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A People Defies Its Dictator, and a Nation's Future is in the Balance
A brutal regime is fighting, bloodily, for its life.
It might be the end. It is certainly the beginning of the end. Across Egypt, tens of thousands of Arabs braved tear gas, water cannons, stun grenades and live fire yesterday to demand the removal of Hosni Mubarak after more than 30 years of dictatorship.
And as Cairo lay drenched under clouds of tear gas from thousands of canisters fired into dense crowds by riot police, it looked as if his rule was nearing its finish. None of us on the streets of Cairo yesterday even knew where Mubarak - who would later appear on television to dismiss his cabinet - was. And I didn't find anyone who cared.
They were brave, largely peaceful, these tens of thousands, but the shocking behaviour of Mubarak's plainclothes battagi - the word does literally mean "thugs" in Arabic - who beat, bashed and assaulted demonstrators while the cops watched and did nothing, was a disgrace. These men, many of them ex-policemen who are drug addicts, were last night the front line of the Egyptian state. The true representatives of Hosni Mubarak as uniformed cops showered gas on to the crowds.
At one point last night, gas canisters were streaming smoke across the waters of the Nile as riot police and protesters fought on the great river bridges. It was incredible, a risen people who would no longer take violence and brutality and prison as their lot in the largest Arab nation. And the police themselves might be cracking: "What can we do?" one of the riot cops asked us. "We have orders. Do you think we want to do this? This country is going downhill." The government imposed a curfew last night as protesters knelt in prayer in front of police.
How does one describe a day that may prove to be so giant a page in Egypt's history? Maybe reporters should abandon their analyses and just tell the tale of what happened from morning to night in one of the world's most ancient cities. So here it is, the story from my notes, scribbled amid a defiant people in the face of thousands of plainclothes and uniformed police.
It began at the Istikama mosque on Giza Square: a grim thoroughfare of gaunt concrete apartment blocks and a line of riot police that stretched as far as the Nile. We all knew that Mohamed ElBaradei would be there for midday prayers and, at first, the crowd seemed small. The cops smoked cigarettes. If this was the end of the reign of Mubarak, it was a pretty unimpressive start.
But then, no sooner had the last prayers been uttered than the crowd of worshippers, perched above the highway, turned towards the police. "Mubarak, Mubarak," they shouted. "Saudi Arabia is waiting for you." That's when the water cannons were turned on the crowd - the police had every intention of fighting them even though not a stone had been thrown. The water smashed into the crowd and then the hoses were pointed directly at ElBaradei, who reeled back, drenched.
He had returned from Vienna a few hours earlier and few Egyptians think he will run Egypt - he claims to want to be a negotiator - but this was a disgrace. Egypt's most honoured politician, a Nobel prize winner who had held the post of the UN's top nuclear inspector, was drenched like a street urchin. That's what Mubarak thought of him, I suppose: just another trouble maker with a "hidden agenda" - that really is the language the Egyptian government is using right now.
And then the tear gas burst over the crowds. Perhaps there were a few thousand now, but as I walked beside them, something remarkable happened. From apartment blocks and dingy alleyways, from neighbouring streets, hundreds and then thousands of Egyptians swarmed on to the highway leading to Tahrir Square. This is the one tactic the police had decided to prevent. To have Mubarak's detractors in the very centre of Cairo would suggest that his rule was already over. The government had already cut the internet - slicing off Egypt from the rest of the world - and killed all of the mobile phone signals. It made no difference.
"We want the regime to fall," the crowds screamed. Not perhaps the most memorable cry of revolution but they shouted it again and again until they drowned out the pop of tear gas grenades. From all over Cairo they surged into the city, middle-class youngsters from Gazira, the poor from the slums of Beaulak al-Daqrour, marching steadily across the Nile bridges like an army - which, I guess, was what they were.
Still the gas grenades showered over them. Coughing and retching, they marched on. Many held their coats over their mouths or queued at a lemon shop where the owner squeezed fresh fruit into their mouths. Lemon juice - an antidote to tear gas - poured across the pavement into the gutter.
