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Listening Post – Reporting the Egyptian revolution

On this episode of Listening Post we look at the Egyptian revolution and the media’s crucial role in it. Plus, Haiti one year after the earthquake – the global media’a anniversary coverage and the local media’s struggles.

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Egypt Burning – Standoff on the Nile

After seven days of mass protests in Egypt, a people’s movement has taken hold throughout the country, demanding the end of Hosni Mubarak’s 30 years in power. A day-by-day account of how Egypt has been set alight by a mass revolt against President Hosni Mubarak.

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Scenes from Tahrir Square: The New Normal

On Saturday, February 12, Egypt awoke for the first time in 30 years without Hosni Mubarak as president. As a new order dawned on the country, it seemed that anything was possible. Youth handed out flyers imploring fellow citizens to change the way they think about everything from littering, to driving, to the treatment of women. Volunteer teams moved about the city, sweeping streets and cleaning graffiti. Despite the optimism, all was not well. Among the hundreds of thousands still celebrating in Tahrir Square, a dedicated core of protesters remained, insisting that their demands – from the dissolution of parliament to the withdrawal of emergency laws – had not been met. Their hopes led to confrontation with an army looking to restore Cairo to normal.

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Analysis on Algeria and Yemen

So will governments in both Algeria and Yemen face the same sort of uprising as in Tunisia and Egypt? Michael Binyon, a foreign affairs specialist for The Times newspaper in London, tells Al Jazeera that while Yemen’s government may face pressure, the situation in Algeria is different.

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Wealthy Egyptians fear change

While millions of Egyptians are welcoming in the post-Mubarak era. Others, particularly the wealthy members of the society, have a lot to lose. Al Jazeera’s Andrew Simmons reports from Cairo.

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What does the world think of events in Egypt? Data specialists Infomous have taken the data from comment site aggregator Appinions to produce this stunning visualisation. Click on a word to change the perspective – hover over it to get a list of comment pieces. Refresh it to get the latest live results Simon Rogers

