Tuesday, February 1, 2011

Hundreds of thousands join Egypt protests; Mubarak says he'll address nation

2011 Egyptian protests
More than 200,000 protesters streamed into Cairo's Tahrir Square on Tuesday for the largest demonstration in a week of unrest against Egypt's embattled government, prompting President Hosni Mubarak to set a televised address to a nation clamoring for him to step down.

After a day of dramatic standoffs between protesters and a mostly tolerant army, Mubarak announced a public address for late Tuesday night in which the Al Arabiya news network said he would assure Egyptians he won't run for another presidential term in elections expected this autumn.

But Mubarak planned to stay in office until the next vote, the network said without identifying the source of its information.
Egyptian state television said only that the president would address the nation with "an important statement."

Earlier in the day, a special U.S. envoy and former ambassador to Egypt, Frank G. Wisner, met with Mubarak to deliver a message from Washington that he needed to step aside and allow a new government to take shape without him, according to Middle East experts who discussed the matter with the Obama administration. The sources said Wisner was rebuffed by Mubarak.

During a day billed by protesters as a million-strong march on Cairo, Army tanks and soldiers took positions across the city, but as on other days, there was little tension between the military and the protesters. Demonstrators at checkpoints helped troops examine identification cards of those flowing into the square. Voices blared from megaphones as the crowd chanted the Egyptian national anthem, while military helicopters buzzed overhead.

The Mubarak government in recent days has offered concessions, such as opening talks with opposition groups and reforming the constitution, but they have done little to placate a nationwide revolt calling for the president's removal. There seems scant compromise between the government and the masses, while the military balances precariously between the two.

The unrest in Egypt has mesmerized the region. Some wonder whether Mubarak -- who for 30 years in power has skillfully crushed dissent -- might be forced to step down or risk pulling the nation into a prolonged crisis that could further damage its economy, most notably tourism. More than 120 people have died over the last week.

In harsh words aimed at Mubarak, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, an increasingly pivotal figure in Middle Eastern affairs, said Tuesday: "No government can survive against the will of its people. The era of governments persisting on pressure and repression is over. … We are all passing and will be judged on what we leave behind."

Protesters came from all ages and walks of life: high school students; workers, medical professionals, married couples and gray-bearded Islamists.

"Leave Mubarak," they chanted. "We don't want you."

Ahmed Ali, a businessman in a gray suit, said he had come to the square because he was tired of government corruption. Ali, who imports marble from abroad, complained about the ritual of government bribes he must pay every time he goes to the airport to pick up goods.

"I have to pay them money at the airport because their salaries are so low," he said. "The government pushes them to demand kickbacks."

Mohammed, a 22-year-old tennis coach dressed in a blue track suit, had come even after being caught up a week ago in clashes with police who raided a mosque where he was praying.

"We can't find work. We have problems with bread, problems with electricity," he said. "Our biggest problem is to get Mubarak to go away."

The huge crowd descended on the square after protest organizers called for a million compatriots to flood the streets.

Egyptian authorities shut down Internet traffic and cellphone service ahead of the protest, in the apparent hope that it would prevent demonstrators from coming to the square.

Al Arabiya reported that authorities had blocked the road between the cities of Suez and Cairo to stymie the flow of protesters. The ruling National Democratic Party also has called for a counter-demonstration in support of Mubarak. Meanwhile, a coalition of Egyptian human-rights groups has issued a call for Mubarak to step down.

Crowds inside the key expanse at the heart of the Egyptian capital have been growing day after day since Saturday, when security forces stopped trying to halt demonstrators from gathering in the square.

(source:latimes.com)

Jordan's King Abdullah shuffles cabinet, but few see an Egypt in the making

After weeks of intermittent street protests, Jordan’s King Abdullah II has sacked his cabinet of ministers and called for the formation of a new government led by Maarouf Al Bakhit, a career military man with a reputation for maintaining order and stability. The new government is also tasked with implementing political reforms.
But the general feeling is one of skepticism. Jordan’s king regularly replaces his ministers when there is a scandal or when public trust in government is low; these cabinet reshuffles are often more cosmetic than representative of actual change.

“The government has really two roles,” says prominent political blogger Naseem Tarawnah. “One is to implement an agenda, the other is to be a scapegoat in case things go wrong.”

Jordan’s government is seldom willing to provide explanations for royal decisions – at the moment, it doesn’t even have an official spokesman, since the communications minister submitted his resignation along with the rest of the government. But the change seems clearly related to the recent street protests in the capital, Amman. For three consecutive Fridays, large crowds have gathered at the city’s main downtown mosque, chanting slogans. Some, last Friday, waved the green flags of the Muslim Brotherhood.

