ElBaradei was thrust into the center of controversy when he questioned the Bush administration's insistence that Saddam Hussein's Iraq was developing weapons of mass destruction. "We knew that Iraq at that time did not have nuclear weapons, we had to see whether they reconstituted their program; we had no shred of evidence that they did and I made that quite clear. "Some people in the Bush administration did not like that and as we now know both in London and in the U.S. they had a hidden agenda, which is regime change," he said. People ... want to look at me as a new pharaoh but that's not what I'm about. --Mohamed ElBaradei ElBaradei and the IAEA were awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in October 2005, in recognition of their efforts to prevent nuclear energy from being used for military purposes. "We got it because of our insistence that the so-called non-proliferation system, the arms control system, is not the right one and we need to get rid of nuclear weapons." After three terms as the IAEA's director general, ElBaradei stepped down at the end of 2009. He was hoping to settle into a quiet retirement, but many Egyptians seem to have a different idea about what's next for him. Yet, it's people's mounting expectations that could be as big an impediment for Elbaradei as the attempt to overhaul a political system that's been in place for 30 years. "The level of frustration, fear and desperation has created this illusion that one person can deliver," Elbaradei says. "And this is really the major problem I am facing here, to get them to understand that you have to organize in grassroots fashion. "You have to learn what happened in Latin America and Eastern Europe; take charge of your own life, that is really the basic message I am sending to people." When asked if Egypt needs a leader who is willing to be tough, ElBaradei is adamant: "That is precisely what I want to change," he says. "To change a system based on a pharaoh to a system based on institutions," he continued. "People are not comfortable with that language, they want to look at me as a new pharaoh but that's not what I'm about." "If you want to sleep well at night, it's best to avoid watching the making of sausages or politics." Otto Von Bismarck |
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| #10 - Posted 28 January 2011, 9:41 AM | |
Location: United States, NYC Join date: October 2009 Member #: 3761 Posts: 12112 | RE: Egypt 's government on last legs-says Baradei "The Egyptians are in solitary confinement – that's how unstable and uncomfortable the regime is. Being able to communicate is the first of our human rights and it's being taken away from us. I haven't seen this in any other country before." That's a good description of the Egyptian situation. The Government is panicking and this has all the hallmarks of a revolutionary situation in the brewing. The US has its hands full with this despot Mubarak who wants to resist all notions of sanity and anoint his son as the new ruler. The times demand that Egypt get on with it, the process of modernization and stop being so cruel and inept with its population. Where are the jobs, education and housing for the young people? 28 billion US dollars and what have they to show for it? Billions more in military funding. Where are the dreams or the formulation of some driving notion of modernity or future quest? Mubarak offers NADA and so should be pushed aside by the military who are the REAL ruling institution in Egypt. The US has paid them well and its time the US pulls the plug on this "Walking Corpse " called Mubarak. Edited on 1/28/2011 9:44 AM by Atabey. "If you want to sleep well at night, it's best to avoid watching the making of sausages or politics." Otto Von Bismarck |
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