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Yesterday Egypt, today Algeria | Karima Bennoune

This was the slogan of the brave protesters in Algiers on Saturday, making the first breach in Algeria’s wall of fear Algiers – In the wake of Friday’s historic events in Cairo, over 1,000 peaceful demonstrators defied a ban on protests in Algiers on the Place de 1er Mai on Saturday . The goal of the National Coordination Committee for Change and Democracy, the organisers of what was supposed to have been a march to Martyr’s Square, was to call for an end to the 19-year state of emergency, for democratic freedoms, and for a change in Algeria’s political system. Invigorated by Cairo’s great event, this Saturday in Algiers they chanted slogans like ” Djazair Horra Dimocratia ” (“A free and democratic Algeria”), ” système dégage ” (“government out”) and indeed, “Yesterday Egypt, today Algeria”. There were small echoes of Egypt. Thousands of police in full riot gear painted the square blue in their uniforms, attempting to occupy the space and prevent the demonstration, yet the protestors remained, for hours risking arrest and beatings, shouting slogans and singing effervescently. A large group of young men, with the obvious cooperation of the police, entered the scene violently, chanting in favour of President Bouteflika (in power since 1999) and attempting to provoke fights with the protestors. (This was so reminiscent of Cairo, that for a moment, one half-expected a charge of men riding camels like in Tahrir Square.) At one point, these youths rushed the bench where I stood taking photographs with journalists, and we all toppled to the ground. Later, the pro-government provocateurs started throwing large stones. The single most moving part of the day was the women’s demonstration. A group of about 50 of the many women present – a few young women in hijab, many other young women in jeans, older, seasoned feminist activists wearing khaffiyehs and dresses – took up position next to the bus station at 1st of May Square holding a large Algerian flag. One of these women, prominent psychologist Cherifa Bouatta , told me on Friday as we watched the celebration in Cairo: “I have been waiting for this for years. This is the beginning. From the years of terrorism [the 1990s] and what came after, everything seemed lost. Our hopes for a just society were dying. But now the possibilities are fantastic.” On Saturday in 1st of May Square, she and the other women explored those possibilities. They occupied the street; they called for profound political change; they ululated (what Algerians call ” pousser les youyous “; a high-pitched glottal chanting); they sang “Kassaman”, the national anthem, and “listiqlal” (independence), a song of the anti-colonial movement that freed the country from French rule in 1962 at the cost of a million martyrs. Most importantly, they refused to cede to the police. The pro-Boutef youth repeatedly confronted them, and even began shouting in favour of an Islamic state at one point as a confused riposte to the women. The most surreal moment came as I watched the unyielding female activists attacked by a group of young policewomen in pants and boots – their own career paths only imaginable thanks to the hard work of some of the very women activists they hit and shoved. A young policewoman, the age of one of the students I teach, slapped me for taking a picture as this occurred. The women protesters’ only “crime” had been to stand peacefully on the sidewalk of their own capital city singing the national anthem and calling for democracy. Reportedly, as many as 350 were arrested during the day. Many were roughed up, including the prominent, 90-year-old lawyer Ali Yahia Abdennour , who is the honorary president of the Algerian League for the Defence of Human Rights (LADDH). Cherifa Khaddar, the redoubtable human rights activist and president of Djazairouna , an association of the victims of the fundamentalist terrorism of the 1990s, whose brother and sister were brutally murdered in 1996 by the Armed Islamic Group (GIA) , was arrested twice . I watched in horror as policewomen manhandled her – unfortunately, not an oxymoron. Just before she was arrested the first time, Khaddar was attacked by a group of the young pro-government “protesters”, some of whom attempted to pull her clothes off while another attempted to simulate sex with her. A policewoman dragged her away from this melee, only to help a group of male cops throw her to the ground and arrest her, rather than the perpetrators. Later on, at the police station, she found herself in a cell with 20 other women. Together, they continued the protest, chanting and singing: “My brothers do not forget our martyrs. They are calling you from their tombs. Listen to their voices, you free ones.” The police became enraged and attacked the women in the cell, dragging one away by her hair.” Khaddar was later released. The situation is fluid. As the protest waned, the square was taken over by a large group of mostly young male protesters, many from the surrounding neighbourhood. Some of them had previously chanted pro-government slogans and insulted the women demonstrators, but now took up anti-government slogans themselves, talked supportively with the freed Khaddar and challenged the police alone. Hundreds of riot police then brought out their guns, marched in formation and shut down the square altogether. It looked like a scene out of the Costa Gavras film “Z” . I hope that what happens in Algeria in the coming period will be watched carefully, notwithstanding the understandable preoccupation with events to the east in Egypt. The contexts are different, but the struggles are the same. Moreover, the brave Algerian activists of 1st of May Square – women and men, young and old – also deserve solidarity and support on the road ahead. Algerian writer and journalist Mustapha Benfodil said that this demonstration’s goal was to turn 1st of May Square into an Algerian Tahrir Square, and that what occurred on Saturday was a very important step in that direction. But he noted that much work remains to be done to that end. Clearly, the wall of fear needs to be broken down here – perhaps a harder task than elsewhere, given the terrible violence of the 1990s that killed as many as 200,000 people and terrorised the entire society. The opposition needs to be united and organised. Additionally, activists need to build critical links with broader segments of the society to achieve the political change so clearly needed in the country and which the police overreaction only underscored – change that Tunisia and Egypt have proven to be entirely possible. For now, perhaps it is more accurate to say, “Yesterday Egypt, tomorrow Algeria …” Algeria Egypt Protest Women Feminism Middle East Karima Bennoune guardian.co.uk