This was Cairo, of course, but these protests were taking place all over Egypt, not least in Suez, where 13 Egyptians have so far been killed. The demonstrations began not just at mosques but at Coptic churches. "I am a Christian, but I am an Egyptian first," a man called Mina told me. "I want Mubarak to go." And that is when the first bataggi arrived, pushing to the front of the police ranks in order to attack the protesters. They had metal rods and police truncheons - from where? - and sharpened sticks, and could be prosecuted for serious crimes if Mubarak's regime falls. They were vicious. One man whipped a youth over the back with a long yellow cable. He howled with pain. Across the city, the cops stood in ranks, legions of them, the sun glinting on their visors. The crowd were supposed to be afraid, but the police looked ugly, like hooded birds. Then the protesters reached the east bank of the Nile.
A few tourists found themselves caught up in this spectacle - I saw three middle-aged ladies on one of the Nile bridges (Cairo's hotels had not, of course, told their guests what was happening) - but the police decided that they would hold the east end of the flyover. They opened their ranks again and sent the thugs in to beat the leading protesters. And this was the moment the tear-gassing began in earnest, hundreds upon hundreds of canisters raining on to the crowds who marched from all roads into the city. It stung our eyes and made us cough until we were gasping. Men were being sick beside sealed shop fronts.
Fires appear to have broken out last night near Mubarak's rubber-stamp NDP headquarters. A curfew was imposed and first reports spoke of troops in the city, an ominous sign that the police had lost control. We took refuge in the old Café Riche off Telaat Harb Square, a tiny restaurant and bar of blue-robed waiters; and there, sipping his coffee, was the great Egyptian writer Ibrahim Abdul Meguid, right in front of us. It was like bumping into Tolstoy taking lunch amid the Russian revolution. "There has been no reaction from Mubarak!" he exalted. "It is as if nothing has happened! But they will do it - the people will do it!" The guests sat choking from the gas. It was one of those memorable scenes that occur in movies rather than real life.
And there was an old man on the pavement, one hand over his stinging eyes. Retired Colonel Weaam Salim of the Egyptian army, wearing his medal ribbons from the 1967 war with Israel - which Egypt lost - and the 1973 war, which the colonel thought Egypt had won. "I am leaving the ranks of veteran soldiers," he told me. "I am joining the protesters." And what of the army? Throughout the day we had not seen them. Their colonels and brigadiers and generals were silent. Were they waiting until Mubarak imposed martial law?
The crowds refused to abide by the curfew. In Suez, they set police trucks on fire. Opposite my own hotel, they tried to tip another truck into the Nile. I couldn't get back to Western Cairo over the bridges. The gas grenades were still soaring off the edges into the Nile. But a cop eventually took pity on us - not a quality, I have to say, that was much in evidence yesterday - and led us to the very bank of the Nile. And there was an old Egyptian motorboat, the tourist kind, with plastic flowers and a willing owner. So we sailed back in style, sipping Pepsi. And then a yellow speed boat swept past with two men making victory signs at the crowds on the bridges, a young girl standing in the back, holding a massive banner in her hands. It was the flag of Egypt.
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34 Comments so far
Show AllDemonstrations in Solidarity with Middle East Uprisings
http://www.iacenter.org/actions/egyptdemos/
I guess the outcome hinges on the question, "what will the military do?"--- will they respond like the Chinese tanks in Tianmen and kill their own people or will they be like the Russian troops in 1991 who refused to murder their brothers and sisters?
I do not mean what I am about to write as anything other than an observation (which may be inaccurate) and a suggestion of a hope.
The images I have seen of the struggles in Egypt have been almost entirely of men.
Call it cultural, call it incomplete, but I think any real chance of significant change in Egypt (and elsewhere) is unlikely without a significant representation of women.
I imagine change might be more likely if the women of Egypt moved to the forefront and confronted the oppressing militarists with the faces of their mothers and sisters.
