For American TV viewers looking to keep tabs on Egypt, there’s really no contest, writes Allesandra Stanley in the New York Times : Keep it on CNN. Rivals MSNBC and Fox are giving lots of air time to the subject, but their coverage tends to degenerate into predictable left-right battle lines….
Continue reading …The uprising in Egypt has claimed its first journalistic victim. Ahmad Mohamed Mahmoud , a photographer with the newspaper Al-Ta’awun , died last night in hospital from gunshot wounds sustained seven days before. Mahmoud is thought to have been shot by a sniper while filming confrontations between security forces and demonstrators from the balcony of his home in Cairo’s Qasr al-Aini district, which is adjacent to Tahrir Square. Sources: CPJ / Wall Street Journal Journalist safety Egypt Press freedom Middle East Roy Greenslade guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Now that the “New Start” treaty between US and Russia is in effect , just how did it come to be? The Telegraph says the US got Moscow to play along by giving up some of Britain’s nuclear secrets. Citing WikiLeaks documents, it says the US turned over the serial numbers…
Continue reading …Whether you’re invested in football or not, the Super Bowl will, as always, provide plenty of entertainment between plays. Here are the commercials to watch out for—some of which, the New York Times notes, have already been released: A kid dressed as Darth Vader will attempt to use the…
Continue reading …A surgeon is under review by California’s medical board after two of his patients died after receiving Lap-Band implants to lose weight, reports the Los Angeles Times . The board informed relatives of the women, ages 33 and 52, that the “quality of care” provided by Dr. Atul Madan at the…
Continue reading …On the day the people decided to sever their final links with the days of the pharoahs, the rebirth of a nation began 25 January is a date that will be forever remembered in Egypt. That was the day when the Egyptian people decided to end the country’s last pharaonic dynasty with a people’s revolution. Egyptians, it seems, were ashamed that Tunisians did it first and were determined to have their revolution too. Young Egyptians joined the “Khaled Saeed” Facebook group to launch the call for an uprising against tyranny, oppression, torture, corruption and injustice. The group was named after a young Egyptian man beaten to death by police. That call was echoed on other Facebook groups, on blogs and on Twitter. El Ghad and a number of youth protest movements embraced the call from an early stage and started to mobilise support throughout the country. Many sceptics took the view that you cannot set a date for revolution, but although Egyptians are not the most punctual of people, this was a date they kept. On 25 January, Egyptians took to the streets in almost every major town and city. The police tried to crush the protests, but unarmed people stood firm against water cannons, armoured carriers and teargas. Three days later, on the “Friday of rage”, more than a million Egyptians took to the streets in support of the uprising. Anti-riot police used maximum force but finally had to retreat – and then they disappeared altogether, from Cairo and other major cities, in what appeared to be a conspiracy to plunge the country into chaos. The army had to step in and were immediately embraced by protesters, who took photos with them and climbed on to their tanks. Mubarak came on TV that evening, offering a government reshuffle and warning of chaos. The protesters were disappointed and have vowed to remain in protest until their demands are met. This is a revolution of the people. After eight days of protests, Mubarak started to get the hint – that he is no longer wanted as a president by his own people. The president’s termination letter has been sealed by millions of Egyptians. After 30 years of ruling Egypt, the 83-year-old man has clearly become detached from reality. After the November elections last year, when the ruling National Democratic Party (NDP) “won” more than 90% of the seats amid reports of widespread fraud and irregularities, the opposition National Assembly for Change developed what is now known as the people’s parliament – a sort of shadow parliament with 100 members from various opposition parties and movements in addition to independents. The people’s parliament elected a committee of 10 members to start a dialogue with the regime in order to put people’s demands into action. The demands of the protesters were beautifully crystallised in two chants: “The people want the regime down” and “Bread, freedom and human dignity”. In political terms, the first demand relates to dismantling the authoritarian regime and installing democracy in Egypt. This means breaking down a culture of corruption emodied in the ruling NDP party, and restructuring the state security police to focus on criminal activities rather than meddle with the political process in defence of the status quo. The protesters also demanded the dissolution of both chambers of the parliament as well as local councils, all of which were elected by a theatrical political process controlled by the regime and its security apparatus. For this to happen, the people’s parliament proposed a peaceful transition of power through negotiating a national unity government of all political forces and protest movements in addition to the military. This transition government should oversee drafting a new constitution and laying out the rules of a political process that allows parties, civil society organisations and unions freely to emerge. This, in turn, can be followed by free and fair elections. New political facts have emerged from this “revolution”. The Egyptian people have demonstrated that they may be patient and peaceful to a fault, but they surely know how to make their voices heard at home and around the world. The way these spontaneous demonstrations took place and maintained a unity of demands, despite the blackout on mobile communication and stoppage of internet service, proves that a new collective conscience has been born in Egypt. In fact, Egypt itself has in these last few days been reborn. Ayman Nour, leader of the El Ghad party, was imprisoned in 2005 by President Mubarak and released on health grounds in 2009. Wael Nawara is a leading Egyptian writer. Hosni Mubarak Egypt Middle East Protest guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Tens of thousands of protesters in Cairo’s Tahrir Square have held their ground after Friday’s “Day of Departure”, continuing to demand that Hosni Mubarak, the Egyptian president, stand down. The government, meanwhile, is attempting to wait protesters out, with Ahmed Shafiq, the prime minister, saying that things are returning to normal in the country. Al Jazeera’s Alan Fisher has more.