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The job of the generals is to help implement the demands of the people Egypt is relieved of Hosni Mubarak; the dictator is gone. That is no guarantee that democracy will follow, but it is a brave leap towards that goal. The crowds that gathered on the streets of Cairo and other cities knew there could be no progress as long as the president of 30 years stayed on. The peaceful, irrepressible tenacity with which they enforced that demand is an inspiration to those who value democracy and a clear warning to those who do not. The sustained power of the crowd is also a vital factor in the political settlement that emerges over the coming days. Within hours of Mr Mubarak’s resignation, the army, which inherited power, recognised that popular consent alone could confer legitimacy on Egypt’s next government. It is a major concession. The nation insisted on regime change, the generals obliged. That makes this a hybrid of popular revolution and military coup. Liberation is cause for celebration, but the role of the army should temper romantic exuberance. Egyptian political and military hierarchies are enmeshed. No one with a civilian background has led the country since the foundation of the modern republic in 1952. The army is a respected institution and its status was enhanced when commanders made early decisions not to move against the protesters. But pro-democracy activists are perfectly aware that the military is acting in its own interests, just as it did when propping up Mr Mubarak for a generation. There is a fundamental mismatch between the kind of political movement represented by the activists in Tahrir Square and the kind of state that is run by men with guns. There could hardly be a starker contrast between Wael Ghonim, the 30-year-old Google executive whose Facebook pages became a digital rallying point against oppression, and Field Marshall Mohammed Hussein Tantawi, 75-year-old head of the Supreme Military Council that now formally runs Egypt. There is no evidence yet that the army plans to renege on its commitments to facilitate a transition to popular rule. But in the absence of mature civil institutions, the fear of chaos might easily lead the generals to conclude that democracy is a project for the long term and then to extend the length of that term ever further. There is a deadline. Mr Mubarak, while clinging desperately to office, made a commitment to free elections in September. That was too long a wait for Egyptians, who wanted the president out forthwith. But there are reasonable arguments now for planning the poll according to a carefully measured timetable. The constitution has to be amended and the apparatus of state repression dismantled. There are political prisoners to be freed and censorship laws to be repealed. Egyptians have demonstrated a passion for free speech and free association over the last 18 days, but the process of channelling those impulses into party politics is not simple. Traditionally, the most organised opposition group is the Muslim Brotherhood, whose Islamist credentials have made western diplomats and politicians nervous. Although the Brotherhood is an important part of the anti-Mubarak coalition, there is no sign of a fundamentalist conspiracy to hijack the revolution. The flags in Tahrir Square bore the colours of the secular republic; the crowd’s hymn of choice was the national anthem. Islam will feature in Egypt’s political settlement – it is the faith of the overwhelming majority. Religious groups cannot be excluded from the process of national rehabilitation. The hope is that a democratic constitution will nurture moderation and sideline extremists. Egypt’s revolution has so far shown no appetite for violence. Ideally, democratic mechanisms would be in place before September. Certainly, the army must not still be running things after then. What happens in Cairo is being meticulously scrutinised in neighbouring states with leaders whose hold on power might be as brittle as Mr Mubarak’s. Pro-democracy protests in Algeria yesterday clashed with government riot police. Meanwhile, there are worrying signs from Tunisia, where a popular uprising in January unseated President Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali . That revolt was an inspiration to Egyptians, but Tunisians’ liberation is not consolidated. The caretaker committee managing the transition to democracy is finding the habits of authoritarianism hard to shed. The situation in Egypt is further complicated by the army’s involvement in the economy. The military controls large estates of land and has stakes in businesses ranging from tourism to olive oil production. That creates an obvious conflict of interest. The army is now expected to manage a process of political liberalisation, but that will be hard to deliver without economic change. Unemployment and inflation were key spurs to popular revolt. The US response will be crucial in that respect. Barack Obama vacillated awkwardly as Mr Mubarak tottered. The White House was conspicuously reluctant to write off an old ally, while eager also to be seen to support the principle of democracy. Mr Obama squandered potential goodwill on the streets of Cairo by hedging his bets. He should not repeat that mistake by tolerating economic and political stagnation under military rule. US aid is a vital source of income to the Egyptian army. Mr Obama should pull hard on that lever to make sure the pace of reform is brisk. Popular revolutions can inspire awe that turns quickly to fear. When power cascades out of presidential palaces and on to the streets, it is not always the most deserving candidates who scoop it up. Egypt’s allies must help the country share the bounty of political freedom equitably and resist the temptation to play casting director, choosing the actors in the unfolding drama and controlling their positions on stage. Mass celebrations of Mr Mubarak’s departure were peaceful – an expression of unity, solidarity and, above all, optimism. That spirit will dissipate quickly if ordinary Egyptians feel their will is being second-guessed or undermined by foreign intervention. So far, the people have proved the best judges of what is in the national interest. The job of the generals, and the policy imperative in the White House, is to help implement the demands of the revolution, not try to contain them. Egypt Hosni Mubarak Middle East guardian.co.uk

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In Tahrir Square, we lost our fears and found ourselves

