
Turmoil in Egypt could scupper programme to supply four billion new coins a year Turmoil in Cairo is fraying nerves at the Royal Mint’s factory in south Wales, which has a lucrative deal to supply the Egyptian authorities with more than four billion coins annually for a long-term “recoinage” programme in the north African nation. Egypt is the Royal Mint’s second-largest foreign customer, behind Russia, accounting for a substantial chunk of last year’s £110m in overseas revenue. Asked if he was keeping an eye on events in Egypt, the mint’s chief executive, Adam Lawrence, said: “We certainly would be. There’s obviously a bit of volatility in Egypt but we’ve worked with the Egyptian mint for many years.” The Egyptian government had been renewing its coin supply and much of the new currency is being made at the Royal Mint, which employs 900 people in Llantrisant, near Cardiff. The mint supplies coins in four denominations: five, 10 and 50 piastres and one Egyptian pound. The uncertainty comes at an awkward time for the mint, which is owned by taxpayers but was given commercial freedom to pursue profitable contracts at the end of 2009. The mint, which will mark the 40th anniversary of decimalisation this week, is anticipating a drop in profits from last year’s £4.2m because of higher pension and insurance costs, together with a drop in demand from domestic banks for British coins. “Our demand is largely driven by cash transactions and cash transactions are restrained in a recession – so the demand pull-through is significantly less,” said Lawrence. Despite the cash downturn, Lawrence said the mint could look forward to a boom in commemorative coins to mark Prince William’s wedding and the Queen’s diamond jubilee. Souvenir gold sovereigns for collectors can cost as much as £700. The mint is also producing medals for next year’s London Olympics. Lawrence said there was a balance to be struck between using such occasions as revenue raisers and “celebrating a national event”. None of the mint’s new coins being dispatched to Egypt, thankfully, bear an image of Hosni Mubarak, who has stepped down after 30 years of rule. Instead, the currency depicts a selection of historical sites, artefacts and figures. Lawrence said he was unsure what the position of any new regime would be on recoinage: “I honestly don’t know. I can’t imagine it’s top of their priority list.” Egypt Andrew Clark guardian.co.uk
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Egyptians are coming to terms with the scale of change in their country following the dramatic protests in Cairo that unseated their president Akhem Hassan came so late to the revolution he thought he might have missed it, but on Saturday he discovered that it is far from over. For days, Hassan watched events unfold on television. Or rather, he fumed as the state broadcaster spewed forth a stream of lies about the protests in Cairo’s Tahrir Square. “They said the demonstrators were paid by foreigners and agents of Israel,” said the 41-year-old driving instructor. “They said they only went to Tahrir Square because there was free Kentucky [Fried Chicken]. But we Egyptians were afraid of the government since the day we were born and no one would go against it just for free Kentucky.” It took Hosni Mubarak’s television address, though, to get Hassan down to the square. Like many of his countrymen, he had been expecting the Egyptian president to quit on Thursday night. When he didn’t, it was too much. “I decided that for my sons’ future, I too must be brave,” he said. Hassan arrived in Tahrir Square on Friday morning as the growing crowd seethed with anger at what was widely regarded as the regime’s duplicity after the near euphoria of the day before at statements from the army and politicians that Mubarak was about to quit. Protest organisers were discussing how to ratchet up the pressure with civil disobedience and mass strikes while hundreds of thousands of people, like Hassan, poured in to the square. A few hours later, a spasm of disbelief and stunned silence gave way to a roar that swept Cairo and cities across Egypt as more than 30 years of Mubarak’s rule was ended in a terse 30-second statement. The army was now running the country. The revolution was won. Or perhaps it wasn’t. On Saturday morning Hassan was still in the square with many thousands of others, still not quite believing the emotional rollercoaster of the past 24 hours as he read a paper with a large picture of Mubarak on the front under a contemptuous headline. “I was going to go home now,” said Hassan. “But people here told me to stay. They’re telling everyone to stay. They said the revolution isn’t over yet.” The morning after Mubarak was forced out, Tahrir Square was busy with protesters clearing up the detritus of revolution – neatly piling the stones ripped from the ground to resist any attempt to force the demonstrators from the square and sweeping the road as if this was the first step to building a new Egypt. On the edge of the square, fathers lifted their children on to tanks and clicked away with their phone cameras. Young women in headscarves edged as close as modesty would allow them to the soldiers as their friends took pictures. Older women delivered cakes to the men in uniform. Their husbands hugged the soldiers and thanked them for saving the country. These revolutionaries – ordinary Egyptians, old and young, middle-class and poor, Islamists and secularists, who could never have imagined publicly criticising the government just a few weeks ago – marvelled at the enormity of what they had achieved. Egyptians have surprised themselves with the power and orderliness of their revolution. During 18 days of protest they endured police attacks with live rounds and rubber bullets, a camel charge by pro-Mubarak thugs, and times when it seemed as though their struggle might