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Egypt: how the people span the wheel of their country’s history

By overcoming their fears and defying the man whose regime had terrorised them for 30 years, Cairo’s protesters not only drove out Hosni Mubarak, they have changed the Arab world There is a tide in the affairs of men which, taken at the flood, leads on to fortune, says Brutus in Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar as he urges his comrades to seize the moment to overthrow the ruler they see as a tyrant. It has taken decades for the storm surge to break over Egypt, but when it finally did the forces of change proved irresistible, sweeping away Hosni Mubarak in just 18 days of popular and peaceful street protests. The most remarkable feature of all is that nobody saw it coming. For all its resources, the United States and its western allies were taken completely by surprise by the brutally swift events which are now reshaping the geo-strategic map of the Middle East. Regime change, the Arab street has shown, need not be given such a bad name after all. Some have called this moment the Arab world’s 1989, when the Iron Curtain fell in eastern Europe – but that was presaged by the years of reform in the Soviet Union under Gorbachev. In truth, there are no real precedents. A first draft of why it happened must begin in a rural town in Tunisia on the shores of the Mediterranean where Mohamed Bouazizi was the unlikeliest catalyst of the extraordinary realignment in the region. Known locally as Basboosa, Mohamed, aged 26, was a street fruit vendor in Sidi Bouzid, where unemployment is conservatively estimated at 30%. He earned around £87 a month, the money going to support his six siblings, including one sister in university. He was regularly stopped by police, who expected him to pay them bribes to allow him to sell his wares from a wheelbarrow. On the morning of 17 December last year he had spent the equivalent of £125 on merchandise when it was seized. What made the loss harder to take was the humiliation. A 45-year-old female officer slapped him across the face, spat at him, scattered his fruit on the ground and confiscated his electronic scales. Two of her colleagues joined in, beating him. As a coup de grace , the woman insulted Mohamed’s dead father, a labourer who died of a heart attack when his eldest son was just three years old. Mohamed finally snapped. For decades millions of young men like him right across the North African coastal plain have watched television images beamed from the other side of the Mediterranean from a European continent of prosperity, freedom and opportunity. They have watched the cronies of their own regimes growing older and, in their decadence, more arrogant and corrupt. They have watched hope for a better future leaking away. Seeking justice, Mohamed went to the local governor’s office to complain about his treatment. He issued a warning when told that the governor was unavailable: “If you don’t see me, I’ll burn myself.” At 11.30am, less than an hour after he had been robbed and humiliated by the state’s forces, he doused himself in petrol in front of the governor’s office and set himself alight. “What kind of repression do you imagine it takes for a young man to do this?” said his sister Samia when her brother finally died of horrific injuries on 4 January. “A man who has to feed his family by buying goods on credit when they fine him … and take his goods. In Sidi Bouzid, those with no connections and no money for bribes are humiliated and insulted and not allowed to live.” The young man’s desperate action was a rallying call long awaited in his country and its neighbours. Mohamed Bouazizi’s death became the spark which lit the bonfire on which the corrupt regime of Tunisia’s President Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali would also perish. And, like a bushfire out of control, there was soon fears that the “contagion” would spread. In an eerie coincidence with subsequent events in Egypt, it took 18 days for Mohamed to die, during which time Ben Ali was sufficiently shaken by the growing voices of anger and protest that he visited the dying young man in hospital. At his funeral 5,000 mourners chanted: “Farewell, Mohamed, we will avenge you. We weep for you today. We will make those who caused your death weep.” He was buried at Garaat Bennour cemetery, 10 miles from Sidi Bouzid. By then there was no turning back for the old guard as riots in Sidi Bouzid spread to the capital, Tunis. It seemed miraculous to Tunisians how quickly the iron fist of Ben Ali, president for 24 years, was loosened. The internet played a vital role, subverting the state-controlled communications channels by allowing ordinary citizens to bypass them and organise democratically. “Game Over!” taunted the placards and cheers of the jubilant crowds in a deliberate reference to the age of online computer gaming – a world beyond the reach of ageing tyrants, where