Although doubtless influenced by recent uprisings in Egypt and Tunisia, the protests here have remained peaceful, and seem much more heavily weighted towards economic issues, particularly complaints about unemployment and rising prices. Protesters had also been calling for the resignation of the just-dismissed prime minister, Samir Al Rifai, and his government, and for a new commitment to political reform and openness. None have ventured to criticize the king, who retains broad popularity in Jordan. (Criticism of the Hashemite royal family is also considered a red line.)

Egypt protesters: Five world leaders jump into the fray

But there’s little optimism that the new government will actually implement an ambitious program. For one thing, the new prime minister is seen as representing an agenda focused on security and order. He has served in the post before, appointed the first time in 2005, only weeks after a group of terrorists led by Abu Musab Al Zarqawi launched suicide attacks against three hotels in Jordan’s capital.

The message this sends is not seen as one of a new era of political openness.

“This is a sad day for Jordan,” says Mustafa Hamarneh, a policy analyst and chairman of the board of the independent magazine As-Sijil. The Bakhit government, he says, represents the “securitization of the state.”

“This is not a reform government,” he says. “This is the government that gave us the worst elections in history, this is the government that buried the [National] Agenda,” Jordan’s last blueprint for comprehensive liberal reforms.

Mr. Tarawnah is more hopeful.

“He [Bakhit] has been prime minister before, and there were no real major security changes under his reign. People expected, well, he’s going to shut down the whole country, it going to be militarized. That really didn’t happen. I don’t see that happening now, either.”

Other than Prime Minister Bakhit, no new appointments have been announced, nor is there a specific outline for what kinds of reforms might be in the air. Tarawnah says that if reform is forthcoming, it is more likely to focus on issues like cracking down on corruption than on democratization. But, he adds, a prime minister like Bakhit, with close ties to the military and powerful Jordanian tribes, might be in a better position than others to pursue a reform agenda.

“If there are any reforms that come, he might not be the worst person to carry them out,” he says.

(source:csmonitor.com)

Egypt protests: parties reject talks and try to restore credibility

Egypt's fractured opposition movement has rallied together to emphatically reject talks with the ruling National Democratic party on political reform, insisting that Hosni Mubarak must stand down before any dialogue can begin. Whether Mubarak promising to step down at the next election, as was reported tonight, will satisfy them remains to be seen.

Former UN weapons inspector Mohamed ElBaradei, محمد مصطفى البرادعي, who has become a de facto leader of the opposition and met with the US ambassador to Egypt today, said no talks were possible while Mubarak remained in power. "I hope to see Egypt peaceful and that's going to require as a first step the departure of President Mubarak," the 68-year-old told al-Arabiya TV. "If President Mubarak leaves then everything else will progress correctly."

The decision to stall on entering any talks with the present regime suggests Egypt's dissident leaders are hoping to ride the wave of public anger against the government, which took many in the political establishment by surprise.

ElBaradei and other opposition figures are attempting to put themselves in a strong position to negotiate a transition to democracy if Mubarak falls.

Following a week of anti-government protests that have brought hundreds of thousands on to the streets, newly appointed vice-president Omar Suleiman said yesterday that he had been mandated by Mubarak to offer an olive branch to the long-marginalised opposition.

But after sacrificing some of their credibility by not giving more enthusiastic support to the demonstrations when they first erupted last week, a range of dissenting voices is now seeking to take a harder line with the regime.

"Omar Suleiman approached us, and we have rejected his approaches," Essam el-Erian, a Muslim Brotherhood spokesman, told the Guardian. "As long as Mubarak delays his departure, these protests will remain and they will only get bigger."

After years of division within organisations opposed to Mubarak, Egyptian opposition figures have now formed a coalition to try to capitalise on the huge and so far leaderless outpouring of fury. The Islamic Brotherhood, Egypt's main political Islamist group, has joined forces with El-Baradei's National Association for Change, along with other, smaller parties and representatives of the Coptic Christian community, calling their new coalition the National Committee for Following up the People's Demands.

Mustafa Naggar, a supporter of ElBaradei, said a request for talks with the coalition had come from Information Minister Anas Fiki and Mubarak's new prime minister Ahmed Shafiq, and had been turned down. "Our first demand is that Mubarak goes," confirmed Mohammed Al-Beltagi, a former Brotherhood parliamentarian and member of the new committee. "Only after that can dialogue start with the military establishment on the details of a peaceful transition to power."