I wouldn't claim to know why but I do recall that not very long ago, perhaps 5 years, Mubarak police thugs brutalized and raped women who participated in such demonstrations to reform electoral process to true multiparty democracy. Granted, the level of women participation in social/political events is relatively low compared to Tunisia. But again educational attainment of women is one of the highest in Arab world and almost equal to Egyptian men
The other foot will drop, or is planted somewhere else. If the women did not support this their men would not be there.
There is something very appropos about "drug-addicted ex-policemen" being the last line of defense for the great ally of the West. Prediction: "Battagi" will be The Word for 2011.
Yes it will. I've already written it down.
Robert Fisk is the world's most astute journalist of middle east affairs. He is always on the ground. This is a good article.
Thank you Robert Fisk! Outstanding reporting. Real power is the ability to stay present and experience the reality of the moment for what it is, rather than the ability to project into the future.
Robert Fisk one of the few brave journalist in the World.
He also is no friend of oligarchs and dictators, which makes hime all the more credible, to me. In no way I say that about our MSM. Thanks , Robert. Give us more!!!
Bring America Back !!!!
**Robert Fisk has his ducks in order here.
**We must say though that Egypt did give shelter
to numbers of Gazans during the Genocides of two
years ago==until they then shut down the ingress
escape routes to a trickle.
**Just as Israel did, Egypt also used US-supplied
tear gas canisters against its rioters==not very
proud of that are we ????
One more big mountain to climb in the big picture
of mideast puzzles. Did not need this esp when the
goldstone report is focusing on Zion Genocides and
US Complicities.
I thought when I read the Headline it was about America!
>^^<
In response about the women I have seen quite a few, not nearly as many as the men, and they were very excited and fired up. In Egyp,t as everywhere, there will be no real lasting revolution until the oldest oppression of all male domination is overturned. But my wishes and hopes go with all the Egyptian rising against a tyrant as opening the gates to the further and needed uprising of the women.
This is happening in Alexandria too, and historically this is so wonderful!
The Library of Alexandria was the shining light of all the wonderful history and knowledge of the ancient world. It can shine again, wonderful women and men of Egypt.
The United States owes its existance to you Egypt, for without your library no one would have known of Athens and Democracy.
The ancient lighthouse is now gone, but that light is shining from the PEOPLE. When light comes from the PEOPLE it is a beacon for the whole world!
True to form, Obama mouthed the phrase "human rights" referring to Egypt, with the significant omission of the word "democracy". On the same day WikiLeaks released State Department cables documenting US knowledge of and complicity in the Mubarak regime’s use of torture and assassination against political opponents.
The labels on the tear gas cannisters "Made in the USA" are a stunning confirmation of the role the U.S. plays in the Arab world. The Empire depends on an equilibrium of forces in which the dictatorial Arab regimes play a key role. The US provides 1.5 billion a year primarily in military aid to Egypt and this aid is used to intimidate domestic opponents. A major element in enabling imperial hegemony over the region's oil and gas reserves is Egypt's military and intelligence apparatus working closely with the US and Israel.
The unrest, unleashed partially by WikiLeak's revelation, has now spread to Jordan, Yemen, and Syria, which has shut down the Internet in that country. Once again, WikiLeaks has exposed and exploited a vulnerability in the repressive apparatus of imperial control. The speed with which these disruptions are spreading throughout the region reveals a weakness in the global society of control that must be targeted with the same speed. The Internet blackout has been imposed so that protesters can be jailed, tortured and executed with impunity. And we can anticipate that the higher the rate of torture and death, the more the Obama administration will declare their undying dedication to human rights. Read WikiLeaks if you want to know what they really believe in.
Down with Obama's elite democracy promotion!
Give us more of... us!
Here's a link to a photo of a made in America tear gas canister used in Egypt:
http://bit.ly/fCEDeS
Bravo, Mr. Collins, a post that fits perfectly with Robert Fisk's legendary ongoing inspirational journalism!