the sans culottes of the Arab world come together in cyberspace. For decades Tunisia had been characterised by the west as a “model” Arab nation, but the WikiLeaks saga, months earlier, revealed the ugly truth of what its key sponsor, the United States, really thought of this “mafia state”, run as a virtual private enterprise by Ben Ali and his hated, avaricious wife Leila Trabelsi, who plundered 1.5 tonnes of gold from the central bank when they fled to Jeddah in Saudi Arabia. Ben Ali’s removal from power suddenly seemed to be creating a potential domino-effect around the region. First he tried to quell the protests by addressing the nation on state television and promising reforms. But when this failed to stem the tide of opposition, and with confidence among the armed forces ebbing from him, he chose to run. An international arrest warrant has been issued by Tunisia and his assets in Swiss banks have been frozen. While opposition figures, including a leading internet activist, have joined an interim government in preparation for elections within two months, the situation in Tunisia remains highly fluid and volatile, with most ordinary citizens unhappy that so many leading lights of the old regime remain in power. The results of Mohamed Bouazizi’s self-immolation swiftly prompted protests across the region. Inspired by Tunisia’s Jasmine Revolution, large protests began in Algeria, Yemen, Jordan and Egypt, with lesser incidents in Mauritania, Saudi Arabia, Sudan, Oman, Syria, Iraq, Lebanon, Libya and Morocco. Many were characterised by a playful, party atmosphere. In Amman, the Jordanian security forces handed out soft drinks to protesters, who laughed as they chanted “Mubarak you are next!” The Jordanians could not have known they were right. But to fully comprehend the swirling fury of the Egyptian street one must look back nine months. It was near midnight on Sunday 6 June when two Egyptian police officers walked into the Space Net internet cafe on Boubaset Street, a short stroll from Alexandria’s crumbling corniche, and demanded to speak to Khaled Said. According to his mother and sister, Said, 28, was devoted to his pet cats and enjoyed pacing the seafront, flying kites on his own. His room was a jumble of wires and old car batteries, part of a homemade music system Said used to practise rapping; the thumping bass from behind his door could often be heard well into the early hours. “He was ordinary, like any one of us,” remembers his sister, Zahraa. “He never seemed interested in politics at all.” That night Khaled Said was beaten to death by the two officers who came looking for him. They smashed his head against a marble ledge in the lobby of the building next door before throwing his body into the back of a van, driving around, then dumping it by the roadside. It later emerged that Said had taped a secret video depicting what appeared to be corrupt local security chiefs dividing up the spoils of a drugs bust. His family also discovered self-penned anti-government songs stored on his computer. Three months ago, in the run-up to Egypt’s blatantly rigged parliamentary elections, Zahraa told the Observer that the suffering of her brother and others like him could end up shaking the country to its very foundations: “Change will not come from this regime’s version of democracy, it will come in the shape of a tidal wave from below. Maybe the torture and murders carried out by our policemen will set that tidal wave in motion.” Her words were prescient. Khaled Said was not the first Egyptian killed at the hands of Mubarak’s police force, nor would he be the last. In Said’s Sidi Gabr neighbourhood alone, dozens of police torture cases have been logged by local activists over the past eight months, some of them fatal. But the brazen manner of this particular murder – on a public street and not behind the blacked-out windows of the Sidi Gabr police headquarters – and the fact that the victim was middle-class, with relatives able to resist pressure from the security services to keep quiet, ensured that the name of Khaled Said quickly become synonymous with the staggering brutality and corruption of Mubarak’s vast security apparatus, a brutality and corruption to which almost all Egyptians, to a lesser degree, were exposed on a daily basis. “That was the turning point,” claims Heba Morayef, the Human Rights Watch advocate in Egypt. “Prior to that, demonstrations in favour of political reform struck many ordinary Egyptians as somewhat abstract, even if they had vague sympathy with the sentiments being expressed. “Police cruelty, however, was something that touched people personally and it inspired a whole new, cross-class section of society to adopt a more combative stance towards the state.” After much dithering and buck-passing by the authorities, the two officers responsible (though not their seniors) were put on trial and mass protests in major cities began. The demonstrations were never more than a few thousand