However, critics of the formal opposition argue that the decision by these parties to sit back and watch how events unfold rather than take a more interventionist role was one that had been forced upon them. "With the opposition, it's a sense of 'hey guys, wait for me'," said Hisham Kassem, an Egyptian publisher and political analyst. "They did not start any of this, and now they are desperately playing catch-up."

He argued that the opposition had been weakened by its inability to control the protesters, who have acted without any prompting from established political forces. "If I was Omar Suleiman and I was serious about negotiating with an opposition figure, I would say, 'First, call the crowds off', which of course ElBaradei can't – barely anyone listened to him in Tahrir the other day, and they're not going to listen now.

"Most of these leaders have been left behind by events. Some of them understand the demographic time bomb that went off and changed the reality of Egypt, and hence might be able to reinvent themselves. The rest will sink with Mubarak forever. Mubarak's opposition is dying with him."

(source:guardian.co.uk)

Obama pressures Mubarak to stand down as Egyptian president

Barack Obama has pressed Hosni Mubarak to agree to stand down as president later this year once radical political reforms have been introduced and free elections held.

Obama's message, delivered by a White House envoy, came amid reports tonight that the Egyptian president was preparing a nationwide address to offer a solution to the crisis gripping his country – an offer that would include ending his presidency in September.

According to US advisers, the Obama administration is pursuing an array of contacts – including military, business and intelligence as well as dispatching to Egypt a former US ambassador who is close to Mubarak – in an attempt to manage the political transition.

Former ambassador Frank G Wisner has been sent in to tell Mubarak that the White House wants him to step aside later this year. The US administration is also discussing whether to press for an interim administration, possibly under Mohamed ElBaradei, but is so far undecided on whether Mubarak should go sooner.

Yesterday, the White House called in experts after being caught ill-prepared by events in Egypt. They included Joel Rubin, a former state department Egypt desk officer now with the National Security Network thinktank. He said officials described a multilayered approach that included pushing a public message that the US is not trying to decide who rules Egypt, while making clear to Mubarak that there has to be a quick and serious transition to democratic government.

"There was a decision to get across the public message that this is not about America and they are not picking winners, that they aren't playing the Bush administration game of deciding who runs which country in the Middle East," said Rubin.

"At the same time they are also using unofficial, informal channels – third parties, people who know people, who can get messages across that are pretty compelling, that there has to be a real serious transition to democracy, quickly."

Steve Clemons of the New America Foundation thinktank, who was also at the White House meeting, said the administration has yet to reach a decision on timing. "They don't see Mubarak as being a constructive player moving forward but formally they don't have a mechanism to tell him to go. If Mubarak were to turn around tomorrow, reform quickly, engage in public and civic reforms, the administration would accept that. But they know he's not going to do that," he said. "I'm talking to the highest levels of government and I sense they're still deliberating what to do about Mubarak."

The administration has come under growing pressure to move against the Egyptian leader. But John Kerry, chairman of the Senate foreign relations committee and former presidential candidate, has demanded Mubarak's immediate resignation.

"President Hosni Mubarak must accept that the stability of his country hinges on his willingness to step aside gracefully to make way for a new political structure. One of the toughest jobs that a leader under siege can perform is to engineer a peaceful transition. But Egyptians have made clear they will settle for nothing less than greater democracy and more economic opportunities," he wrote in the New York Times .

Clemons said that the US administration is also scrambling to assess and build relations with the Muslim Brotherhood.

"There's a concern right now about not having much intelligence, much outreach. It came up in the meeting how important it was to begin engaging, that these leaders were not terrorists, that this is not al-Qaida, that they've survived in a very toxic environment and that they are going to be significant in any equation but they're not going to dominate the equation," he said. "Officials I spoke to acknowledged that they needed to begin a process of engaging those who are constructive and to isolate those who are not constructive. But they're not there yet."

Rubin said the White House is trying to frame the terms for Muslim Brotherhood participation in any elections.

"With democratic rights come responsibilities and some of those responsibilities come a commitment to non-violence. Certainly it is going to be essential, as the US has a major strategic interest in this region, to see stability and continuation of the peace treaty with Israel," he said.

