Protest won’t fade away in Egypt and Tunisia, whatever the old order and its allies in the US think Wherever you go around Tunis, you see people demonstrating – at the airport, in front of the post office, schools, ministries, factories: simply everywhere. Protests and pickets are a feature of daily life. People sit in cafes drinking and chatting alongside demonstrators shouting slogans for change. Even small children have turned into political analysts, and are overheard mocking the speeches of Ben Ali, the deposed dictator . I saw one demonstration quietly split in two to allow the tram to pass by, reassembling promptly after its departure. Tunisians seem to have stumbled on the magical power of street protest, and are unwilling to relinquish it. After three decades of silence, self-censorship and repression there is an explosion of social demands from all sectors. Even police officers have been marching to request the forming of a union that defends their rights. Tunisia’s new rulers are besieged by endless demands that they can neither meet nor openly reject. The French word dégage (get out) – initially used by the crowds that encircled the interior ministry on 14 January – is being used to brand this new era. It is brandished against all those associated with Ben Ali’s rule – political figures, directors of state and private companies, senior civil servants, top security officials – generating a climate of perpetual tension and discontent in a society haunted by the prospect of a return to tyranny. The peaceful nature of this continuous protest movement has ensured that the country remains relatively stable in highly volatile circumstances. Post-Ben Ali Tunisia is being shaped by two conflicting dynamics: change and containment. The first is the dynamic of the street – fuelled by the demands of the young and the unorganised opposition. The second stems from the political establishment, who have the state bureaucracy, security apparatus and money on their side. Present-day Tunisia is defined by these two polarised logics. Shortly after Ben Ali’s demise thousands of men and women outraged by the persistence of the old system travelled for hundreds of miles from the country’s marginalised south and inner cities, some on foot, in what they described as a “freedom caravan” . They surrounded the office of the prime minister, Mohamed Ghannouchi, in the capital’s Kasbah district and staged an open-ended picket to demand the overthrow of the interim government, which they dismissed as a remnant of Ben Ali’s dictatorship. With the world’s attention on Cairo, their protest – which lasted for over a week – was brutally dispersed by the police, with many casualties. The public outcry that ensued compelled Mohamed Ghannouchi’s administration to make a series of unwanted concession that began with the resignation of ministers belonging to Ben Ali’s RCD party, culminating in the suspension of the party altogether. Last week 25 governors were appointed, 19 of them RCD members – but most were forced from office by protests that flared up in towns around the republic (including Gafsa and Gabelli in the south and Nabeul and Sousse in the north). A few days ago, parliament was hurriedly convened to grant the interim president – who had served under both Ben Ali and his predecessor – authority to issue edicts without consulting the legislative authority. Such moves have fuelled calls for the dissolution of the government and its replacement by a founding council to oversee the transition to democracy. This clash between a wounded old regime fighting for survival and a new order being formed painfully and arduously under popular pressure is the story of Tunisia today. These developments serve as important indicators of what could lie ahead for Egypt, its heavyweight Arab sister, now that Mubarak has gone. The containment policy that has been pursued in Tunis is already under way in Cairo. There is a stubborn will, internal and external, to salvage a system that has failed to preserve its figurehead. That is precisely what Barack Obama means by “managed change”, and what Cameron intends by ” orderly transition “. The US is seeking to avert the mistakes of 1979 – when it positioned itself in open confrontation with the Iranian masses – by using unusually reserved, non-provocative language. But beyond the rhetoric, its strategy consists in emptying change of its essence and confining it instead to a rearrangement of the existing power centres. Reality may, however, turn out to be too complex for this strategy to succeed. The US could find itself powerless to control the rhythm and direction of events on the ground. Just as Tunisia’s protest movement did not end with the ousting of Ben Ali, the millions who have filled Tahrir Square for over two weeks are unlikely to consider their mission accomplished with Mubarak’s departure. The forces unleashed by revolution will not fade into the background overnight – but are set to occupy the centre stage of politics in Egypt, as in Tunisia, for the foreseeable future. The attempt to contain events in these countries hinges on the hope that they are simply transient waves of anger that will recede with the passing of Ben Ali or Mubarak. The truth, however, is that what is under way are revolutions originating from society’s depths: political earthquakes that will transform the entire region. What we are witnessing is nothing short of the birth of the new Middle East. Tunisia Protest Middle East Egypt Soumaya Ghannoushi guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …• Libya – clashes in the eastern city of Benghazi • Bahrain – demonstrations enter third day • Iran – President Ahmadinejad says protests are doomed 8.04am: Protests continue in the Middle East and North Africa. The latest flashpoints are Bahrain, where demonstrations continue for a third day despite the intervention of King Hadad, and Libya where the arrest of a human rights campaign sparked clashes with