strong, and often smaller – not insignificant in a country where a 30-year-old emergency law effectively criminalises any sort of public expression of dissent, but not enough to panic Mubarak’s entrenched political elite. Online, however, it was a different story. Kolina Khaled Said, a Facebook group meaning “We are all Khaled Said”, quickly gathered hundreds of thousands, of supporters, who swapped information on other examples of inhumane police treatment and helped organise small-scale acts of civil disobedience. Along with a loose network of more explicitly political online activist groups, the anonymous administrators behind Kolina Khaled Said – one of whom turned out to be Google’s regional marketing executive, Wael Ghonim, who attended to the web page from his home 1,500 miles away in Dubai – tried to find creative ways to get round Egypt’s suffocating legal prohibitions on collective action in an effort to make their voices heard on the ground. Sometimes small groups of youths would “spontaneously” gather in city centres and sing the national anthem; on other occasions individuals wearing black would walk to the Nile at an appointed hour across the country and stand separately by the river in silence, an innocent routine that still managed to provoke a violent response from the security services. This vague but energetic new wave of dissent was leaving behind the moribund landscape of formal opposition politics in Egypt, where paper-democrats had long been scrabbling for crumbs of power tossed down by a regime keen to keep up the facade of a pluralist democracy. Now a new alternative avenue of resistance was on the cards and it was led from below, by those who had never known anything other than Mubarak’s autocratic rule. With a demographic time-bomb ticking below the surface – two-thirds of Egypt’s population is below the age of 30, and each year 700,000 new graduates chase 200,000 jobs – conditions were ripe for a social explosion. Into this combustible mix entered Kolina Khaled Said, the creators of which took great pains to cast their movement as not party-political, not backed by shadowy foreign forces, and dedicated primarily to encouraging Egyptians not to be afraid. The ingredients for massive social unrest may have been falling into place, but still in the way stood the firmest obstacle of all: fear. Through a prodigious web of overlapping security agencies ranging from armed riot police to plain-clothes informants to the baltagiyya – casually-employed ex-prisoners and local thugs – Mubarak’s ruling clique had effectively instilled a sense of hopelessness in an overwhelming proportion of the population, whose instincts lay in avoiding the state, not defying it. But there was never any doubt that frustration at the status quo was deep and potent in every geographical and social corner of Egypt. If ever a critical mass of street protests were to develop and individuals thought the state’s gendarmerie was no longer impregnable, it was likely that a full-scale uprising would quickly balloon. But something was needed to break down that initial aversion to open disobedience. Tunisia provided it. Arab neighbours had faced down their own security forces and won; perhaps now Egyptians could do the same. But a change of tactics was essential if the omnipresent state security agencies were to be outwitted; 25 January, the date of a national holiday devoted to celebrating the achievements of the police force, was selected as the “day of rage” to exploit growing public resentment against Mubarak’s security forces which had been fuelled so successfully by Kolina Khaled Said. An umbrella coalition of youth activists formed small cells and spent the preceding weeks meeting in secret, plotting a series of devolved, localised protests designed to put maximum strain on the state security resources. In Cairo, 20 protest sites in densely populated, largely working-class neighbourhoods were selected and publicised. One extra location, in the warren of back streets of the Giza neighbourhood of Bulaq Al-Duqrur, was never broadcast – and took police completely by surprise. “Usually we rally in one place and immediately get kettled in by hundreds or thousands of riot police,” said Ahmed Salah, who was involved in planning for 25 January. “This time we were determined to do something different – be multi-polar, fast-moving, and too mobile for the amin markazi [central security forces], giving us the chance to walk down hundreds of different roads and show normal passers-by that taking to the streets was actually possible.” The plan worked better than they could ever have imagined. Throughout the capital and across the country, pockets of protest sprung up and overpowered the thinly stretched riot police, who had no choice but to let the marches continue. Later, when the different strands rallied in city centres – including Cairo’s symbolic Tahrir Square –the police used guns and tear gas to disperse them. But it was already