Clemons said one of the problems for the White House is a lack of planning for how to deal with a popular revolt against Mubarak. "I don't think any serious scenario building, contingency plans, thought about political transitions was done in the state department, in the intelligence department, in the Pentagon. It's really shocking given the number of years there's been debate about Mubarak surviving, about the succession to his son, about the growing Muslim Brotherhood. I know from senior state department types there was no scenario planning done. Who knows why. They've been caught without those resources," he said.


(source:guardian.co.uk)

Huge protests fan Egypt unrest

Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak has said that he will not stand for re-election in September, as protests against his rule grow.

Speaking on state TV, Hosni Mubarak promised constitutional reform, but said he wanted to stay until the end of his current presidential term.

The announcement came as tens of thousands rallied in central Cairo urging him to step down immediately.

The demonstration was the biggest since protests began last week.

The Egypt Twitter, among the protesters in Cairo's Tahrir Square, says the crowd erupted in jubilation after hearing the president's speech.

Egyptians are patient, he says, and may be prepared to wait for a few more months for his departure.

Hosni Mubarak said he would devote his remaining time in power to ensuring a peaceful transition of power to his successor.

But he criticised the protests, saying what began as a civilised phenomenon turned into a violent event controlled by political cowards.

He said he had offered to meet all parties but there were political powers that had refused dialogue.

Leaders of the protests had called on Mr Mubarak to step down by Friday, when demonstrators were planning to march on the presidential palace.

(source:bbc.co.uk)

Mubarak says will not run for presidency again

(Egypt Twitter) - Egypt's President Hosni Mubarak , محمد حسني مبارك‎ said on Tuesday he would not run for the presidency again and would work in the last months of his term to allow the transfer of power.

He said the main priority was the stability of the nation to allow the transfer of power. A presidential election is due in September.

Egypt After Mubarak

With President Hosni Mubarak clinging to power after eight days of unprecedented protests in Egypt, many observers are now predicting the imminent fall of his regime. A change in leadership would bring to end nearly three decades of uninterrupted rule and have significant implications for the region’s balance of power.

Marwan Muasher, Marina Ottaway, Michele Dunne, and Nathan Brown assess the latest developments in Egypt, evaluate Mubarak’s rule and potential successors, and explain what a new leader could mean for Egypt, the Arab world, the Israeli-Palestinian peace process, and the United States.
What is the situation in Egypt?

Brown: At this point, it is clear that the political system as it has been configured for the last half-century cannot survive. There is a strong and diffuse challenge from wide segments of Egyptian society and a regime that has no ability—and perhaps no willingness—to respond.

We are in the middle of an extremely difficult situation where the regime is clinging to the old ways of doing things and offering at best a mixture of mild steps with the possibility of heavy repression. That is not going to work for long.


Why did protests erupt?

Ottaway: Protests were sparked by a combination of economic and political reasons—but the dominant concern was undoubtedly political. Egyptians have long been faced with economic constraints, a lack of jobs, and a growing disparity between rich and poor, but there is a strong sense that the economic hardship was caused by the Mubarak regime. There is also a widespread belief that the government hasn’t done anything to remedy the situation.

We know what the underlying reasons for the uprising are, but it is more difficult to answer why the protests spread now—the conditions have existed in Egypt for twenty years. The upheaval in Tunisia, however, helped embolden Egyptians and demonstrated that a crowd can bring down a president. And protests in Egypt led to a crisis much faster than protests did in Tunisia.


What are the possible scenarios for how the unfolding events will play out?

Brown: The least likely outcome is for the regime to continue as is. Had the regime reacted more rapidly and subtly a week ago, it may have been able to placate the opposition with a pledge that Mubarak would not run again. But at this stage it is most likely that the regime will collapse or it will be significantly reconfigured.

The two leading possibilities over the short term are a soft coup led by the military or a broad-based opposition coalition that challenges the regime and offers to form an alternative leadership. In the case of the soft coup, the military might follow constitutional procedures or it might handpick a new leader. In the case of an opposition-led transition, there would be an interim leadership.

Both cases are unlikely to be permanent solutions. There will need to be a quick transitional period of constitutional reform and new parliamentary and presidential elections. You will need constitutional reform of some kind because the current provisions regarding things like succession and elections are designed to maintain the existing regime and do not allow change.


How did Egypt change under Mubarak’s rule? How should his rule be evaluated?

Ottaway: Mubarak started ruling with increasing repression as the situation worsened over the last decade and did little to address the problems in the country. While he desperately wanted to preserve security, what worked in his early years in office didn’t work as well in recent years. He never had a vision of how to maintain stability in the face of changing conditions.