police in the eastern city of Benghazi. Up to 2,000 people were involved in the clashes in Libya , according to the BBC. Eyewitnesses told the BBC that the unrest had been triggered by the arrest of a lawyer who is an outspoken critic of the government. The lawyer was later said to have been released, but the demonstrations reportedly continued.. They [the witnesses] say stones were thrown at police who are said to have responded with water cannon, tear gas and rubber bullets. In Bahrain protesters have occupied Pearl Roundabout, a landmark in the capital Manama. Thousands of people are expected to take part in a funeral procession for Fadhel Matrook who was killed at a funeral yesterday. Here’s a round-up by country of yesterday’s events in the region: Bahrain King Hamad tried to quell unrest by promising to investigate the killings of opposition protesters . Ali Abdulhadi Mushaima was killed in Monday’s protests. Fadhel Matrook was shot when security forces fired at crowds of people who had gathered yesterday for Mushaima’s funeral. The opposition Shia party al-Wifaq, announced that it was withdrawing from parliament in protest against the crackdown. This was a key event , writes our Middle East editor Ian Black, because political participation al-Wifaq party is seen as crucial to political stability, as a leaked US embassy cable revealed . Yemen Protests calling for removal of President Ali Abdullah Saleh have been taking place for last five days in the capital Sana’a. Yesterday pro-government supporters clashed with protesters yesterday amid alarm about increasing violence. Egypt • Elements of Egypt’s fractured political opposition are concerned that the army will hijack the revolution . They are alarmed by the army’s unilateral declarations of reform and the apparent unwillingness of senior officers to open up genuine negotiations with activists. • The Muslim Brotherhood announced that it plans to set up a political party. • The Guardian is compiling a database of those missing and detained during the unrest in Egypt . • Barack Obama said his administration was “on the right side of history” for its response to the downfall of the Mubarak regime. • CBS News journalist Lara Logan is recovering in hospital after being violently attacked and sexually assaulted by a mob in Egypt’s Tahrir Square on Friday. Iran The authorities confirmed that a second person had died in Monday’s unrest, in which security forces used teargas, pepper spray and batons against the protesters. Around 1,500 were arrested in the protests. M Ps have branded opposition leaders Mehdi Karroubi and Mirhossein Mousavi “corrupt on earth” a charge that carries the death penalty. Jordan The government sought to head off trouble by easing restrictions on public gatherings. Jordan’s interior minister Saed Hayel Srour said that protesters would still have to inform authorities of any gathering two days in advance to ensure public safety. Tunisia The new government extended a state of emergency in place since Zine al Abidine Ben Ali fled to Saudi Arabia, but ended a curfew imposed during the protests. Morocco The government appears to be trying to calm fears over price hikes on basic goods ahead of a Facebook-arranged protests planned for next Sunday. It has doubled the money it sets aside for state subsidies to counter rising global commodity prices. Middle East Bahrain Iran Libya Egypt Tunisia Yemen Jordan Morocco Matthew Weaver guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …It is one of the world’s most popular beverages, and now a radio programme in the United States claims to have cracked the secret formula for Coca Cola. It has even brewed up its own batch, to see if it tasted like the “real thing.” Al Jazeera’s Scott Heidler reports from New York.
Continue reading …The main headlines on Al Jazeera English, featuring the latest news and reports from around the world.
Continue reading …CBS News journalist Lara Logan remains in hospital after a brutal assault in Tahrir Square on the night Mubarak resigned CBS News journalist Lara Logan is recovering in hospital this week after being violently attacked and sexually assaulted by a mob in Egypt’s Tahrir Square on Friday, according to a statement by CBS. Amid the celebrations on the night of Hosni Mubarak’s resignation, Logan was reporting on the scenes in Tahrir Square for the news programme 60 Minutes when the South African-born journalist, her camera crew and security staff were overwhelmed by what the US television network described as “a dangerous element … a mob of more than 200 people whipped into frenzy”. “In the crush of the mob, she was separated from her crew. She was surrounded and suffered a brutal and sustained sexual assault and beating before being saved by a group of women and an estimated 20 Egyptian soldiers,” CBS said in its statement released on Tuesday evening. “She reconnected with the CBS team, returned to her hotel and returned to the United States on the first flight the next morning. She is currently in the hospital recovering.” Logan joined CBS in 2002, after a television news career that included a spell at GMTV covering the invasion of Afghanistan in 2001, and is a veteran of reporting from warzones including Iraq and Kosovo. CBS’s chief foreign affairs correspondent, Logan had previously been detained by the Egyptian military for a day, as part of the Mubarak regime’s crackdown on foreign journalists. Logan serves on the board of the Committee to Protect Journalists, which documented 140 attacks on journalists in Egypt during the protests this month. “We have seen Lara’s compassion at work while helping journalists who have faced brutal aggression while doing their jobs. She is a brilliant, courageous and committed reporter. Our thoughts are with Lara as she recovers,” said Paul Steiger, chairman of the committee. CBS said it will make no further comment. “Logan and her family respectfully request privacy at this time,” the network said in its