Live updates as the events in Tunisia and Egypt continue to inspire protesters throughout the Middle East and North Africa 9.09am: The 19-year-old state of emergency in Algeria will end within days, foreign minister Mourad Medelci said. There were running battles between police officers and about 2,000 demonstrators in Algiers on Saturday . Officials said that 400 were arrested by police – who vastly outnumbered them. Most were then released. Reuters reports: A state of emergency has been in force in Algeria since 1992 and the government has come under pressure to ditch emergency laws following uprisings in Egypt and Tunisia. “In the coming days, we will talk about it as if it was a thing of the past,” Medelci told the French radio station Europe 1 in an interview. Algerian President Abdelaziz Bouteflika said earlier this month the state of emergency would be lifted in the very near future. 8.57am: At least 14 people have been injured in clashes on Bahrain’s “Day of Rage” Reuters reports: Police clashed late on Sunday with residents in Karzakan village, where security forces regularly skirmish with Shia youths, and one protester was injured, witnesses said. Police said three officers were hurt. In the village of Nuweidrat, police used teargas and rubber bullets on Monday to disperse a crowd demanding the release of Shia detainees, witnesses said, adding that 10 people were slightly injured. “There were 2,000 sitting in the street voicing their demands when police started firing,” 24-year-old Kamel told Reuters, declining to give his full name. Nearby, streets were littered with teargas canisters and rubber bullets. The scene was different in Manama, where government supporters honked car horns and waved Bahraini flags to celebrate the 10th anniversary of a national charter introduced after unrest in the 1990s. 8.53am: After scuffles yesterday, when soldiers tried to clear demonstrators out of Tahrir Square , the military has delivered an ultimatum to protesters today to leave the central plaza that formed the heart of the revolution or face arrest: We have half an hour left, we are cordoned by military police,” protester Yahya Saqr told Reuters. “We are discussing what to do now,” he said, adding that a senior officer “told us we have one hour to empty the square or we will be arrested.” 8.49am: The wave of protests inspired by events in Tunisia and Egypt show no signs of dissipating. Activists in Iran are planning to go ahead with a banned rally in central Tehran today in defiance of warnings by the regime. Iranian leaders have vowed to deal with protesters from the opposition Green movement severely, even though Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s government welcomed the ousting of Hosni Mubarak in Egypt. There have been clashes in Bahrain as protesters stage their own “day of rage” . Shia citizens ruled by a Sunni minority are unhappy about their lack of representation. In a bid to stave off protests King Hamad bin Isa al-Khalifa, trying to defuse the tension, said he would give 1,000 dinars (£1,650) to each local family, and the government has indicated that it may free minors arrested under a security crackdown last year. There have been demonstrations in Yemen for the past three days . Witnesses in the capital, Sana’a, said several protesters were injured and 23 were detained by police in clashes yesterday. Despite the ousting of Mubarak, tensions continue in Egypt over the military’s plan to rule by martial law until elections are held . While the military’s move has been welcomed by some, other pro-democracy protesters are alarmed by the failure to agree to a civilian-led interim government. The army is expected to issue a communique today cracking down on those creating “chaos and disorder” as well as effectively banning strikes. Middle East Egypt Tunisia Iran Yemen Bahrain Algeria Sudan Haroon Siddique guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …As the Egyptian army struggles to clear Tahrir Square of protestors, opposition groups are still trying to find a united voice. Cracks are already showing in the Youth movement – who say they are the rightful owners of the revolution. So can Egypt’s young people come together – or will they be swept aside, in the march towards change.
Continue reading …Protesters have once again taken to the streets of the country’s second city – Alexandria. But this time, they are motivated by a sense of civic responsibility and pride. Al Jazeera’s Jamal Elshayyal reports.
Continue reading …Pressure is mounting for Hosni Mubarak’s appointees to be removed from Egypt’s state media. During the protests state television broadcast propaganda for the government and now some fear it may not be impartial during the country’s transition to democracy. Al Jazeera’s Andrew Simmons reports from Cairo
Continue reading …Refugees from Tunisia have sparked a humanitarian crisis on the Italian island of Lampedusa. More than 4000 migrants have landed in the past few days. Italy is appealing for urgent EU aid to stop the arrivals. Richard Martin reports.