When Mubarak came to power after Anwar Sadat’s assassination in 1981, Egypt had been through a period of constant turmoil for thirty years. Mubarak was the antithesis of the previous leaders and came in with a firm conviction that the country needed stability.

In the early years, he made some cautious but promising steps to further open the economy and political system. His growing fears of insecurity, however, soon caused him to clamp down on opposition groups—Islamist and secular. By the end of the 1980s, the regime was becoming more and more repressive politically and sluggish economically, and reform ground to a halt.

In the end, Egypt lost its economic and diplomatic heft under Mubarak’s leadership. This greatly upsets Egyptians as they still see themselves as leaders of the Arab world. But the country has lost its leadership role both economically and politically. Mubarak wasted opportunities because he was too timid to innovate and take risks that could have restored Egypt’s leading role in the region but might have diminished his control.

Despite high levels of international military and financial assistance, Egypt missed opportunities to grow economically and develop a new modern education system. Egypt is now a tired and discouraged country with growing inequality. There are increasingly two Egypts—the Egypt of the rich with big gated communities and the Egypt of the poor with overcrowded and suffering cities.

Mubarak damaged the country’s regional and international standing and will leave behind a more repressive and less economically viable country.


Who are the key groups and figures who will play a leading role in shaping the outcome?

Ottaway: What we are seeing in Egypt is the problem with unorganized protests, as we are seeing in Tunisia: these protests don’t seem to produce new leaders or any organized force that can play a role in the next steps of forming a new government and implementing reforms. So the players now are the same ones who existed before.

The balance of power between the players, however, has shifted. On the government side, the party seems to be disappearing. The National Democratic Party was the front of the regime, but it is now disintegrating in the face of the protests. Party leaders are not issuing statements and several prominent figures have resigned.

With the party ceasing to function, the security/military side of the regime has come to the fore. The military was in the background until recently, but there has been a clear change in the balance of power within the regime. It is clear that the loyalty of the security forces lies with the head of intelligence, Omar Suleiman, who is now vice president, but we do not yet know what position the military will take.

The army has played an ambiguous role. While they are out in the streets, they are not active in repressing the protests. But they have not come out explicitly in favor of the protestors either. The army command could remain loyal to Mubarak, but it may not trust the troops to obey orders to break up demonstrations. While it is very difficult to see what the military will do, it may be the key determining factor in the end.

Outside of the regime, there is complete disorganization. The street movement was started through networking in social media, but there is no organization behind the crowds. The opposition groups that existed before the protests escalated are weak and divided.

The secular political parties are small, disorganized, and do not seem to have strong constituencies. The Muslim Brotherhood has shown better organization in the past, but after the 2005 elections they have lost support because they were not being effectual and no one knows how much support they enjoy. They have been trying to take a low profile and are uncertain about what to do.

Neither the secular parties nor the Muslim Brotherhood are offering leadership. And out of all of these groups, no one is standing out as a potential leader who can negotiate with the Mubarak regime. There has been an agreement among political parties to let Mohammed ElBaradei be the figurehead, but there is not a groundswell of support for him. Still, he may end up being the spokesperson for the protestors because there is no one else around.

There is a great deal of anger and a shaky regime, but no obvious alternative at the moment.


What is the makeup of the current government? Who are the most influential players?

Dunne: In response to the demonstrations, President Mubarak sacked his cabinet and appointed Director of Central Intelligence Omar Suleiman as vice president—the first vice president during Mubarak’s thirty-year tenure—and Ahmad Shafiq, former air force commander and minister of civil aviation, as prime minister. Mubarak also replaced unpopular Interior Minister Habib Adli with another security officer who is not well known, and replaced all of the ministers who were associated with unpopular economic reforms.

Some other major stalwarts of the regime—Defense Minister Mohamed Tantawi and Foreign Minister Aboul Gheit—remain, as does Minister of State for Legal and Parliamentary Affairs Moufid Shehab, whose management of elections has been strongly criticized.

The last cabinet, which was in place since 2004, was all about economic reform; this new cabinet, which might well be short-lived, is all about security.

The key players are Suleiman, Shafiq, and Tantawi. While Shafiq and Tantawi have relatively neutral public reputations as military officers, Suleiman is more controversial due to his background as director of intelligence, which automatically associates him with human rights abuses.


How will this impact the presidential election set for later this year?

Dunne: Even if Mubarak survives this crisis, which seems increasingly unlikely, the uprising has completely changed calculations about the presidential election. It is now clear that Mubarak cannot serve another term, nor will his son Gamal be a viable candidate.