statement. Egypt CBS US television Women United States The news on TV TV news Richard Adams guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Lara Logan in Cairo, reporting for CBS News The details are slight, but it makes the story no less disturbing : “60 Minutes” correspondent Lara Logan suffered a “brutal and sustained” sexual assault at the hands of a large group of men while covering the Egyptian uprising, CBS News said. It happened during Friday’s jubilation in Cairo’s Tahrir Square after President Hosni Mubarak finally stepped down. “A dangerous element” in the crowd surrounded Logan and her crew, said CBS spokesman Kevin Tedesco. “It was a mob of more than 200 people whipped into a frenzy. In the crush of the mob, she was separated from her crew,” he said in a statement Tuesday. “She was surrounded and suffered a brutal and sustained sexual assault and beating before being saved by a group of women and an estimated 20 Egyptian soldiers.” Logan went home to the United States on the first flight Saturday and is recovering in a hospital, Tedesco said. [..] At least 140 reporters have been injured or killed covering Egypt since Jan. 30, according to the Committee to Protect Journalists. Logan’s personal life has been fodder for tabloids–and I’m not entirely sure some of it wasn’t furthered by DC types threatened by her no-nonsense reporting of the f ailures in Iraq and Afghanistan and her lack of fear of calling out pundits (aka Fox’s Bill O’Reilly and Laura Ingraham ) for their studio armchair war coverage heavy on spin and light on facts–but for the sake of her husband and child, I hope that the media respects her desire for privacy on this. It would be truly horrible to learn that she had been victimized quite so brutally again by pro-government forces because of her desire to report the truth on the ground.
Continue reading …Clarence Thomas is falling into a deep, deep ethical hole, deeper even than the one he dropped into when he failed to disclose his wife’s income for 20 years. As more facts come to light , it’s obvious he failed to disclose quite a bit, including the $100,000 Citizens United spent on his behalf in 1991 to support his nomination. That would be an in-kind contribution which should have been disclosed as such. A Time Magazine article from 1991 has the details: Washington-area television viewers were startled last week to see three familiar senatorial faces pop up on their screens above the words WHO WILL JUDGE THE JUDGE? The follow-up question — “How many of these liberal Democrats could themselves pass ethical scrutiny?” — was hardly necessary, since the faces were those of Edward Kennedy, Joseph Biden and Alan Cranston, all scarred veterans of highly publicized scandals, from Chappaquiddick to plagiarized speeches to the Keating Five. The ad, produced by two independent right-wing groups, was intended to bolster Supreme Court nominee Clarence Thomas’ confirmation chances by pointing the finger at three liberal Democrats who seemed likely to oppose him. Not coincidentally, the ad was produced by the same people who launched the 1988 Willie Horton spot that branded Michael Dukakis soft on crime but left George Bush open to charges of racism. Anxious not to be associated with such negative campaigning this time around, Bush quickly labeled the attacks on the Senators “counterproductive.” Thomas pronounced them “vicious.” His chief Senate supporter, Missouri Republican John Danforth, called them “sleazy” and “scurrilous.” Although Bush and chief of staff John Sununu demanded that the ads be pulled, their right-wing sponsors — L. Brent Bozell III, chairman of the Conservative Victory Committee, and Floyd Brown, chairman of Citizens United — refused. Calling the campaign a “pre-emptive strike” to counter anticipated anti-Thomas commercials, as well as retaliation for the 1987 spots that helped defeat Supreme Court nominee Robert Bork, they vowed to keep running the messages for at least two weeks “until the left agrees to discontinue all its efforts against Judge Thomas.” Thus far, that has been a mostly fitful effort at best, but Brown and Bozell appeared to see the flag of revolution rising above it. “Unfortunately,” the two men declared in a written statement, “the Administration has no desire to confront the radical left.” So Citizens United pays to produce and air an ad with the stated intention of bullying “the left” into silence over his nomination, and Clarence Thomas fails to disclose that before hearing last year’s Citizens United case that corrupted our election process? Ironically, the case ProtectOurElections is relying on is Caperton v Massey , ruled on by the Supreme Court in 2009. Predictably, Thomas, Scalia, Roberts and Alito dissented. Applying Caperton to Citizens United, it is clear that Justice Thomas, after having been supported by an effective advertising campaign that reaped millions in free media time, labored under an actual conflict of interest that denied the FEC due process. Justice Thomas owed his spot on the Court to Citizens United Foundation. That fact undermined his ability to put aside his bias in favor of Citizens United. Justice Thomas was required to disclose his relationship with Citizens United and sua sponte recuse himself from the case. Instead, he hid that relationship and cast the deciding vote in favor of Citizens United. This corrupted the administration of justice and violated D.C. Rules of Professional Conduct Rule 8.4—Misconduct, which states in pertinent part: “It is professional misconduct for a lawyer to: (a) Violate or attempt to violate the Rules of Professional Conduct, knowingly assist or induce another to do so, or do so through the acts of another; (c) Engage in conduct involving dishonesty, fraud, deceit, or misrepresentation; (d) Engage in conduct that seriously interferes with the administration of justice; ….” Seems like Justice Thomas has a really distorted idea of what justice is. Can we impeach him yet?