too late. By destroying the smokescreen of police invincibility, even for only a few hours, the youths had pierced Mubarak’s last line of defence – the fear his subjects felt at the thought of confronting him – and a fatal blow was struck to a 30-year dictatorial regime. Nevertheless, Mubarak would prove to be a mightier force than Tunisia’s Ben Ali. He knew he could rely upon the support of the Americans, who had long granted him premier status in the region not just as guarantor of peace with Israel but also the bulwark against Islamist militancy. And, as a fabled military hero, he was not just the creature of the all-powerful armed forces but for decades their own guarantee of stability and continuity. It was only as the demonstrators refused to desert Tahrir Square or accept Mubarak’s concessions for as long as they fell short of his departure, and as Washington dithered and flip-flopped, that the army began to have its doubts about continuing to back him. Repeatedly over the past two weeks the Obama administration, the State Department, CIA and the Pentagon had been unsettled and confused by the situation in Egypt. Caught unawares at the prospect of the protests actually succeeding, they reacted too slowly, then too quickly and, finally, were rescued by events on the ground. But few should be surprised; American strategy was caught between a rock and a hard place. There was an urgent need to respond to the pro-democracy movement, but at the same time that movement was aimed at unseating one of America’s most trusted Arab allies, a man who had been a friend to five presidents over three decades. At the start the crisis only rippled slowly through Washington. On 26 January, a day after protests began in Egypt, White House spokesman Robert Gibbs called Egypt a “strong ally”. The impression of support for a president whose army soaks up more than one billion dollars of US aid a year was strengthened a day later when vice-president Joe Biden said Mubarak was not a dictator. American policy appeared in total disarray. Obama’s envoy in the crisis, old school diplomat Frank Wisner, travelled to the country. On 5 February he expressed public support for Mubarak staying on, yet such was the confusion in US policymaking now that, mere hours later, both the White House and the State Department disavowed his comments. As the protests refused to die down after Mubarak said that he would resign in September, US policy hardened again. It coalesced around the figure of new vice-president Omar Suleiman. For American – and Israeli – interests, Suleiman seemed ideal. He was known as a strong man and someone who wanted to preserve the strategic status quo, yet also a figure who had made the right noises, in public at least, about making the transition to democracy. He was seen as someone who could avoid the nightmare American scenario of a popular anti-Israeli government taking power in Egypt or, worst of all, an Islamist-influenced one. On 8 February, Biden spoke to Suleiman by phone and stressed the need for an orderly, and swift, transition of power. That convinced many in Washington that it was only a matter of time. Yet the impact of the Egyptian unrest was spiralling out into the rest of American diplomacy. Last Wednesday Obama spoke to Saudi Arabia’s King Abdullah in a reportedly testy exchange in which the ageing Saudi royal argued for Mubarak to not be humiliated. When news of the conversation leaked it created a flurry of speculation that the revolt in Egypt was exposing the weakness of American power. On Thursday CIA chief Leon Panetta told Congress that he imminently expected Mubarak to announce that he was likely to stand down. As Mubarak took to the TV screens that evening, Obama watched the speech on Air Force One as he made his way back from an event in Michigan. Yet Mubarak fell short of the expectations of those in Tahrir Square and of the army generals when he announced he was transferring his remaining powers to Suleiman but remaining as president, if in name only to save his pride. It was a move that stunned many and seemed to threaten a complete unravelling and a blood bath, with the demonstrators noisily hatching plans to march on the presidential palace in the morning, a move which would force the Army, thus far maintaining a politically detached posture, into choosing sides. And so it did, the military’s supreme council shepherding the defeated Mubarak onto a plane to take him to a luxurious internal exile at his Red Sea palace. It was an extraordinary finale to 18 days of rage; the army had staged a coup with the backing of the people. Like a swan looking graceful on the surface while kicking its legs furiously underneath, Obama was able to take to the airwaves and welcome in the changes. “The wheel of history turned at a blinding pace,” Obama said. For once, he was spot on. Egypt Hosni Mubarak Protest Omar Suleiman Barack Obama Middle East Tunisia David Sharrock Jack Shenker Paul Harris guardian.co.uk