Continue reading …Secretary of State Hillary Clinton exchanged ratification papers for the New START treaty with her Russian counterpart at a Munich conference today, sealing the deal on the nuclear arms treaty that limits the number of atomic warheads the former Cold War foes can possess and allows them to inspect each…
Continue reading …The west failed to ‘see like citizens’ and missed the signs that people in Egypt, Tunisia and Yemen were at breaking point Why did diplomats, policymakers, analysts and academics fail to see and understand the growing popular unrest in Tunisia , Egypt and other Arab countries? It seems that the reasons why we thought a revolution impossible were wrong, our identification of the agents of change was misguided and our understanding of how collective mobilisation happens was too narrow. We need new ways to capture what is happening on the ground through the eyes of these countries’ people. Failing to make sense of the protests Egypt has witnessed a number of protests in the past five years. Demonstrators clearly showed that they were defying the restrictions of political activism and breaking through the fear barrier. We missed these hints of public dissent because these forms of collective action did not fit our checklist of what constitutes the “right kind” of citizen mobilisation that would shake an authoritarian regime. The constant flare-up of protests, sit-ins, demonstrations and encroachments on public space all led by citizens, whether workers in their thousands or young Egyptian Christian youth more recently, were often dismissed as too small, inconsequential or too narrow in their demands to be of significance for regime change. However, to assume that the masses would not rise shows how dismissive we have been of the power of unruly politics. The impact of state security on citizens’ lives While policymakers and analysts focused on the oppressive role of the police force in dealing with the formal institutions and establishments – the media, the political parties – the extent and scope of state security monitoring of ordinary citizens was almost entirely neglected. The domestic intelligence service had created unsustainable levels of paranoia, fear and distrust that gripped citizens in Egypt, Yemen and Tunisia. By focusing on the formal institutional actors, we failed to “see like citizens” and missed out on the experiences citizens faced on a day-to-day basis. Citizens tried to adapt to living with security services (and the thousands of informers) breathing down their necks. But with the increasing economic deprivation, the provocations of a regime that does democracy through rigged ballots and the absence of choices elsewhere, their breaking point was clearly nearing. Economic figures that don’t add up on the ground The official economic story, measured by the international community in terms of economic growth, suggested that Tunisia, Egypt and Yemen were weathering the economic crises. Yet on the ground, the story was very different. In Yemen, as part of research by the Institute of Development Studies on the impact of the economic crises on the poor, interviews conducted with families in Sana’a in April 2010 revealed the extent to which a war in the north, inflation and diminishing economic opportunities were taking their toll on their survival. Families were having to cut down severely on food and reduce their children’s school attendance because conditions had become so dire. The poor were fully aware of why this was happening: a corrupt government blind to the people’s suffering. When the conventional saviours have no saving powers Current understanding of the democracy process pinpoints three groups believed to be instrumental in challenging authoritarian regimes: political parties, the Islamist movement and human rights associations and other civil society organisations. In short, the focus has been on highly institutionalised actors operating in the formal, public sphere. Opposition parties did not catalyse, organise or lead the citizen movements who took to the streets in Egypt or Tunisia. They were almost missing from the scene at the outset. As for the human rights groups, their role in awakening citizens or mobilising them into activism has been minimal, almost nonexistent. Human rights organisations, like some vocal political party activists, have been instrumental in exposing the violation of human rights by existing regimes. But foreign funding for democracy promotion has led to it becoming increasingly professional in nature, and in some instances to depoliticisation as well. In a bid to prove that civil society organisations are the sites for igniting social activism, western policymakers and scholars have looked to development and human rights organisations for engagement in contentious politics – but in the process missed out on where the organic activism was unfolding. Political analysts and scholars have been strongly advocating for the west to forge dialogues with “moderate” Islamist forces on account of their large popular support base and the fact that they represent the most significant political opposition to existing authoritarian regimes. But we may have all grossly overestimated the power of the Islamists on the ground. The Muslim Brotherhood ‘s position on the protests that erupted in Egypt on 25 January was ambivalent, and even when they joined in the uprising on the Friday “day of fury”, it was evident that they were not leading, nor did they have a conspicuous presence. Seeing like citizens Informed by social movement theory about actors, agency and how change happens, we ended up asking the wrong questions as to why the people have risen. In Egypt, Tunisia, and Yemen, was there an organised social movement? Certainly not. Did they have visible leadership? No. Did they have a massive, or at least significant following? Not in the conventional sense of a mobilised constituency. Our analytical perspectives failed to enable us to “see like citizens” and understand that people were overcoming barriers of fear and reaching breaking point. However, it is not too late to be responsive: international diplomats need to side with the people now. Otherwise, it is not only the legitimacy of the current Egyptian regime that is at stake, but also the legitimacy of the entire international human rights framework. Egypt Tunisia Yemen Protest Middle East Mariz Tadros guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …An American Airlines jet got a little too close to comfort to two Air Force cargo planes two weeks ago, and the feds are investigating the close call, reports the New York Daily News. About 12 minutes after takeoff from JFK airport, the passenger jet’s proximity-detection system went off, warning…
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