Home » Archives by category » News » World News (Page 2275)
Egyptian army calls the shots as nation embarks on democratic transition

• Veteran commander will steer Egyptian political reforms • Uncertainty over military’s role following years of control Field Marshal Mohammed Hussein Tantawi, the 75-year-old commander of Egypt’s armed forces and head of the Supreme Military Council, is the new face of power in Cairo now that Hosni Mubarak has finally stepped down. Tantawi is in charge of steering the country through political reforms that should change the way Egypt has been ruled for nearly 60 years – a prospect that is already sending shockwaves across the Arab world. It is a task which is also likely to pose problems for an institution that is keen on preserving its own power, privileges and status. The military council is expected to quickly suspend both houses of parliament and rule with the civilian head of the supreme constitutional court for a transitional period of just a few months. A free and fair presidential election has been promised for September. If Tantawi and the generals are still in charge at the end of this year, then the great hopes of the uprising will have been dashed. Last night, Egypt’s military said it would not act as a substitute for a “legitimate” government. A military spokesman, in a brief televised statement, said the armed forces would later announce measures and arrangements to introduce the changes Egyptians want. He also praised Mubarak for his contribution to the nation. It always seemed likely that the army, the most powerful player in Egyptian politics since the 1952 revolution, would step in as the guardian of stability once the unprecedented unrest began. The US, Israel and other Arab regimes will most likely welcome it, keeping their qualms to themselves. And so, for the moment, will many ordinary Egyptians – but only if it is the prelude to far-reaching change. Rule by the military can only be temporary. Mubarak’s exit, the dissolution of what is seen as an illegitimate parliament dominated by the ruling party, key constitutional reforms and abolition of the hated emergency laws are all non-negotiable demands. If those reforms are achieved then Egypt will have witnessed a real, transformative revolution – far beyond the removal of a stubborn 82-year-old president long past his sell-by date. It had seemed clear from the events of recent days – especially the contradictory messages before Mubarak’s last defiant TV address to the nation on Thursday – that the army is divided. Tantawi, privately scorned by younger officers as Mubarak’s “poodle,” is a conservative figure and like his old boss a veteran of wars with Israel. But as the dust cleared, the newspaper al-Ahram reported that the addresses by Mubarak and his vice-president and former spy chief, Omar Suleiman, were in defiance of the wishes of the armed forces. If the military now moves solely to protect its own position, and that of the big businessmen who have done so well out of their links with the regime – then the system will not open up, at least not without repression and bloodshed. Mubarak’s replacement by the military council will mean a resumption of talks that began earlier this week on constitutional and other changes, though they were pronounced dead by opposition groups almost before they began. But with goodwill it should now be possible to amend or rewrite the constitution to allow the election of a new parliament and president. It could, however, all still take months to agree, risking impatience in the streets and new unrest. Egyptian and foreign commentators are sharply aware of how difficult it will be for the military to accept a democratic transition that includes the legalisation of its bugbear, the banned Muslim Brotherhood, the most powerful opposition force in the country. “This is just the end of the beginning,” said Jon Alterman of the Centre for Strategic and International Studies. “Egypt isn’t moving toward democracy, it’s moved into martial law and where it goes is now subject to debate.” Analysts also see risks for the army in the new situation, exposed to demands for a civilian transitional government that could challenge or dilute its own authority or launch investigations into corruption or human rights abuses. The army may also want to avoid an armed clash with the Republican Guards that would seriously destabilise the country and further rob the regime of legitimacy. Another danger, commented the Arabist blogger Issandr Amrani, is that the army could become a target of the protesters. “There’s always been a core of activists who want to see the end of military dominance over Egypt,” he wrote. “It’s not clear whether it’s the majority, or even if this sentiment is echoed in the wider, silent Egyptian public. The army’s key problem … is that they suck at communicating. Their battle to retain public legitimacy may be lost because of bad PR and tone-deafness.” Egypt Hosni Mubarak Middle East Ian Black guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …

The sudden ouster of Hosni Mubarak has Egypt celebrating in the streets—and in interviews, and on Twitter. The Global Post rounds up some of the best reactions. From Egypt: Mohamed ElBaradei: “This is the greatest day of my life. The country has been liberated,” he told the BBC . “It’s…