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Mona & The Chattering class

Click here to view this media As Mona Eltahawy was listing off how momentous an event Egypt’s uprising has been, and how it may signal a change in the way the United States approaches the Arab countries in the Middle East, siding with the peoples of that region rather than the dictators, the CNN pundits throw some cold water on such idealistic notions. GLORIA BORGER: Well I’m not so sure about that. There’s always going to be realpolitik in U.S. foreign policy. …and she lists off the relationships with Jordan, Saudi Arabia, and Syria as evidence. Ever helpful Candy Crowley chimes in that the “experts” she talks to in the State Department have told her that the conditions in Egypt were unique and not likely to be replicated elsewhere in the region. Oddly enough though, those same experts never saw Tunisia or Egypt becoming anything like they have. Funny about that. Full transcript via CNN below the fold. BLITZER: Gloria Borger and Candy Crowley are here. Mona and Fouad are standing by. But Gloria, the president, I think he’s getting pretty good reviews for his comments today. And I think, except for a few Republicans, he’s getting pretty good marks for the way he’s handled this crisis. GLORIA BORGER, CNN POLITICAL ANALYST: Well, you know, this wasn’t easy. You know, this is — 30 years of history, close history with Mubarak in this country. And the administration, you know, started out by saying that Mubarak was stable and then kept moving and changing. It was such a fluid and dramatic situation. Of course, we tend to judge these things by outcomes. And the truth of the matter is this is a fabulous outcome, but we don’t know what comes next. And that’s what they’re doing in the White House. BLITZER: In the short term, Candy, from the U.S. perspective, very positive development. CANDY CROWLEY, CNN ANCHOR: This was as good as it was going to get, really. BLITZER: Some people were fearing, you know, that there would be the Muslim Brotherhood taking over. CROWLEY: Or that there would be riots in the streets; there’d be, you know, a lot of bloodletting, that Mubarak would stay on forever. And they really got the best situation. Now how much did they have to do with that and how much was — simply was the power of those few people sitting in the square? I think they’ll argue forever. But nonetheless, they got exactly — they got the best they could ask for. BLITZER: Let me ask Fouad Ajami at Johns Hopkins University. Fouad, I know you’ve been critical of this administration, earlier administrations, but you see it — you call it as you see it. What do you think? FOUAD AJAMI, PROFESSOR, JOHNS HOPKINS UNIVERSITY: Look, I think this has always been from the beginning an Egyptian drama. Our government caught up with a storm, in fact. It really wasn’t about Barack Obama. It wasn’t about even George W. Bush’s freedom agenda. This was the Egyptian people bringing their pharaoh, bringing their autocrat to account. In the end, President Obama did what he needed to do. And I think the moral example, the example we had and the power we had had to do with reigning in the military, making sure there is no Tiananmen Square in Cairo, in Tahrir Square. And that’s considerable moral influence and political influence. BLITZER: When you heard the president speak today, the president of the United States, Mona, I think you were moved, weren’t you? MONA ELTAHAWY: I was, because it’s exactly what I hoped he would say. I mean, we spoke earlier, and you asked me what I would like him to say. And he focused exactly on this beautiful nonviolent pure revolution. And you know, I mentioned earlier the toppling of all these stereotypes of Arabs. Here’s another thing that Egyptian sisters and brothers, my people I’m so proud of, have toppled. They have toppled this fear that Hosni Mubarak has been using all along to silence western allies about “It’s either me or these crazy radicals.” But they’re also toppling, and this, I think, is what President Obama addressed today. They’re also toppling a foreign policy that always chose the dictator versus the people. And I think what the message behind President Obama’s speech today was U.S. foreign policy, as it now wakes up to what’s happening, Hosni Mubarak is the Berlin Wall today that fell. U.S. foreign policy now is looking ahead and thinking. It serves us best to side with the people, because that is the best way to find stability. Because a stable country is not a country suffocated by a dictator. A stable country is a democratic, free country with people who are happy and free. I think this is what we’re seeing come — this is what we will see from — as a result of the speech today, thanks to the revolution in Egypt. BORGER: Well, I’m not so sure about that. I mean, I think that there’s always going to be realpolitik in our foreign policy. And I don’t think that the United States is looking to change its good relationship, its good relationship, for example, with Jordan right now. But they are looking to see how can they make the Saudis be less upset? We’re very upset about this. What’s going to happen in Iran? What’s going to happen in Syria? I mean, obviously, the whole chess table is very different right now. CROWLEY: I talked to a couple of experts today about this. What next? What will we see fall? Look at the — across the Arab world. There’s dictators. There’s autocrats. And they really looked said these are all so different that I don’t see anything imminent here. Oh, it went from Tunisia to Egypt, and now it goes, you know, to X, Y or Z. They just — you know, we sort of went through a number of the countries. And they said, “I just don’t see it” because of the very different circumstances in so many of these places. BLITZER: All right, guys. We’re going to continue, obviously, our analysis and our coverage. The breaking news out of Cairo right now, out of all of Egypt, in fact. Mubarak is gone. There’s a new day in Egypt. We’ll be right back.