Thanks, Simonsez. Fisk is one of my favorite journalists.
Today's lead in the _Independent_ is an interesting mea culpa worthy of mirroring here, http://www.independent.co.uk/opinion/leading-articles/leading-article-western-hypocrisy-towards-the-
arab-world-stands-exposed-2197801.html
Very brief excerpt:
"That such a dilemma exists at all, of course, is largely of our own making. We have long observed a double standard in relations with most Arab countries."
The item is saying things Obama and Clinton will never be heard voicing; I don't even think they are capable of even thinking such sentiments.
The population of the planet increases at three people per second.
Finite planet.
Finite resources.
What you are seeing is the results of that fact.
What happens next depends on the vigilantes.
We Americans are with you, Egypt, and march with you in spirit! Another U.S./Israeli/corporate sponsored dictator with a nice fat Swiss account is getting the boot. What's his house look like? Most of the people live in conditions that are not too different than what we see in movies about Ancient Egypt. Wonder why the Arab coalition could never do anything? Just a bunch of dictators keeping their payments rolling in. Tunisia, Egypt, now Yemen. Who's next? It's incredibly inspiring to see freedom being born. Wish Americans had the guts to get control of their country, too.
This can't be said, freely, everywhere, but I strongly believe that the people who successfully rise up in places like Egypt need to 'Ceauşescu' the U.S.-backed criminal who kept them enslaved for all those years. (I believe in the death penalty. I don't believe in it when it can't be done properly.) Nicolae Ceauşescu was a former president of Romania. American taxpayers have payed for the coddling of terrorists for years. There's Luis Posada Carriles, Orlando Bosch and Emmanuel Constant for example. Then there's Jean Claude Duvalier, known as Baby Doc, who, after his atrocities in Haiti, was allowed into France where he was wined and dined, until recently. He's been sent into Haiti, which has been raped over endlessly and continues to be! Imagine! How would Egyptians feel if they succeeded in forcing Mubarak out and then after a few years, the U.S. or some other imperial state sent him back to Egypt?
Elites would understand. They know all about making examples out of individuals so that the rest of us will calm down. Julian Assange and Bradley Manning are perfect examples of that.
Wikipedia:
"Some people, believing that Ceauşescu was not aware of what was going on in the country, attempted to hand him petitions and complaint letters during his many visits around the country. However, each time he got a letter, he would immediately pass it on to members of his security. Whether or not Ceauşescu ever read any of them will probably remain unknown. It was common knowledge that people attempting to hand letters directly to Ceauşescu risked adverse consequences, courtesy of the Securitate...
"The Ceauşescus were executed by a firing squad consisting of elite paratroop regiment soldiers: Captain Ionel Boeru, Sergant-Major Georghin Octavian and Dorin-Marian Cirlan, while reportedly hundreds of others also volunteered. The firing squad began shooting as soon as they were in position against a wall. The firing happened too soon for the film crew covering the events to record it. After the shooting, the bodies were covered with canvas. The hasty trial and the images of the dead Ceauşescus were videotaped and the footage promptly released in numerous western countries. Later that day, it was also shown on Romanian television."
Bradley Manning Support Network: http://www.bradleymanning.org/
Now is the time to start planning and organizing some serious aid for Ejypt. As soon as the Government falls, and that will be soon; they will be needing everything, even tourists; mind you, it will not be a very pretty place. If it will be anything like Nicaragua was after they successfully deposed Somoza, people will be crying tears of joy and dancing in the streets. It will be a wonderful time. They will have to be vigilant to make sure that their revolution isn´t sabotaged, and to maintain and protect the reforms that they hope to implement. Let´s hope that their revolution isn´t drowned in blood like Nicaraguas´s was. I have a very real hope that Ejypt will be a much better place to live, and that human rights will be safeguarded. These people know what they want. I sure hope they can get it, and continue to defend it. It won´t be easy.
ahsen nas.................
