Opposition in Egypt Gears Up for Major Friday Protest

The Guardian: Egypt’s president, Hosni Mubarak, will face escalating challenges on all fronts tomorrow, with Cairo expecting the biggest day yet of street protests and Mohamed ElBaradei, one of his fiercest critics, calling explicitly for a “new regime” on his return to Cairo.

Redoubling the sense of crisis for 82-year-old Mubarak, who has ruled for the past three decades, the outlawed Muslim Brotherhood, Egypt’s most potent opposition force, said it was backing the latest call for demonstrations scheduled to follow Friday prayers.

In an interview with CNN before his return, ElBaradei poured scorn on comments by the US secretary of state, Hillary Clinton, who had described the Egyptian government as stable and “looking for ways to respond to the legitimate needs and interests of the Egyptian people”.

“I was stunned to hear secretary Clinton saying the Egyptian government is stable. And I ask myself at what price is stability? Is it on the basis of 29 years of martial law? Is it on the basis of 30 years of [an] ossified regime? Is it on the basis of rigged elections? That’s not stability, that’s living on borrowed time,” said ElBaradei.

“When you see today almost over 100,000 young people getting desperate, going to the streets, asking for their basic freedom, I expected to hear from secretary Clinton stuff like ‘democracy, human rights, basic freedom’ – all the stuff the US is standing for,” he said.

The Muslim Brotherhood is throwing its weight behind protests after four days in which six have died and almost 1,000 have been rounded up by police. Mohammed Mursi, a leader of the group, said: “We are not pushing this movement, but we are moving with it. We don’t wish to lead it but we want to be part of it.”

Organisers of tomorrow’s marches – dubbed “the Friday of anger and freedom” – are defying a government ban on protests issued on Wednesday. They have been using social media to co-ordinate, and hope to rally even more than the tens of thousands who turned out on Tuesday in the biggest protests since 1977.

Posted in Egypt | Tagged | Comments Off on Opposition in Egypt Gears Up for Major Friday Protest

Protests Grow in Yemen

See the video from Thursday’s rallies in Sana’a.

Posted in Yemen | Tagged | Comments Off on Protests Grow in Yemen

Defiance in Egypt

This is what defiance looks like…

Posted in Egypt | Tagged | Comments Off on Defiance in Egypt

US State Department Spokesman Grilled

See the video here. The al-Jazeera correspondent ask very poignant questions. I just picture PJ Crowley swearing left and right as soon as the interview ends.

Posted in Egypt | Tagged | 1 Comment

The Tunisian Effect: Cairo in ‘Day of Revolt’ and elsewhere

Cairo on January 25: See the video here.

Jordan on January 24: See the video here.

Yemen on January 23: Read about it here.

Algiers on January 22: See the video here.

Posted in Egypt, Middle East, Tunisia, Yemen | Tagged | 1 Comment

Mohamed Bouazizi’s suicide sparked the Tunisia Revolution

Remember his name. See the video (not of the suicide but of the story of his suicide).

Posted in Tunisia | Tagged | Comments Off on Mohamed Bouazizi’s suicide sparked the Tunisia Revolution

The Tunisian Revolution: An Exemplar for Action

[Picture is from Tunisia, but you gotta love the Palestinian flag hanging from the balcony.]

Algeria: A man has died after setting himself on fire at a government building in Algeria, state media has reported, echoing the self-immolation that triggered the protests that toppled the leader of neighbouring Tunisia… Several Algerian towns, including the capital Algiers, have experienced riots in recent weeks over unemployment and a sharp rise in the prices of food staples. Official sources say two people have been killed and scores were injured during the unrest, which unfolded in parallel to street violence in Tunisia and demonstrations over high food prices in other North African and Middle Eastern countries. The fall of the Tunisian president on Friday is the first time in generations that an Arab leader has been toppled by public protests. The demonstrations that brought down Ben Ali erupted after the self-immolation of 26-year-old vegetable seller Mohamed Bouazizi, who set himself on fire on December 17 because police had confiscated his vegetable cart. Bouazizi died weeks later of his burns, becoming a martyr to crowds of students and the unemployed protesting against poor living conditions.