Continue reading …For the second week in a row, Newsweek's Eleanor Clift found herself in a hostile crowd on PBS's “McLaughlin Group.” During a lengthy segment about the crisis in Eqypt, after Clift claimed the protesters were secular, the entire panel almost pounced on her with Mort Zuckerman saying several times, “That's nonsense” (video follows with transcript and commentary): MORT ZUCKERMAN: We have an absolutely perfect example of whether our interests and our values are aligned here in Egypt, because our interests as Pat says, we're tied in with a lot of very, very conservative, monarchial or shall we say non- democratic regimes, all throughout the region of the Middle East. They're in our interests. The question is, our values, if democracy becomes our sole value, we're going to have a lot of problems. So the President does have a very difficult line in a sense to walk. JOHN MCLAUGHLIN, HOST: Did he preserve a line of proper distinction and clarity between these, these, these two situations? The United States and Egypt? Did he draw too close to Egypt. ZUCKERMAN: Certainly it was very easy to draw a very clear line at this stage of the game. But we don't know what the problem is going to be. PAT BUCHANAN, MSNBC Here's the problem. The problem is, John. MCLAUGHLIN: Let’s turn to General Crowley. General Crowley, what do you think of Egypt? MONICA CROWLEY, WASHINGTON TIMES: Sir. Reporting for duty! Look, I think in many instances the train has left the station, and when we talk about the President's ability to influence events, we saw that was incredibly limited even within the context of Egypt. And now if this starts spreading abroad, it’s going to be so far beyond what the United States can influence here. MCLAUGHLIN: Is Obama going to take any of that rap? CROWLEY: What you might get is far darker influences than what we had with a military regime. BUCHANAN: John, look at Gates. Look at the military to military relationship. What we want is maintaining that peace treaty. I think the Egyptian military doesn't want to put an army in Sinai. The Israelis want that. But here’s the thing, do the people, does the Muslim Brotherhood, want that? No! They would like to cut ties with Israel. MCLAUGHLIN: Quickly. ELEANOR CLIFT, NEWSWEEK: I’m sorry, but the protesters were secular… CROWLEY: Oh no, Eleanor. CLIFT: …they were peaceful… ZUCKERMAN: Oh you don’t know that. That is nonsense! CLIFT: …they were not talking about Islam or war on America. ZUCKERMAN: That is nonsense! Given her treatment by this exact same panel last week, it makes you wonder if Clift is going to ask McLaughlin to mix things up a bit so that she doesn't consistently look the fool. Let's hope if this does happen, McLaughlin declines her request. This is far too entertaining.
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Robert Kuttner reiterated many of the same points he made in his article at the Huffington Post last week on this weekend’s edition of Your Money on CNN. Businesses are not going to start hiring American workers until our politicians start to care more about protecting American jobs than their corporate campaign donors. Business Doesn’t Need American Workers : Once again, the job numbers are dismal. In January, the U.S. economy created just 36,000 domestic jobs, far below the roughly 145,000 that economists had forecast. The unemployment rate fell, to 9 percent, but only because more and more discouraged workers are giving up and leaving the workforce. The U.S. still has a jobs gap of about 14 million jobs, and that number is increasing as the labor force grows. Counting people who’ve given up, or who are working part time when they want full time jobs, the real unemployment number is around 17 percent. America now has about 25 million people either out of work or underemployed. Meanwhile, corporate profits continue to set records. Profits in the third quarter of 2010 were 1.659 trillion, about 28 percent higher than a year before, and the highest year-to-year increase on record. What’s going on? Very simply, America’s corporations no longer need America’s workers. Much more there so go read the rest. Transcript via CNN below the fold. ROMANS: You know Robert Kuttner, is the coeditor of the “American Prospect.” Robert there’s this feeling, this sneaking suspicion that American workers have been delinked with success of corporate America and American business. Is that true and is it permanent? ROBERT KUTTNER, CO-EDITOR, “THE AMERICAN PROSPECT:” Well, it’s certainly true. And it’s certainly the result of the business model that American business currently pursues and unfortunately that is abetted by the trade policy practice by both political parties, which is to say make whatever deals you can make with whatever countries are offering you subsidies, low-wage workers, a little bit of arm twisting as the Chinese do, and if you can prosper from that, god bless you. I mean in the ’50s engine Charlie Wilson, then the head of GM, was ridiculed for saying what’s good for GM is good for America. There was some truth to that in those years. I’m not sure you can say what’s good for GE is good for America because GE has been moving most of its high level as well as low level jobs overseas and making a separate peace with the Chinese. ROMANS: But the CEO of GE is a man who the president is relying on quite heavily for advice about how to work with business to make sure that the American middle class isn’t left out. Right? KUTTNER: Yes, and isn’t that unfortunate. I mean if anything, Jeff Immelt is the poster child for the wrong kind of business model. ROMANS: But super elites don’t vote for the president in 2012, and they don’t vote for congress. Congress is where there is the real concern about what to do. Robert, what does Obama need to do to help the middle class whether this recovery and enjoy this recovery? KUTTNER: Well super elites may not vote, but super elites fund campaigns and that is why they have so much disproportion influence. I have to take exception to the idea it’s always the middle class that gets whacked. The middle class was getting whacked long before this recession. This is a 30-year process of income distribution becoming more unequal. We need to turn that around and we need to persuade congress to invest in America, to invest in the skills of workers and have a different trade policy. That is not protectionism. Germany has the highest wage cost in the world. And it also has the highest export surplus in the world because German elites care whether they still make things in Germany. American elites don’t seem to care whether we do. Now Obama needs to reach out to public opinion as well as to the Chamber of Commerce to change those perceptions and those policies and those national goals. ROMANS: Last word to Richard Quest who is going to throw his pen into the camera at any moment. QUEST: Well, he makes a very good point. Just look at the way Germany handled the great recession. It didn’t lay off employees. It put them on short time. It did paid holidays or unpaid holidays. It did all sorts of things. It drove down the cost base so that when the recovery came German industry more than any other in Europe was ready to take advantage of the growth that was coming. So Robert is quite right. But this question of infrastructure is fascinating. Look at the Victorians, look at the last century, they built bridges. They built tunnels. They built roads. They actually built something that we’re still using today. In New York they can’t even get the tunnels under the Hudson. You can’t even — you can’t even get agreement on a fast rail network, and in Britain we’re having exactly the same problem. ROMANS: Two seconds to Chrystia, the one that is dying to get points. FREELAND: Super quickly. I agree with Richard and Robert about infrastructure and investment. But someone has to pay taxes for that to happen. Americans across the political spectrum seem to not want to do that. ROMANS: All right. Chrystia Freeland — KUTTNER: How about the top 1 percent? ROMANS: Global editor at large at Reuters. Robert Kuttner, co- editor of “The American Prospect.” And Richard Quest is going to stick around where he can throw things and say Victorian as many times as possible because I love it when he does that. Thank you everyone.
Continue reading …There was supposed to be one Democratic oolitician on, but Harry Reid got canceled because Face the Nation had to have John McCain back on one more time. ABC’s “This Week” – Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak; former House Speaker Newt Gingrich; former Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty NBC’s “Meet the Press” – Reps. John Boehner, R-Ohio, and Bobby Schilling, R-Ill.; Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed. CBS’ “Face the Nation” – Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz.; Egyptian-American scholar and Nobel laureate Ahmed Zewail “Fox News Sunday” – Gov. Haley Barbour, R-Miss.; Rep. Paul Ryan, R-Wis. Steve Benen adds: And with that in mind, I won’t mention that the senator is making his 29th appearance in the last two years this morning, just like I also won’t mention that McCain will be on “Face the Nation” for the second time in just four weeks. I will mention, though, that McCain’s wasn’t scheduled to be on “Face the Nation,” which had booked Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) to appear, but host Bob Schieffer explained Friday that the show bumped Reid to get McCain (again) as part of the show’s coverage of developments in Egypt. Faiz Shakir’s take was spot-on. It’s sadly telling that Schieffer, a veteran Sunday morning host, feels the need to frequently turn to a Republican Senator to discuss a foreign policy issue, rather than hosting any number of qualified Democratic voices to opine on Egypt. McCain has waffled on his views regarding the pro-democracy protests. Initially, he expressed fear about the movement, calling it a dangerous “virus” that could spread throughout the Middle East. But following President Hosni Mubarak’s decision to step down, McCain issued a statement applauding the “Egyptian people” for “beginning … their country’s transition to democracy .” Moreover, in late January, McCain told CNN it would not be wise for the Obama administration to ” cut [Mubarak] loose .” A few days later, he was demanding Obama call on Mubarak to resign immediately . Right — and this is partly why I started keeping track of McCain’s appearances in the first place. The media in general, and Sunday show bookers in specific, consider the Arizona senator a knowledgeable, credible expert on foreign affairs and national security. If there’s evidence to support this assumption, McCain’s kept it well hidden — on CNN’s Sunday morning show two weeks ago, he urged President Obama to support “the right side of history” in Egypt, but couldn’t quite explain which side that is.
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