The actor and activist describes the lead-up in Cairo to the overthrow of Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak My journey to become part of the community of Midan el Tahrir – Tahrir Square – started 17 days ago when, at dawn in London, after talks with my father and my girlfriend, I booked my ticket, less than 10 hours before the flight was due to depart. For more than two years I had been filming in Cairo, and I had come to know its pulse. I had filmed its demonstrations, fires, huge street parties, but the demonstration that took place on 25 January was unprecedented, and we all knew what was at stake. Over the past two weeks I have seen people die, learned how to breathe through teargas, climbed on top of tanks and been on a battlefront. On 28 January, when we finally walked over the Nile past the great lions of Qasr el Nil Bridge, the storm cloud of Hosni Mubarak’s regime broke. State police brutality was failing against the force of crowds and Midan el Tahrir was about to become ours. None of us entering the square as night fell knew that we were about to make a home for ourselves that would last long enough to develop an infrastructure, with our own government and social services. When I heard the news that Mubarak had stepped down I was at the far end of the square, downloading a statement I’d been asked to record to be screened at a solidarity demonstration in Trafalgar Square. I ran the length of what had become our state, from the borders of the scene of our deadliest battlefront to the heart of the square where I had lived and slept. My first memory of entering my new country was that its borders spontaneously fell apart with the deluge of people running into it. Our little state had become Egypt. What we had learned and lived through together, regardless of age, class, politics, religion, or indeed religiosity, had suddenly become everyone’s. People’s tears, embraces and cries of jubilation were not over the fact that their demand that Mubarak leave had been met, but the fact that they owned their future. For the first time in thirty years, what they said and did mattered. “Hold your head high”, they said. “You’re Egyptian!” It took hours for Midan el Tahrir to spill back into the rest of Cairo, because everyone who could get to the square had done so as soon as they could. By night time the traffic of people was flowing through a square that had become famous for its shows of density, and by early morning people were talking about what they would take with them in memories and souvenirs. Into the early hours we talked about what Egypt could become, and about how what we think of each other had changed. We talked about the fact we didn’t fear the army. We said to each other that the revolution had only just begun, and that reform would have to start inside us. The state of Midan el Tahrir is being dismantled as I write this, and I already miss it. I’m desperate now to rush there and join those packing it up with broomsticks and bin liners, and each word I write delays me further. If there was one sadness I had through the celebratory night it was that this place that had housed our dreams was gone – that particular balance of people and thoughts and togetherness. There are those who don’t want to leave yet because they want more assurances. What I think they will realise is that what we all gave Midan el Tahrir – the world over – is now part of us, and it is not those borders that we protected so desperately that will give us the future we want, but what we learned there from each other. Those of us who were citizens of Midan el Tahrir will be interpreting and unravelling what happened there for the rest of our lives. May it rest in peace, along with those who died with it. The actor Khalid Abdalla was born in Glasgow in 1980 to Egyptian doctors and was raised in London and Cairo. He came to the fore in 2006 as the lead terrorist in Paul Greengrass’s acclaimed United 93 and has since starred in The Kite Runner (2007) and Green Zone (2010) alongside Matt Damon. Egypt Protest guardian.co.uk

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Twitter and Facebook played an integral role in helping to topple Hosni Mubarak, but if Egypt is to be reformed, the online momentum of recent events must go beyond mere protest There was a chant I heard in the midst of one the most dangerous moments of Egypt’s popular revolution against President Hosni Mubarak. As supporters of the regime and its opponents faced off with bricks and petrol bombs across a barricade on the edge of Tahrir Square, those wanting Mubarak to go shouted: “We are Egyptians! You are Egyptians!” It was part taunt, part invitation to join them. And a statement of fact. It underlined a new reality that was being forged, the dangerous dissonance between two Egypts that remain – despite Mubarak’s resignation – in conflict. For while Mubarak, the polarising figure of hatred, may have gone, his nasty state remains. Those who doubt that need only consider just how easily the tap of chaos was turned on and off in service of Mubarak’s survival: the harassment of human rights activists and journalists; the mobilisation of the violent gangs in his support. And their sudden disappearance. Behind those actions are a set of entrenched interests, including the senior military hierarchy, which have invested for decades in Mubarak’s rule of Egypt’s grubbily intertwined realms of political and economic influence. For what has been left behind – after Mubarak – are two radically contradictory notions of organisation and power: two Egypts in competition whose ability to communicate will define how events unfold in the coming months. The reality is that Egypt’s revolution, like Tunisia’s, has been a broad and shallow one, with most in Tahrir Square rejecting the leaders the west’s media wanted to impose: whether Mohammed ElBaradei or the Muslim Brotherhood. Indeed some, like arrested Google executive Wael Ghonim, in a tweet on Friday night, have rejected any notion that they might be a “figurehead”, insisting on the people’s ownership of events. Which leaves an unanswered question. If, as the evidence strongly suggests, social networks like Facebook and Twitter were crucial in organising the revolutions in Tunisia and Egypt, what does that mean about the nature of these revolutions and their ability to negotiate with the still strong remnants of the autocratic states left behind? For what we have witnessed in both countries are uprisings that have mirrored the nature of the online networks used to organise them. They have been viral events, at least at first, which have quickly forged links between disparate interest groups – non-hierarchical in the way they have come

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