take months. But the violence that cost more than 300 people their lives all came from the state’s brutal but failed attempt to break the uprising. “The government tried to kill us but it only made us stronger,” said Khalid Mostafa, a worker at a butchery. “They didn’t think we would fight back when they sent the people to beat and shoot us. When they did that, we had the whole country with us and we knew they could not kill us all.” When some of the young men among the hundreds of thousands packed in to Tahrir Square grew belligerent at the army’s attempts to prevent the protest spilling beyond the barricades, others calmed them with pleas that non-violence was their most powerful weapon. Instead, deeply religious men and women in chadors laid themselves down in front of the tanks, their heads resting inside the tracks, to forestall any attempt by the military to move on the square. On Saturday Mostafa was among the clumps of people gathered around speakers as men – it always seemed to be men – took turns to offer their views on what should happen next. Here and there, the arguments turned heated. Some saw ridding the country of Mubarak’s rule as enough and declared the revolution won. The army is with the people, they declared. Others dwelled on the uncertainties of a takeover by the same military that kept Mubarak in power for 30 years. The crowds may have chanted “the army and people are one” as they sought to forestall any attempt to use force to break the protests, but for protesters such as Fawzi Abdul Aleem, a surgeon who left a state hospital in Alexandria to join the demonstrations early on and slept every night in the square, there is reason for concern. “We don’t know the military’s intention. Since the 1952 revolution we have been governed by the military,” he said. “We need a civilian government. We don’t want the military to rule us. They are strict, they are not democratic. It’s not good for us. We are staying here until we get guarantees for the future. We are waiting for the army to accept our demands.” Shortly after taking over, the military called for an end to the protests. It told the demonstrators in Tahrir Square that they had won and it was time to clear the barricades of burned-out cars, railings and metal sheeting and go home. “The army is a bit surprised that we haven’t left,” said Azza Khalil, another doctor at the open-air clinics scattered around the square. “The best thing about this revolution is we broke the fear of talking to our leaders. Now we hope the leaders will be afraid of the masses, the people. I think people realised how powerful they are. I hope the army realises that.” The protest organisers have laid out a series of demands to the army, key to which are the dissolution of the widely discredited parliament, the lifting of the 30-year-old state of emergency imposed after Anwar Sadat’s assassination which has been used to persecute the government’s opponents and suppress political activity, and the establishment of an interim administration to get the country to free elections. The military has agreed to meet some of those, but not all. The demonstrators are pressing for the creation of a five-person interim ruling council of four civilians – all of whom would be barred from running for president when elections are held, so they could not use their position for political advantage – and one military official. While some Egyptians are misty-eyed about the army, there is ample evidence that it has not been neutral during the crisis. It stood back while the regime’s thugs attacked demonstrators in Tahrir Square. Hundreds, possibly thousands, of opposition activists, or people merely carrying political literature, were detained and some severely tortured. Among those picked up was Kareem Amer, a renowned political activist and blogger, who had already served four years in prison. He was arrested on the edge of Tahrir Square on 7 February. Amer told a website, CyberDissidents.org, that he was held in a military prison in the desert in a crowded cell. “People were treated harshly and severely tortured on a daily basis. They were tortured in front of our eyes – water-boarded, beaten with sticks, and electrocuted,” he said. Amer was only released on Friday as Mubarak fell. “Thousands of prisoners were released, even those who had killed soldiers,” he said. Still, even amid the debate over what the military is really up to, there is a new confidence in the power of ordinary people to make a difference and a determination that, if the army doesn’t deliver, Egyptians will be back on the streets. “We are the example to the world,” said Abdel Massri, a 25 year-old IT specialist. “All over the Arab world they are celebrating our freedom. In America, in Israel, they say Egyptians are not ready for democracy, Arabs don’t know how to use democracy. But that is just their excuse for supporting Mubarak. He was good for them, not for us.” Mubarak may be gone, but people have not stopped talking about him. They debate how to get back the money they believe he has stolen. They disagree about whether he should be allowed to retire in peace in Egypt or be called to account for the many crimes people tick off. But they generally agree on one thing in Tahrir Square – that Mubarak colossally misjudged Egyptians. “Mubarak, this man is so stupid,” said Khalil with a laugh. “Everything he did managed to get more people on the streets. His speech made every single person hate him because they discovered he doesn’t love Egypt, he loves himself.” Egypt Hosni Mubarak Middle East Chris McGreal guardian.co.uk
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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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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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