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Apparently courage is contagious, and Northern African regimes plan to stop the spread in its tracks: Riot police have been deployed in the centre of the Algerian capital, Algiers, ahead of a planned anti-government rally. The government has banned the protest, but opposition and rights groups say they intend to go ahead with the march. Algeria – like other countries in the region – has recently witnessed demonstrations for greater freedoms. On Friday, police stopped people from gathering to celebrate the fall of Egypt’s President Hosni Mubarak. The BBC’s Chloe Arnold in Algiers say the authorities want to avert any popular uprising similar to those in Tunisia and Egypt. “We are ready for the march,” Mohsen Belabes, a spokesman for the small Rally for Culture and Democracy (RCD) opposition party, said. And in Yemen: (Sanaa) – Hundreds of men armed with knives, sticks, and assault rifles attacked anti-government protesters in Yemen’s capital , Sanaa, as Yemeni security forces stood by, Human Rights Watch said today. Within an hour, the 1,000-plus protesters had been pushed from the square and at least 10 had been detained by security forces, Human Rights Watch said. Human Rights Watch witnessed at least 10 army trucks carrying men in civilian clothing to Sanaa’s Tahrir Square, where a crowd of around 1,000 Yemenis had been demonstrating in support of the historic changes in Egypt and against the Yemeni government. Hundreds of men, their arrival coordinated by uniformed security agents, attacked the anti-government protesters with knives and sticks, prompting the majority to flee .

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Algeria’s police crack down on protesters

A wave of anti-government protests appears to be sweeping the Middle East and North Africa. It all started with Tunisia, and quickly moved to Egypt. The leaders of both those countries were forced to step down. Organisers told Al jazeera that around 10 thousand people joined the demonstrations in Algiers, the Algerian capital, including a key opposition leader. Al Jazeera’s Bhanu Bhatnagar reports.

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Dictatorship in Wisconsin?

enlarge Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker, elected with millions from the US Chamber of Commerce via the Wisconsin Republican Governors’ Association, is about to declare martial law on public workers in his state. This is not an exaggeration. Aware that there would be a loud outcry if he proposed legislation to strip public workers of their collective bargaining rights, Walker inserted a provision in his budget stripping workers of their right to bargain . By including it in the budget, he bypassed all hearings or opportunity for public comment, and is pushing the Wisconsin legislature to vote on it as early as next week. Under Walker’s immediate plan, all collective bargaining rights would be removed for state and local public employees starting July 1, except when it comes to wages. But any salary increase they seek could be no more than the consumer price index, unless voters in the affected jurisdiction approved a higher raise. Contracts would be limited to one year and wages would be frozen until the next contract is settled. Public employers would be prohibited from collecting union dues and members of collective bargaining units would not be required to pay dues. The proposal would effectively remove unions’ right to negotiate in any meaningful way. Local law enforcement and fire employees, as well as state troopers and inspectors would be exempt. Walker’s plan also calls for state employees to contribute 5.8 percent of their salaries to their pensions starting April 1. They would have to contribute at least 12.6 percent toward their health care. Those two items would generate $30 million by July 1 and roughly $300 million over the next two years when combined with the other concessions. Walker insisted he was not targeting public employees and that his primary concern was balancing the budget. His bill also calls for selling off state heating plants to save money and refinancing state debt to save $165 million in the fiscal year that ends June 30. As you might imagine, an action like this might trigger a strike, or at least, the threat of one. No worries, because Walker is ready to call out the National Guard if such a thing happens. Gov. Scott Walker says the Wisconsin National Guard is prepared to respond if there is any unrest among state employees in the wake of his announcement that he wants to take away nearly all collective bargaining rights. Walker said Friday that he hasn’t called the Guard into action, but he has briefed them and other state agencies in preparation of any problems. Walker says he has every confidence that state employees will continue to show up for work and do their jobs. But he says he’s been working on contingency plans for months just in case they don’t. Russ Feingold has a thing or two to say about Walker’s unilateral attempt to strip workers of their rights: Governor Walker’s request to the State Legislature to eliminate nearly all of the collective-bargaining rights for thousands of Wisconsin workers is big government at its worst. No private employer can do what the governor proposes, nor should it. For decades, Wisconsin has protected the rights of workers to collectively bargain with their employer on wages, benefits, workplace rules, and many other aspects of their employment. The governor is wrong to suggest that public workers are responsible for the state’s budget woes, and he is wrong to use that bogus excuse to strip them of rights that millions of other American workers have. And I’d go one step further and say he has no right to threaten law-abiding citizens exercising their right to assembly and free speech by bringing in the National Guard. What does he think that will accomplish? Does he expect to have guardsmen pick up the garbage, man state services’ switchboards? The last time the National Guard was called in for labor disputes was in 1968, during the Memphis sanitation strike. Are we now going back to those days? Again? The Republican Governors’ Association spent over $5 million to get Walker elected. They’re not shy about it — it’s right on their ” congratulations, Scott Walker ” page. The Republican Governors Association congratulates Governor-elect Scott Walker on his election as governor of Wisconsin. Scott Walker succeeds Democratic governor Jim Doyle. The Republican Governors Association was a key investor in Scott Walker’s victory spending a total of $5 million. What they don’t mention is that the RGA has its own branch in Wisconsin . Wisconsin’s state disclosure laws are not all that transparent, so reporting is sketchy. But millions went through that RGA branch. Millions, donated by Koch Industries, Texas builder Bob Perry, Target Enterprises, and many other corporate interests. Some of that money stayed in Wisconsin. Some went to other candidates in other states, laundered through an opaque reporting system in Wisconsin. All of that money was spent with the goal of breaking unions, promoting corporate profits, and creating a permanent underclass to serve their wealthy overlords. Now Walker has the resources of the National Guard and the mind of a dictator. Is that really what the people of Wisconsin thought they were getting when they voted for him?