The demonstrators and opposition groups are calling for a transitional government that will undertake the constitutional and legal changes necessary to allow a free and fair presidential election. It is not yet clear whether that would take place in September, as originally scheduled, or earlier than that.

Also, the protestors are calling for new parliamentary elections. The recent elections for the People’s Assembly, held in November 2010, were regarded as thoroughly corrupt, rigged elections, and were the last straw in increasing public discontent with the government.


Will a new Egyptian government influence the Israeli-Palestinian peace process?

Muasher: While it is too early to tell exactly what form the Egyptian government will take, it is safe to say that any new government will not abrogate the peace treaty with Israel. It is also important to note that the relationship between Egypt and Israel is already cold on a popular level, and even though Egypt has played a leading role in pushing the peace process forward, there is not much of a peace process at the moment.

So over the short term it does not make a huge difference whether Cairo and Jerusalem enjoy warm relations—the peace process will not suffer because of Israeli-Egyptian strains.


How will a change in Egyptian leadership impact the Arab world?

Muasher: The future of Egypt will have a huge impact on the Arab world. Egypt is the Arab world’s largest country and, as the saying goes, what happens in Egypt doesn’t stay in Egypt.

The protests send strong signals that political reform is needed—and needed now—and all Arab countries are at risk of upheaval. The Arab street has not been vocal for decades, but it is now clear that it is no longer acquiescing on political reform issues, particularly corruption. This is a signal that Arab leaders cannot afford to miss.

Just a short time ago, people tried to argue that the Tunisian crisis was an isolated case and that Tunisia was different from any other Arab country. It is now difficult—if not impossible—to make the same argument with Egypt engulfed in turmoil. If the largest Arab country is faced with unrest, then people need to draw the right lessons.


How is the United States responding to the crisis?

Ottaway: The United States is playing its hand badly right now—the Obama administration has managed to turn the crowds against the United States. The protests did not start this way, but there are more and more anti-American messages. Egyptians are increasingly critical of the position Washington is taking.

Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has claimed that Washington has been pressuring Cairo to undertake political reforms for thirty years and that this policy would essentially continue. But the Egyptian public did not see things this way. In the past, people in Egypt did not think Washington was pushing for democracy in the country and so the message being received in Egypt is that the United States will still not put pressure on Mubarak.

There is a fear in the United States that the Muslim Brotherhood could gain power and that a change in leadership will impact Egypt’s relations with Israel. Both of these fears are greatly exaggerated. And these are the concerns that have kept Washington from putting pressure on the Mubarak regime for all these years.

The Iranian scenario—where the situation in Egypt will mirror the 1979 Iranian revolution—is extremely unlikely in Egypt given the Muslim Brotherhood’s lack of a charismatic figure and divisions within its leadership. And there is no new government—without the radical Islamist alternative in the cards—that will rush into reopening a conflict with Israel. While there is no love lost between Egyptians and Israelis, there is no sign that new leaders would break the peace treaty.


How will U.S. relations with a key Arab ally be altered?

Dunne: The United States is in a difficult position. The Obama administration has been tepid in its support for democratization in Egypt and now has to play catch up.

The U.S. government is not eager to see Mubarak go, as there is great concern in Washington that any Egyptian leader coming after Mubarak will be inclined to cool relations with both the United States and Israel. This will further complicate many U.S. efforts in the region that are already troubled, particularly Israeli-Palestinian peacemaking efforts.

On the other hand, the damage to U.S. interests will only increase if Washington is seen as propping up Mubarak. The gap between Mubarak and the Egyptian people, which has been expanding for a decade, has now grown so wide that it is not possible for the United States to stand on both sides.

(source:carnegieendowment.org)

Egypt's Mubarak to make 'important speech'

CAIRO — Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak will make an "important speech" at the end of the day, marking his second public address since protests to his 30-year rule erupted eight days ago.
In an earlier speech on Saturday, Mubarak named a vice president who is considered his designated successor, and also sacked his Cabinet and promised economic and political reforms called for by his protesters.
As word spread of Mubarak's impending talk, protesters in Cairo's Tahrir Square sat in front of a giant TV hung up between lampposts. "Oh God, Oh God, let tonight be his night," some of them chanted as they sat on the ground.
Hundreds of thousands of chanting demonstrators, meantime, continued Tuesday to pack downtown streets while thousands more jammed the airport trying to flee Egypt on Tuesday.
Throngs of men and women waved flags, chanted slogans and hung effigies of Mubarak, reveling in an unprecedented expression of political frustration and anger.
They responded to a call for a "million-man march" and a nationwide strike to force Mubarak from office.
The momentum of the demonstrations, which began a week ago, seems to have caught even the organizers off guard. Mostly young, they promoted their cause on the Internet and "never had it in their mind it would be a revolution," said Alaa al-Aswani, an Egyptian author and political analyst.
Protesters have gained confidence with each passing day, pledging to remain in the streets until they bring Mubarak's rule of almost 30 years to an end.