Continue reading …
Hosni Mubarak resigns – and Egypt celebrates a new dawn

• President surrenders power to army and flies out of Cairo • Egypt rejoices as 18 days of mass protest end in revolution • Military pledges not to get in way of ‘legitimate’ government When it finally came, the end was swift. After 18 days of mass protest, it took just over 30 seconds for Egypt’s vice-president, Omar Suleiman, to announce that President Hosni Mubarak was standing down and handing power to the military. “In the name of Allah the most gracious the most merciful,” Suleiman read. “My fellow citizens, in the difficult circumstances our country is experiencing, President Muhammad Hosni Mubarak has decided to give up the office of the president of the republic and instructed the supreme council of the armed forces to manage the affairs of the country. May God guide our steps.” Moments later a deafening roar swept central Cairo and protesters fell to their knees and prayed, wept and let loose victory chants. Hundreds of thousands of people packed in to Tahrir Square, the centre of the demonstrations, waved flags, held up hastily written signs declaring victory and embraced soldiers. “We have brought down the regime, we have brought down the regime,” chanted the crowd. Among those in the square was Mohammed Abdul Ghedi, a lifeguard in the Red Sea resort of Sharm el-Sheikh, where the former president and his family flew on Friday. Abdul Ghedi held up a sign in English that said: “Mubarak you are nothing, you are heartless, without mind, just youkel, worthless, fuck off.” “This is my first day here and he is gone. Mubarak is a liar. When he promised to leave in three or six months we don’t believe him. We only believe him when he is gone,” he said. “Now Egyptians are free. All of Egypt is liberated. Now we will choose our leaders and if we don’t like them, they will go.” Another protester with tears in his eyes, Karim Medhat Ennarah, said: “For 18 days we have withstood teargas, rubber bullets, live ammunition, Molotov cocktails, thugs on horseback, the scepticism and fear of our loved ones, and the worst sort of ambivalence from an international community that claims to care about democracy. But we held our ground. We did it.” There were similar celebrations across the country, from Alexandria to Suez, among protesters who were often too young to have known any other leader than Mubarak. But the demonstrators were giving little immediate thought to what military rule will mean, and there were few indications from the army as to if and when it intends to meet other demands – including the dissolving of a discredited parliament elected in tainted elections, the lifting of the oppressive 30-year state of emergency, and the installation of a civilian-dominated interim administration. For now, Egypt will be governed by a military council led by the defence minister, Field Marshal Mohamed Hussein Tantawi, who is not a known reformer. But some of the protest organisers said that the dramatic success of the street demonstrations meant that any future administration would be held to account. Mohammed ElBaradei, who on Thursday called for a military takeover, described the change as the liberation of the Egyptian people. “We have a lot of daunting tasks ahead of us. Our priority to make sure the country is restored; socially cohesive, economically vibrant, politically democratic,” he said. “My message to the Egyptian people is you have gained your liberty, the right to catch up with the rest of the world. Make the best use of it.” In the US the Obama administration had schemed to try to keep Mubarak in power until a stable transitional administration was in place. In recent days, however, the Egyptian regime’s failure to make any substantial reforms and defiance of American pressure had become a deepening problem for Washington. The US defence secretary, Robert Gates, has been in regular contact with Tantawi and spoke to him just hours before the military takeover. In Britain, David Cameron called on the new Egyptian administration to ensure a move to civilian and democratic rule. The EU foreign policy chief, Lady Ashton, welcomed Mubarak’s resignation. “It is important now that the dialogue is accelerated leading to a broad-based government which will respect the aspirations of, and deliver stability for, the Egyptian people,” she said. Switzerland immediately froze the assets of the former president. Mubarak’s resignation came after a turbulent 24 hours in which a televised address to the nation that was intended to defuse the crisis only further infuriated the protesters and prompted the largest demonstrations to date. On Thursday evening, after a day in which members of the president’s party and cabinet said they expected him to resign, Mubarak announced that he was handing his powers to Suleiman. That in effect left Mubarak as president in name only, a move he appears to have believed would be enough to satisfy the protesters’ demands for his resignation. But on the streets of Cairo the announcement was interpreted as the regime’s leaders shuffling authority among themselves. Instead of easing the crisis, Mubarak’s statement deepened it. The army appears to have expected more from him, possibly including his complete resignation or the transfer of powers to the military, not Suleiman. Clearly alarmed at the popular reaction it sought to reassure the protesters on Friday morning with a declaration that the promise of free elections would be fulfilled. But that too failed to ease the demonstrations as many in the opposition saw the statement as backing the status quo, although it could also be read as offering an assurance to Egyptians that the military was prepared to ensure Mubarak stood by his commitments. As the protests built up during the day, a determined crowd marched on the state television building, a target of particular ire because of its stream of propaganda and false accusations against the protesters. The station all but went off air as it had to cancel live programmes because it could not get guests into the building. Several hours later it was conducting interviews again – with protesters and victims of the regime. The protesters fanned out to other parts of the city and began a march on Mubarak’s presidential palace. Meanwhile the military’s supreme council held an emergency session to decide how to clearly confront the crisis and concluded that Mubarak had to go once and for all. By lunchtime he was on a plane with his family to Sharm el-Sheikh, where he also has a palace which he periodically lends to Tony Blair. A few hours later came the announcement that had Egypt celebrating in to the night. Egypt Hosni Mubarak Omar Suleiman Middle East Chris McGreal Jack Shenker guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …

Humanity broadcasts a mind-boggling amount of information daily—try 1.9 zettabytes on for size, says a USC study . In other words, each person is hit with 174 newspapers’ worth of information every day, the Daily Mail reports. Meanwhile, computers, libraries, DVD collections, and newspapers can store some 295 exabytes—…

Continue reading …

The commander of Egypt’s air force appeared on Egyptian TV today to assure the people that the Supreme Military Council was taking over the country, but only during the transition to another civilian government, CNN reports. He also praised both the “martyrs” among the protesters, and Mubarak himself for his…

Continue reading …
Scenes from Tahrir Square: The Revolution Victorious

Two hours after Hosni Mubarak, Egypt’s president for 30 years, announced his resignation, the party in Tahrir Square – the heart of the revolution – was in full effect. A singer who has been performing in the square for days played a protest song on his acoustic guitar: “The people finally brought down the system.”