I remember in the first days of our illegal invasion of Afghanistan reading of Robert Fisk who had come to Afghanistan to report on the war. I believe he came in by taxi over the AF-Pak border. When he stopped in a small tribal village Fisk, British by birth, was stopped by young local men then struck to the ground with hard blows. Before fatal blows could be given an cleric stopped the men and took Fisk to the local leader. He was immediately recognized by the leader as the best reporter of years of conflict in Lebanon for fair treatment of Arabic people. He was released and offered medical assistance for his wounds.
Here now he is standing in the fog of revolution surging with the people to cross the Nile and report on the street the most important world news of the day in a blacked out nation in the grasp of a cruel dictator.
I can almost count on one hand the American reporters that could stand with Robert Fisk. Amy Brown, Chris Hedges,Alexander Cockburn some of the few. Where are the rest?The gross talking heads of the major media networks in corporate America today do not even compare to the brown spots on Fisk's toilet paper.Shame on you America. Is that the best you can do?
yes, robert fisk is a renowned journalist with integrity and the gumption to tell it how it is (however unpleasant that might be)...................
Amy Goodman and Allan Nairn did their tours. (I don't know what Nairn is doing now.) That's why she was so sensitive to the news of Obama's support for the reformation of Indonesia's official terrorist organization, The Kopassus. When Indonesia invaded East Timor, completely supported by the U.S., they slaughtered thousands and roughed up her and Nairn. I think he got the worst of it. I forget the details.
See the Democracy Now! segment titled "Obama In The Company Of Killers," here: http://bit.ly/gMtcnG
See Stephen Lendman's article about Kopassus here: http://bit.ly/g3zhds
Thank you Robert Fisk. The American public needs this commentary. Their TV's lie to them everyday 24/7.
The ADMINISTRATION of this country must be shaking in its boots. What if?
Alan Nairn was recently the guest for the hour on "Democracy Now!" He talked about contemporary issues with a depth of insight that was masterful. I reccomend going to the DN! archives and listening to it. Incidentally, he suffered a fractured skull while shielding Amy Goodman from injury. The man is a war hero.
The whole rest of the middle east is in flux and dictators are becoming faint everywhere.
http://english.aljazeera.net/news/middleeast/
The “policeman of the world” must be shaking in their boots. What’s superpower to do …bomb the rest of the world into the stone age……ewwwww Boeing and Lockheed’s wet dream.
Those of us in the West should take as good a look as we can of the details of this procedure. We are watching -- or not watching -- something very like what we might live in a very few years.
The US, in particular, has used protests in the US and Canada to experiment with new techniques in crowd control, and when we arrive at serious challenges to Western governments, we will see these and the old-fashioned agents provocateurs to divide dissenters.
See that every move is made to disperse and isolate the people on the ground. The teargas and watercannon are obvious, but note the similarities in cutting off the press, particularly Al Jazeera, and shutting off or attempting to shut off electronic communications.
Luttwak's late-60's study of coup d'etat pointed out that a coup could be successful if and only if it controlled the executive, the military, and communications at once. A revolution is not a coup, of course, but the thrashing attempts of a Mubarak to hold on to a rule without credibility is in certain ways very similar: He must retain control of his military, and he must retain or freeze communications.
Fairly simply, past a certain point of hegemonic disintegration, some of the military lose faith that they fight for love, truth, goodness, and patriotism or whatever; and others lose faith that they are still fighting for a winner or someone who will take care of them. They stand with their guns or their tanks and look at one another and wonder whether their comrades will fire, and on which side they are on or had better be on.
The flashpoint that makes that change is a question of communications, and most often of media.
This is true in quieter movements, too. It might make a great difference in the United States if most Americans knew that most Americans want single payer healthcare, more money for education, or less money for the military.
Ojala!
United we stand, divided we fall. Exactly the intent of the ruling elite and their complicit minions. They've used media and religion as a couple of examples, to divide us - race, class, gender, etc....if we can all just get back to the power of the first 3 words, and consider the inevitability of the last 3 if we don't, it becomes quite clear that we can change things here. We can.