Monday, January 31, 2011

Ways to Teach About the Unrest in Egypt

Egypt is the most populous country in the Arab world and has often been its leader. But this month, the spark of revolution in Tunisia seemed to set fire to decades worth of smoldering grievances against the heavy-handed rule of Egypt’s president, Hosni Mubarak. Tens of thousands of protesters took to the streets calling for Mr. Mr.Mubarak to step down, defying bans and curfews. It was by far the most serious challenge to the regime in memory.
–Overview from the Times Topics page on Egypt

On the seventh day of uprisings in Egypt, we offer several ideas for approaching this breaking news in the classroom.

We’ll continue to update the post as events unfold.

Get the Big Picture

For a quick “Egypt 101,” you might read aloud to students, or have students read and annotate, the Times Topics page overview on Egypt, which is updated regularly to reflect breaking news and put it in context. As students listen or read, have them write down a list of topics, terms, names and questions they would like to know more about. You might then move on to the more elaborate gallery walk format, below.

Introduce the Events Through a Gallery Walk

One way to quickly introduce students to a complex topic, and provide them with images and text from which they can generate questions for further discussion and research, is through a gallery walk.

Depending on your curriculum, how much background knowledge students have and the technology available, choose from The Times and other coverage to find texts of all kinds to hang or project around your classroom or place in “stations.” A variety — short readings of different kinds, photographs, maps, podcasts and video — is ideal. The Times Topics page on Egypt, on President Hosni Mubarak and on Mohamed ElBaradei are excellent places to start, since all pull in the most recent articles and multimedia automatically, and feature a short Times-written overview of the topic at the top.


Have students circulate around the room with pen and paper as they read and view what you have posted. (For example, you can choose from captioned photographs here and here, video or an interactive map.) You might ask students to keep a simple T-chart as they work, one side for listing observations and reactions to what they see and read, and the other for their questions.

After the gallery walk, have students discuss their reactions and questions in small groups, then write their common questions on the board. As a class, come up with broader categories under which student questions can be sorted. (For example: “What led to this uprising?” “What do we need to know about Egypt, its history and social and political structure to understand these events?” “How are national and international leaders responding?” “How might these events affect the whole region?”) Students can then form groups to pursue one of the questions in depth. Provide each group with relevant articles, or invite them to search the Times’s site, and have them mine what they find for answers. In a future class, groups will present their research findings to their classmates.

Invite Students to Post Reactions
Have You Been Following the News About Egypt? Our Student Opinion question invites any student 13 or older to post a response to unfolding events, and to write about how, why and when they tend to follow news about international events in general. Why should non-Egyptians care about what happens in Egypt?

Identify Just the Basic “5 W’s and an H” of the News
In schools or homes where other demands mean little time to delve into this topic, you might help students answer the simple questions we feature daily about a news story in our 6 Q’s About the News: Who, What, Where, When, Why and How? The 6 Q’s we posted on Jan. 27, “Protests in Egypt,” might be a starting point.

Investigate the Roots of Dissent

After examining this chart, illustrating that Egyptians have become increasingly dissatisfied with the direction of their country over the past few years, have students read about the reasons that Egyptians have taken to the streets. Have students create a chart that identifies protesters’ concerns. Discuss with students whether these concerns would lead them take the kinds of actions Egyptians have taken if they found themselves in a similar situation.

Track Global Effects

Times headlines for Jan. 31 include “Unrest in Egypt Unsettles Global Markets,” “Israel Shaken as Turbulence Rocks an Ally,” and “Political Crisis Starts to Be Felt Economically.” How, in our global world, is the crisis in Egypt something that touches us all? How will these events affect the delicate balance in the Middle East? Students might brainstorm and create their own graphic organizers visualizing the effects — political, economic, social, technological, etc. — that they observe as they read and listen to the news in coming days. They might also make predictions for the effects they expect to see, and then follow the news to see how they play out.