Continue reading …

The Grammys are Sunday, and it’s inevitable that you won’t agree with the winners in every category. In Entertainment Weekly , Leah Greenblatt and Simon Vozick-Levinson let us know who will win … versus who should win: Album of the Year : Eminem will win for Recovery , but Arcade Fire’s The Suburbs…

Continue reading …
News Bulletin – 1700GMT update

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

Continue reading …
Be my valentine? – video

Livedraw: Patrick Blower imagines potential love matches in world politics for this Valentine’s Day Patrick Blower

Continue reading …
Hosni Mubarak resigns: ‘Look at the streets … This is what hope looks like’

Ahdaf Soueif on the spirit of protest, joy and optimism across Egypt – and how that can be harnessed as the rebuilding begins The joy cries filled the air – across Egypt the joy cries filled the air. For two weeks we’d chanted: ” Come on Egy pt, One more push / Free dom will be born to night.” And tonight this has come true. We don’t yet know how the next stage will pan out. But we know that we will continue to do everything to protect our revolution and the spirit of our revolution. If it had not been so dangerous it would have been comic: the spectacle of a handful of old men popping up one after the other to – to do what? To demonstrate their complete irrelevance to the people and the events they still hoped to control. We looked at each other in amazement after every one of their performances. Were they living in an alternative reality? A kind of Truman Show? On Thursday eveningHosni Mubarak, Omar Suleiman and Ehud Barak were sharing a song-sheet: Egypt isn’t ready, don’t move too quickly, the Islamists will destabilise the region. How they wished all this were true; rather than the Woodstock-type scenes we’ve been witnessing in Egypt’s public spaces for two weeks. The key to understanding the regime’s discourse was this: these people were not addressing Egypt at all: they were still addressing what they think of as America. The first and necessary demand of this miraculous, human, humane, revolution was clearly expressed from day one: the removal of the regime. The regime being all the people, the power bases, the regulations and traditions that have facilitated the exploiting, the degrading of the country’s institutions to serve the interests of a small clique against the interests of the nation as a whole. And to be able to do this they have maligned and misrepresented the Egyptian people to each other and to the world. They have engaged in nothing less than the destruction of the humanity of this country. The people demanded the fall of this regime. In Tahrir Square and on the streets of Egypt the people have reclaimed their humanity. Now they will reclaim their state. By means of free and fair elections under judicial supervision. To hold these elections we need to reform the constitution the regime has so deformed. So we will need a council of senior judiciary to form a cabinet of non-political technocrats to run the country while a committee of respected public figures and constitutional experts redraw the bits of the constitution necessary to regulate elections. Six months should see this all done. And the army has declared it will safeguard the country for this to happen. On Thursday night when the regime announced its intention to stay, the people’s response was immediate: they marched. On the Nile Corniche they formed a human chain around the radio and television building: the source of all the poison propaganda against the revolution. On the airport road, they started a sit-in at Mubarak’s residence – he, of course, was not there. On Friday, millions were on the move: exasperated and fed-up, but insisting “sil miy yah / sil miy yah” — peaceable, good-humoured, still cracking jokes. And now, in a mercifully brief statement, Suleiman declared the stepping aside of Mubarak and the handover to the army. As of this minute there is no embezzling president, no extraordinary-rendition-facilitator vice-president, no corrupt cabinet, no rigged parliament, no brutal emergency laws, no – regime! We have entered a new phase. For two weeks the people have been chanting “The People/The Army/One Hand.” We will now work to make this true in the most positive way possible: that the army will guarantee peace and safety while we put in place the civilian structures that will help us to articulate how we want to run our country. In the square I had met two women in the last stages of pregnancy. They were due to give birth any day and they wanted to give birth in a free Egypt. Now they can have their babies. The world has been watching this struggle between a tenacious, brutal and corrupt government, using all the apparatus of the state, and a great and varied body of citizens, armed with nothing but words and music and legitimacy and hope. The support of the world came through to us loud and clear, and what has happened here over the last two weeks will give voice and power to civilian citizens everywhere. Our work will begin now: to rebuild our country in as exemplary a fashion as the one in which we’ve won it back. To remember our young people who died that this night might happen and to carry them forward with us into a future good for us and good for our friends and good for the world. Look at the streets of Egypt tonight; this is what hope looks like. Ahdaf Soueif is the author of the Booker-prize nominated novel The Map of Love and many other books. She lives in Cairo and London Hosni Mubarak Egypt Middle East Ahdaf Soueif guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …