Reuters: We did not move to support the Shi’ites in Bahrain but we called for interference in Bahraini affairs to be stopped and don’t want to make it a sectarian issue. Because if it happens, it will be like a snowball, it will get bigger if it is ignored … The region may be drawn into a sectarian war.” Maliki has previously criticized the intervention by Gulf states in Bahrain. Shi’ites in Iraq have also demonstrated in support of Bahraini demonstrators. Like Bahrain, Iraq has a Shi’ite majority that complained about decades of oppression under a Sunni ruling class.
Arab spring: an interactive timeline of Middle East protests
The Guardian has really showed its worth through its coverage of the revolutionary movements in the Middle East. Here’s its latest gem, an interactive timeline of Middle East protests.
Islamist Group Is Rising Force in a New Egypt
If the Muslim Brotherhood was a force even during times when he had to operate in relatively secrecy, it makes sense that it’s power is growing faster than before now that it can operate freely.
NYT: In post-revolutionary Egypt, where hope and confusion collide in the daily struggle to build a new nation, religion has emerged as a powerful political force, following an uprising that was based on secular ideals. The Muslim Brotherhood, an Islamist group once banned by the state, is at the forefront, transformed into a tacit partner with the military government that many fear will thwart fundamental changes.
It is also clear that the young, educated secular activists who initially propelled the nonideological revolution are no longer the driving political force — at least not at the moment.
As the best organized and most extensive opposition movement in Egypt, the Muslim Brotherhood was expected to have an edge in the contest for influence. But what surprises many is its link to a military that vilified it.
Calls on Facebook for a 3rd Palestinian Uprising
In keeping with recent history, organizers are now using facebook to call for a third intifada, or uprising, in “all” of Palestine. Here’s the link. It has been reported that Israeli authorities have asked facebook to take down this page. I guess Israel and the Arab regimes have more in common than people think.
Celebrity Deaths Happen in Threes
They say celebrity deaths happen in threes. After these history-making moments, they’ll look back and say “Arab dictators fall in 3s” or 4s or 5s. First Ben Ali, 2nd Mubarak, and now Saleh and Gaddafi cutting in front of each other for the 3rd spot.
In U.S. poll, 60 percent back Libya military action
Reuters: “Sixty percent of Americans support the U.S. and allied military action in Libya to impose a no-fly zone to protect civilians from forces loyal to Muammar Gaddafi, a Reuters/Ipsos poll released on Thursday found.” You know what this tells me? It tells me that the media continues to get the American people to go along with government policy. It does NOT tell me that they are following events in Libya closely and have made an informed decision. I mean, the majority also supported the Iraq War erroneously believing that Saddam had a hand in 9/11.
Don’t forget about the struggle in Bahrain
Latest al-Jazeera video.
Rebel Insider Concedes Weaknesses in Libya
NYT: Mr. Tarhouni acknowledged the dilemma, saying that without heavy artillery and planes, the rebels were left to rely on the young people who had first faced the colonel’s army with stones. “Now they’re carrying arms,†he said. “Rightfully so.â€
Netanyahu is freaking out
In 1979, Egypt, the most powerful Arab country and the leader of the movement against Israel, signed peace with Israel, and left the struggle (and was banished from the Arab League). In the same year, Iran, a one-time staunch ally to Israel, joined the struggle after it underwent its revolution, supplanting Egypt’s pre-Camp David role, and has since led the resistance to Israel. Yassir Arafat, seeking a benefactor to replace the then banished Egypt, was the first world leader to visit revolutionary Iran. Now that Egypt is undergoing its own revolution and is predicted not necessarily to be an enemy of Israel, but to no longer collaborate with it in regards to suffocating the Gaza Strip or isolating Iran, the Israeli gov’t is now desperate to make up for the Egyptian “loss.” Just look at what Netanyahu recently said: “I would expect that the world put similar pressure on Iran. Iran is at least equal to Libya, and I believe that its importance is even greater,†said Netanyahu, adding that Iran hopes to “return the region to the ninth century.â€Â He’s absolutely freaking out about the tectonic shifts underway in the region and is wishing that somehow someway, they can manage to obtain something positive. In other words, he’s effectively saying, “if the Arab revolutions are going to hurt Israel, maybe we can get the world to treat Iran like Libya so as to win something out of all this uproar.”  Unlike 1979, Israel’s situation will not be lose-win (Iran-Egypt) but lose-lose.
Despite the lack of coverage, Gaza still suffers
Dr. Sara Roy was my master’s thesis adviser at Harvard. She’s brilliant and her recent article on Foreign Policy is stinging: “Indeed, most Gazans have been impoverished and too many have known hunger, a reality (in the form of a strangulating economic siege) deliberately and principally imposed for years by Israel, the U.S., EU and Egypt on a defenseless and overwhelmingly young civilian population. Perhaps most alarming, recent indicators strongly suggest that the ability of people to feed themselves and their children has diminished even further.
In a recent report on food and water insecurity in the Gaza Strip, Physicians for Human Rights-Israel (PHRI) revealed some striking statistics regarding the damage incurred. For example, levels of food insecurity–defined by the World Food Programme as a “lack of access to sufficient, safe, and nutritious food, which meets dietary needs…for an active and healthy life”–rose from 40 percent in 2003 to 61 percent towards the end of 2010. This means that over 900,000 people out of a total population of 1.5 million “do not have the self-sufficient means to grow or purchase the bare minimum amount of food for themselves and their families” (while another 200,000-plus remain vulnerable to food insecurity).”
Libyan rumors
There are unconfirmed reports of great significance. 1. Qaddafi’s son Khamis may have died in a suicide attack, which if true, is a major blow to Qaddafi and his armed forces because Khamis is a key figure in Qaddafi’s loyalist corps. and is the military commander of the elite Khamis Brigade; 2. there are rumors that Qaddafi may be preparing for a life in exile. This latter rumor is probably not true because everything Qaddafi has said and done and is doing leads to the conclusion that it’s still premature for him to be planning his escape (though I’m sure he’s always had a preliminary emergency plan as a contingency).
Demonstrations in Syria enter 5th day
No country is exempt, some are just less vulnerable to protest because the fear factor is higher. Syria, where its intelligence agency and security services are among the more efficient and ruthless in region, is now experiencing its 5th day of protest. The fear factor is now breaking in Syria. Here’s the footage from yesterday. Here’s the update for today: The preacher of the Saladin Mosque was reflecting on the joys of Mother’s Day, his sermon straying far from dramatic protests now gripping Syria, when a young man jumped up to the pulpit and grabbed the microphone.
“Why are you talking about this in these circumstances? Tell us about the political situation!” shouted the youth, before secret police arrested him and hurried him away.
The scene at the mosque in the lower income Damascus district of Ruknaldin, recounted to Reuters by worshippers who witnessed it on Friday, was striking in a country where pliant citizens have endured government-dictated sermons for decades.
In Damascus, as in the provinces, a barrier of fear which had blocked dissent is breaking down. Uprisings across the Arab world have not stopped at the door of one of its most hardline administrations.
For the first time, placards other than those glorifying Syria’s ruling elite and the “historic achievements” of the Baath Party are being raised in the towns of the strategic Hauran plain south of Damascus.
A single word is etched on them — “Freedom”.
Ali Abdullah Saleh the Comic
Ali Abdullah Saleh, who has served as Yemen’s president for 32 years, declared that the recent military defections to the opposition were “a coup against democracy.” Why didn’t anybody tell me he had a sense of humor?!? Had I known, I would’ve invited him to do stand-up comedy at my last birthday.
Top Army Commanders Defect in Yemen (Video)
This is a disaster for the government and a major morale boost for the revolutionaries in Yemen. See the video here. Now that the commanders have pledged to protect the demonstrators, protests will probably swell even larger now that there is less risk of harm than before.