Egypt: Video.

Jordan: “Queen Rania of Jordan became the butt of many ominious jokes over the weekend when she tweeted that she was ‘watching developments in Tunisia and praying for stability and calm for its people.’ She was met with a barrage of Twitter taunts, including ‘lol Jordan is next!’ and ‘start palace hunting in Jedda.’

Libya: Fearing that his people may learn from the Tunisians and rise up against his decades long dictatorship, Qadhafi had these pearls of wisdom to share: “You [Tunisians] have suffered a great loss … There is none better than Zine [El Abidine Ben Ali] to govern Tunisia… I do not only hope that he stays until 2014, but for life.”

Posted in Tunisia | Tagged | 4 Comments

Tunisia’s Nervous Neighbours

The Tunisian Revolution is the spark that may change the political landscape of the region, but because of that very possibility, Arab regimes, fearing the domino effect that their citizens will follow the example of their Tunisian brethren and topple their regimes, will line up one  after the other to turn back this revolution. We will have to wait and see if the remnants of the Ben Ali regime, which are working tirelessly to stay aboard their sinking ship, will be capable of circumventing this historic movement. In the meanwhile, check out this video that shows the regional implications of the Tunisian Revolution.

Posted in 22 Khordad | 3 Comments

Ben Ali’s 1979 Playbook

ForeignPolicy.com: It’s hard to envy the position Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali was in these last few weeks: There just aren’t many good answers available to despots who are faced with popular uprisings. Still, he should have known better than to settle on Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi’s 1978-1979 playbook for quelling incipient revolutions.

Indeed, Ben Ali seemed intent on compressing the shah’s yearlong series vacillations into a tidy one-week time frame. First, a show of denial: The shah started 1978 by denouncing street protests as conspiracies directed from abroad, while Ben Ali started this week by declaring mass demonstrations to be “terrorist acts.” Next a halfhearted show of force to restore law and order: In the autumn of 1978, the shah declared martial law and organized a military government; Ben Ali, for his part, imposed a nationwide curfew this week and presumably instructed security forces to use deadly force against continued protests. Then a hasty series of concessions that are inevitably interpreted as too little, too late: Late in the game, each leader tried to shuffle his cabinet into a more liberal arrangement. That’s followed by a transparently cynical, and frankly depressing, declaration of sympathy for the protests: The shah went on television in November to announce, “I have heard the voice of your revolution”; Ben Ali went on television on Thursday to tell his restive populace, “I have understood you.” Finally, there’s the retreat into exile — the shah fled to Egypt in January 1979, while Ben Ali is now reported to be in Malta, France, or Saudi Arabia. (The aftermath is unlikely to get any rosier for Ben Ali, judging from the shah’s experience: He shuttled around the world — from Morocco, to Mexico, to the Bahamas, to the United States to Switzerland — in search of an offer of residence that was more than temporary, until he finally died in 1980.)

The shah’s unsteady strategy was already discredited in the eyes of the current regime in Iran, which came into power after his departure — hence, the Iranian leadership’s unremitting hard-line crackdown when it was faced with mass protests in the wake of the country’s 2009 presidential election. Tunisia’s current revolution may well be seen in Tehran, and perhaps in other regional capitals, less as a reminder of the power of popular action than as confirmation of Ben Ali’s personal weakness in refusing to pick a position and stick with it. If any other governments threaten to collapse in the wake of Tunisia’s successful revolution, you can expect that the protests will be met with either an outstretched hand or a clenched fist, but certainly not both.

Posted in Tunisia | Tagged | Comments Off on Ben Ali’s 1979 Playbook

The New Dawn in Tunisia

Started with one man, Muhammad Bouazizi. See the video here. Let the remaining Arab dictators tremble in their palaces.

Posted in Tunisia | Tagged | Comments Off on The New Dawn in Tunisia

Tunisia and the American Double-standard

More Tunisians have died in just a few weeks of protesting their dictatorship than Iranians in the entire post-election turmoil, in ’09 yet, American media and the Republican Party were falling over themselves to cover the crisis and condemn human rights abuses in Iran while staying relatively silent on the events currently taking place in Tunisia. Why the double-standard? I am not saying that what happened in Iran didn’t deserve the media attention it received nor am I saying that the Iranian regime didn’t deserve the rebuke, but I am pointing out that the hypocrisy is unnerving. The truth is, the Republican Party and the media are quiet about the Tunisian Revolution, and it is indeed a revolution, simply because the now-ousted dictator was near and dear to US policy in the Middle East and North Africa. To put it mildly, he was a dictator, but he was a US dictator, and the US supported him (to learn more about US relations with the Tunisian dictatorship, read this). The Tunisian Revolution is a nightmare for fellow Arab dictators.  The thing they fear most, more than another war with Israel where they’ll surely lose more land, is being toppled by a popular protest movement. We are already seeing the ramifications of the Tunisian Revolution reverberating in Jordan today. Here’s a video on the Tunisian Revolution. Here’s a video of the protests in Jordan.

Posted in Tunisia | Tagged | 1 Comment

Stephen Kinzer: “Prince Ali Reza Pahlavi Suicide: Tragic End to Iran’s Dynasty”

The Daily Beast: Down the street from my apartment in Boston’s South End, a single gunshot shattered the pre-dawn darkness Tuesday. Police arrived to find a suicide. This doesn’t happen any more often in the South End than anywhere else, and passers-by like me were left to imagine what tragedy lay behind it. Then came news of the man’s identity. He was Prince Ali Reza Pahlavi, son of the late shah of Iran.

This shocking act of self-slaughter was the latest violent tragedy in the long history of a family drenched in blood—first that of the Iranians it tortured and killed, then its own. It is a drama of Shakespearean dimensions. The shah once ruled Iran with an iron fist, but his family later paid dearly for his sins, echoing Hamlet’s judgment that royal crime “cannot come to good.”

Prince Ali Reza’s father died in humiliating exile barely a year after being chased from his homeland in one of the 20th century’s most spectacular revolutions. His aunt, Princess Ashraf, the shah’s twin sister, a once-sinister figure known as Iran’s “black panther,” Experts from Mcshin Foundation – best recovery residences has said that he actually suffered through depressions and addictions, three failed marriages, and the assassination of one of her sons. His sister, Leila, was found dead in a London hotel room in 2001 after taking an overdose of barbiturates.

“Like millions of young Iranians, he too was deeply disturbed by all the ills fallen upon his beloved homeland, as well as carrying the burden of losing a father and a sister in his young life,” the Pahlavi family said in a brief statement on Tuesday. “Although he struggled for years to overcome his sorrow, he finally succumbed.”

Iran has also succumbed over the course of a cruel century, in large part because of the depredations of the Pahlavi dynasty. Yet this was a dynasty that set out to modernize and strengthen a nation that was prostrate and on the brink of extinction when it seized power. Prince Ali Reza’s tragedy mirrored that of his long-suffering land.

The founder of the dynasty, Reza Shah, Prince Ali Reza’s grandfather, was a titanic figure, a brutal tyrant but also a visionary reformer. He was an illiterate soldier who came to power in a coup and made himself shah in 1926. The main reason he refused to lead his country toward democracy was that he wished his son to be shah after he was gone.

That came to pass with Mohammad Reza Shah’s ascension in 1941, but the son turned out to be a cowardly wimp, completely unlike his commanding father. He hated the democracy that emerged in Iran after World War II—personified by its most formidable leader, Prime Minister Mohammad Mossadegh—but could do nothing to crush it. Then, like a gift from God, the CIA and British MI-6 arrived to overthrow Mossadegh in 1953, angered by his attempt to nationalize Iran’s oil industry. That allowed Mohammad Reza Shah to take absolute power.

The Pahlavi dynasty was one of the few facts of 20th-century geopolitical life that nearly everyone considered permanent and unalterable. Its collapse in 1979 stunned the world no less than the collapse of the Soviet Union a decade later.

Prince Ali Reza spent his childhood in royal luxury. He was the second son of an absolute monarch who held the fate of 30 million people in his hands, became America’s chief ally in the Middle East, and lost himself in such deep megalomania that he came to consider himself one of the greatest kings of all time, rightful successor to Persian titans like Cyrus, Darius and Xerxes.

The prince was not yet 13 when his family’s world collapsed in 1979. Rarely in human history has a nation risen up so unanimously against a tyrant. Cataloging the Pahlavi dynasty’s sins would be an exhausting task, but perhaps its greatest was driving Iranians to launch the revolution that brought brutal mullahs to power. Much as Prince Ali Reza detested their violently repressive regime, he cannot have failed to recognize the role his own family played in creating the conditions that allowed it to seize power.

He moved to the United States after his father’s ignominious and lonely death in Egypt, attended prep school in the Berkshires, graduated from Princeton, and went on to study Middle Eastern and Persian history, as well as philology and ethnomusicology. He enrolled in a doctoral program at Harvard but did not complete it.

Once named as one of the world’s most eligible bachelors, he was engaged to be married in 2001, but the engagement lasted for a reported eight years and then fell apart. His neighbors on West Newton Street say he never spoke to them; he would pull up in his Porsche, often wearing jeans and a nappy blazer, then disappear behind the walls of his brownstone, its bay windows permanently blocked by wooden shutters.

The prince’s older brother, Crown Prince Reza, lives near Washington and periodically offers himself as a future shah of Iran. Prince Ali Reza never indulged in this fantasy, at least not in public, but he once said that bringing “freedom and democracy” to Iran was his “unique mission in life.”

Yet although some might say that fate has justly punished the Pahlavi family for its great crimes, the reality is that Prince Ali Reza was no more of a criminal than any of my other neighbors. If sons are guilty for their fathers’ transgressions, he was surely covered with guilt, but if each individual is responsible for his own actions and nothing else, he was innocent. He never ordered an execution, dispatched anyone to a torture chamber, or prostrated himself before foreign power. He could honestly hold his head high. Yet the weight of his family history was evidently too heavy for him to bear.

One can only imagine the demons that tormented this exiled prince while he was cloistered in his darkened South End townhouse before taking his own life at the age of 44. He died in the manner of a soldier who cannot bear dishonor and disgrace, of a single shot to the head.

“Within the hollow crown that rounds the mortal temples of a king,” Shakespeare explained, “keeps death his court.”

Posted in Pahlavis | 1 Comment

Wikileaks Exposes Iran’s Secret Revenge on Iraqi Pilots For 1980s War

ABC News: A brief paragraph in the mountain of Wikileaks documents shed a sliver of light on what officials claim is a viscious and coldly efficient Iranian campaign of revenge on Iraqi air force pilots who bombed Iran during the Iran-Iraq war of the 1980s.

“Many former Iraqi fighter pilots who flew sorties against Iran during the Iran-Iraq war were now on Iran’s hit list (NOTE: According to [Name removed], Iran had already assassinated 180 Iraqi pilots. END NOTE),” the Dec. 14, 2009 confidential U.S. cable stated.

The systematic elimination of Iraqi air force pilots by Iran was a little noticed vendetta amid the crossfire of ethnic fighting and urban combat that convulsed Iraq in the years after the U.S. invasion toppled Saddam Hussein’s regime.

Iran used the chaos in the aftermath of the invasion to settle scores from the Iran-Iraq war, an eight-year slug fest from 1980 to 1988 in which an estimated 500,000 Iranians and Iraqis died. The war was largely a bloody standoff that resembled World War I at times with trench warfare, poison gas, human wave and bayonet attacks.

Iran, however, has taken a special vengeance on the pilots of the Iraqi air force and the lawlessness that followed the collapse of Saddam’s regime gave Iran its opportunity.

In addition to the 182 pilots who have been hunted down and killed by Iranian agents, the assassination campaign prompted another 800 Iraqi pilots to flee the country, according to statistics released by the Iraqi Defense Ministry.

Posted in Iran, Iraq, WikiLeaks | 14 Comments

Palestinian Statehood, the UN, and Israel as a “Jewish State”

Following Brazil’s recent declaration, Argentina has now recognized a Palestinian state in the pre-67 borders. Like the Brazilian announcement, however, this may not have an immediate effect on the ground but it is significant nonetheless.  As of now, the following Latin American countries recognize an independent Palestine: Cuba, Nicaragua, Bolivia, Costa Rica, the Dominican Republican, Brazil, and Argentina.  Mexico, Peru and Uruguay have announced their intent to increase Palestinian diplomatic representation. The important thing is that such announcements of recognition bolster Palestinian Authority president Mahmoud Abbas’ efforts to rally international support against the continued illegal Israeli settlement construction in the West Bank and maybe even UN recognition of Palestinian statehood. If 9 out of 15 UNSC members as well as 2/3 of the General Assembly vote to recognize a state, then legally speaking, Palestine will have legal sanction as a nation to sue Israel in international courts for the continued theft of Palestinian land (see image below).

At this juncture, the newly launched Israel-Palestine negotiations have predictably run into another deadlock as far-right Israeli premier Netanyahu refuses to freeze illegal settlement construction in the Palestinian West Bank.  Mark Regev, Netanyahu’s spokesman, recently applauded Netanyahu’s willingness to come to the negotiating table without any pre-conditions (except that Israel be recognized as a “Jewish State”), while lambasting the Palestinians for  demanding a halt to the settlement construction as a precursor to starting the negotiating process.  It’s not unreasonable whatsoever for the Palestinians to make such a demand because to negotiate the status of their land while Israel is concurrently seizing and building on it is tantamount to negotiating peace with someone as they are slapping you across the face or discussing the splitting of a piece of pie while one is eating away at it.  Additionally, it can be said that Netanyahu does indeed have a pre-condition to the negotiations. While his government claims that only the Palestinians have pre-conditions, the Israeli government’s refusal to freeze settlement construction effectively means, “We won’t come to the negotiating table to discuss the status of your land unless we can continue to build on your land at the same time.”

Furthermore, I believe that Israel’s insistence that it be recognized as a Jewish state is an indication of Israel’s long-term demographic strategy. 1/5 of Israel’s population are Palestinian citizens of Israel (or Israeli Arabs).   These Arabs are distinct from the 4-5 million Palestinian Arabs living under occupation in the West Bank and the open air prison known as the Gaza Strip.  Far-right Israeli leaders have repeatedly referred to Israel’s Arab population as a “ticking time bomb” fearing that with their current birth rates, Israel’s Arab population will one day become the majority inside Israel.  Thus, recognizing Israel as a Jewish state may be a precursor to either a land swap with the Palestinian Authority or a population transfer. After all, if Israel is officially recognized as a Jewish state, then what is to come of the state’s 1.3 million non-Jews? The theory is that Israeli lands where Israeli Arabs dominate will be transferred over to PA control in exchange for the large illegal Jewish-only settlement blocs that cut through the West Bank. Or, there will be a population exchange with the native Israeli Arabs transferring over to the West Bank in exchange for the return of the Jewish settlers to Israel proper. All this underscores the problem of having an exclusivist ethnic-religio state in a region where its indigenous population does not identify with that state’s self-proclaimed identity.

To learn more about the discrimination Israeli Arabs face at the hands of the Israeli state, see this short video titled ‘Israel’s unwanted citizens’.

Map Link: BBC

Posted in Palestine, Settlements | Tagged | 2 Comments

Cyberwar erupts over WikiLeaks (video)

See the al-Jazeera video here.

Posted in WikiLeaks | Tagged | Comments Off on Cyberwar erupts over WikiLeaks (video)