Map Discord

As the inspiration for a Jan. 18 lesson plan, we used a Week in Review article that stated “It’s still early, but 2011 may prove the year that the status quo in the Middle East proved untenable and began falling apart.” In the lesson, “Mapping Discord: Creating a Primer on the Arab World,” we ask “Why is there much turmoil in the Arab world right now? What are the key issues facing the nations in that part of the globe?” Students then create an annotated map of the Middle East and North Africa that includes information about five countries in the Arab world —Tunisia, Lebanon, Egypt, Sudan and Iraq. You might adapt the questions and activities here to respond to breaking news.

Examine Different Perspectives

Split the class into small groups and assign each group a different viewpoint about what is the central issue of the Egyptian protests. Have students create a visual representation of their assigned article’s argument (a Venn diagram, a story-board, a flow chart, etc.). Have each group present its creation to the class and explain what its assigned author saw as the central issue of the Egyptian protests. After the presentations, have students discuss the similarities and differences among each of the assigned opinion pieces. Which arguments resonate most with them? Why?

Investigate the Role of Technology

Conduct an adapted version of the warm-up activity from this Times lesson, which has students brainstorm a list of ways that activist groups share information and then examines how shortened this list is when all mentions of technology are unavailable. Next, show the chart in “Egypt Cuts Off Most Internet and Cell Service,” which illustrates the precipitous drop in Internet traffic in Egypt on Jan. 27. Ask students to brainstorm ideas about what could account for such a drop in Internet traffic, then read the article and discuss whether they believe that shutting down Internet access made people more or less likely to join the protests.

Finally, put the discussion in a bigger context by reading “Spotlight Again Falls on Web Tools and Change,” to examine how, “in Minsk and Moscow, Tehran and Beijing, governments have begun to climb the steep learning curve and turn the new Internet tools to their own, antidemocratic purposes.” What predictions do students have for Egypt after reading this?

Consider the Role of the Media

Read about the role that the satellite channel Al Jazeera played in escalating the dissent. What does Marc Lynch, a professor of Middle East Studies at George Washington University, mean when he says, “The notion that there is a common struggle across the Arab world is something Al Jazeera helped create…They did not cause these events, but it’s almost impossible to imagine all this happening without Al Jazeera”?

Students might discuss the political role of media in their own lives. Without consistent television and Internet programming, would they interact with politics in the same way? Would they have the same political vocabulary or see political issues in the same light? Given the important role the media plays in national and global politics, what responsibilities does the media have?

Examine the American Diplomatic Dilemma

Watch the video “Clinton Calls for an ‘Orderly Transition’ “ from a Jan. 30 appearance by Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton on “Meet the Press.” What is the diplomatic dilemma facing the United States, which has long backed President Mubarak, but is sympathetic to the reasons for Egyptian unrest? How should the United States react?

Read about the diplomatic history of the United States in Egypt and consider different viewpoints about how the United States should proceed. Then write memos for President Obama and Mrs. Clinton proposing courses of action that the United States should take in response to events in Egypt.

Uncover Egyptian History

According to the Times Topics page on Egypt, the country is “a heavyweight in Middle East diplomacy, in part because of its peace treaty with Israel,” “a key ally of the United States” and “often the fulcrum on which currents in the region turn.”

Begin investigating some of the historical roots of these statements with our On This Day in History feature, which links to an important historical Times front page each day. Have students read the original Times article on the March 26, 1979, Camp David peace treaty, signed by Prime Minister Menachem Begin of Israel and President Anwar Sadat of Egypt at the White House. Then have them read the On Oct. 6, 1981, article published when Mr. Sadat was shot to death by Islamic militants while reviewing a military parade.

Discuss the Role of Young People
Political organizers, many younger than 30, are taking the lead in efforts to topple a regime older than they are, write David D. Kirkpatrick and Mona El-Naggar in “Protest’s Old Guard Falls In Behind the Young.” Why and how have young people taken this role? How have older opposition leaders reacted? What role is Mohamed ElBaradei, the diplomat and Nobel laureate, playing and why? Do you think young people in the country where you live could have significant political power if they chose to use it? Why or why not? What do you think young people in your region would consider worth organizing and fighting for?

Follow the Events

Have students keep an updated timeline of events in your classroom. Partners or small groups might be made responsible for different aspects of the situation, depending on in what context you are teaching it, and can be asked to bring in news stories and photos to add to the timeline regularly. Students might also be asked to provide quick daily or weekly oral updates on their subtopic. One way to follow events as they unfold is via the Lede blog.

(source:nytimes.com)