Continue reading …http://www.youtube.com/v/PqlqVwZhzcg?f=user_uploads&app=youtube_gdata Read more from the original source: Us freedom final
Continue reading …Click here to view this media We’ve been remarking for awhile how strange it is that the case of Shawna Forde has received so little media attention, especially because of its naturally sensational elements and the fact that it has real political and social significance. Indeed, one of the most common reactions we’ve observed among readers to whom we’ve presented the case has been: “Why haven’t I heard about this?” Even with yesterday’s conviction on two counts of first-degree murder for the killings of 9-year-old Brisenia Flores and her father, it hasn’t gotten a great deal better: the story, for instance, ran as only a “brief” in the New York Times , and didn’t appear at all in the Washington Post, even though both had written briefly about it previously. Well, at least CNN — the only cable-TV network to have bothered to pick up the story previously — did a full-length segment on the story, which ran on Anderson Cooper’s show. It pretty well covered the bases, although it repeatedly emphasized that Forde had been “kicked out” of the Minuteman Civil Defense Corps for being “emotionally unstable” and that she was supposedly not associated with any of them — even though in fact Forde maintained a close association with Minuteman Project cofounder Jim Gilchrist right up to the moment of her arrest, and was very much part of the larger Minutemen movement. Easily the best coverage of the case came from the local reporters at the Arizona Daily Star and from the Daily Beast’s Terri Greene Sterling, who yesterday pulled off a coup by getting Forde to talk to her for a post-conviction interview. As we observed yesterday, one of the more remarkable aspects of the announcement of the jury’s verdict was how utterly unfazed by it Forde seemed to be. Sterling zeroed in on this: Forde, dressed in a navy-and-cream blazer and navy pants, remained calm as she listened to the verdict, even though the murder charges could lead to a death sentence in a state that does not shy from executions. The 43-year-old former child burglar, mom, beautician, and self-professed Minuteman from Everett, Washington, kept her composure, because, she told The Daily Beast in an exclusive post-verdict jailhouse interview, “you can’t freak out with the whole world watching you.” Speaking by videophone in the Pima County Adult Detention Center, the woman prosecutors dubbed a braggart and a killer—who reportedly boasted she would “kick down doors and change America” with her border vigilante activities—maintained her innocence. Wearing glasses, no makeup, and black-and-white striped jailhouse pajamas, Forde told me she was “extremely saddened” by the verdict. The jury of 11 women and one man also found Forde guilty of attempted murder, two counts of assault, two counts of robbery and one count of burglary. The jury gave a clear victory to prosecutors, who accused Forde of cooking up a plan to steal drugs and money from Raul Flores by gaining entry to his Arivaca, Arizona, mobile home with accomplices on the pretense of being law-enforcement officers in search of fugitives. The verdict was “surreal” to Forde, but she said she took it like a “pro.” As the leader of Minutemen American Defense, or MAD, which she described as a large organization of patriots, she said she’d learned to “take things step by step, revamp, assess, and move forward.” Forde also claimed that she sympathized with Brisenia’s mother, Gina Gonzalez, who was shot in the home invasion but survived, and later identified Forde as the leader of the gang. But then, she had a very bizarre way of expressing it: “I know in her mind,” Forde said of Gonzalez, “I am guilty and she hates me. I know her tragedy is extremely sad.” But on the other hand, she said “people shouldn’t deal drugs if they have kids.” (No drugs were found in the trailer.) Forde told me she’d “lost a daughter” and she knows from experience Gonzalez will feel pain “the rest of her life” and her “tragedy is extremely sad.” “I wish I could say I was sorry it happened,” Forde said. “I am not sorry on my behalf because I didn’t do it.” Forde, of course, is a prodigious liar. Fortunately, the jury figured that out.
Continue reading …The 2003 invasion of Iraq was sanctioned largely because of claims the country had weapons of mass destruction. The source of some of the alleged intelligence behind the claims was an Iraqi defector living in Germany, someone who has now admitted the evidence he submitted was false. Al Jazeera’s Barnaby Phillips reports.
Continue reading …