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Saeb Erekat resigns

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Saeb Erekat resigns

Saeb Erekat, the Palestine Liberation Organisation’s chief negotiator, has resigned from his post after an investigation showed his office was the source of a leak. Al Jazeera published over 1600 documents, the Palestine Papers, which documented secret negotiations between Israelis and Palestinians. Erekat had earlier said that he would resign if the source of the leak was found to be in his office, the Negotiations Support Unit. Al Jazeera’s Will Jordan has more.

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I agree with Kucinich : I think a primary opponent would have the effect of making Obama a stronger progressive candidate. But I’d be very, very surprised if a Democrat decides to run against him: Congressman Dennis Kucinich will not challenge President Obama for in the 2012 Democratic primaries—“I’m focusing on being re-elected to the House of Representatives ”—but he thinks Obama should face a foe for the presidential nomination. “I think primaries can have the opportunity of raising the issues and make the Democratic candidate a stronger candidate,” Kucinich, who sought the party nod in 2004 and 2008, said Thursday . “I think it’s safe to predict that President Obama will continue to be the nominee of the Democratic primary, but he can be a stronger nominee if he receives a strong challenge in a primary. ”Kucinich won’t speculate on who could, or should, run against Obama, who has disappointed much of the Democratic base with moves to the right on issues ranging from last year’s healthcare debate—in which he abandoned first the single-payer reform he had once backed and then the public option—to tax policy and entitlement reform. But the Ohio congressman did suggest the issues that he’s like to see raised by another Democrat in the primary states where Obama will begin his re-election campaign.“I’m very interested in making sure that creation of jobs, healthcare for all, protection of Social Security and Medicare, those things are fundamental—and education,” Kucinich explained in a C-SPAN interview . “Those are issues that certainly should be brought up in primaries. And, finally, getting out of Iraq and Afghanistan. We have to stop roaming the world looking for dragons to slay—we’ve things to take care of right here at home.” Kucinich’s comments echo those of Rabbi Michael Lerner , who wrote last fall, in the aftermath of the midterm election setbacks for Democrats: “There is a real way to save the Obama presidency: by challenging him in the 2012 presidential primaries with a candidate who would unequivocally commit to a well-defined progressive agenda and contrast it with the Obama administration’s policies. Such a candidacy would be pooh-poohed by the media, but if it gathered enough popular support—as is likely given the level of alienation among many who were the backbone of Obama’s 2008 success— this campaign would pressure Obama toward much more progressive positions and make him a more viable 2012 candidate . Far from weakening his chances for reelection, this kind of progressive primary challenge could save Obama if he moves in the desired direction. And if he holds firm to his current track, he’s a goner anyway.”

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News Bulletin – 1830GMT update

The main headlines on Al Jazeera English, featuring the latest news and reports from around the world.

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‘No trace yet’ of Swiss twins

Swiss, French and Italian police are working together in the search for Alessia and Livia Shepp, six-year-old twins who disappeared almost two weeks ago. In a letter to their mother, the twins’ father claimed he killed the girls before committing suicide, but police say they will continue to search for the girls until there is certainty about their fate. Al Jazeera’s Christina Marker reports.

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