How the New Deal did and didn't happen

I just put out a news release via the Institute for Public Accuracy on the financial hearings plugging the work of Thomas Ferguson and Robert Johnson, two of the best analysts on these issues. They contribute to an outfit called New Deal 2.0. But I don't think the New Deal happened because smart analysts asked for it. It happened because the establishment was scared of socialists and other organizers achieving more far-reaching change. Now, so-called progressives look at change as a scary thing. This morning, Democracy Now featured Naomi Klein talking about how the right is trying to misuse the earthquake in Haiti. There wasn't a discussion about how to help restore some democratic structure that has been stripped away to Haiti now that the government there has so fully failed.

Intls in Cairo -- Candlelight Vigil with Egyptian Activists #GFM

From a group of internationals staying in Cairo:
 
What: candlelight vigil
Where: Talaat Harb Square
When: Saturday, January 16th, 6 p.m.

• Please spread the word and make use of any press contacts you may have developed in Egypt or abroad.
• If you will be in Cairo on the 16th, please send an email to ben@cairodeclaration.org ASAP to find out how internationals can help Egyptians in this common cause.

As all Egyptians know, they could face severe reprisal from the dictatorship's security apparatus for protesting at a square such as Talaat Harb; the presence of internationals and of the press may help prevent reprisals. This is the first time in over a year and a half that an Egyptian protest at a significant square has been attempted.

The April 6 Youth Movement has been mobilizing on its website and on its Facebook group of 70,000. Leading members of Karameh, Revolutionary Socialists, El Ghad and Democratic Front have endorsed the action and participation by the youth in other opposition groups is anticipated. What follows is a translation from the April 6 site:

--------------
There is no longer any doubt that a deal exists between the Egyptian regime and the US and Israeli administrations: In return for the regime's intensifying of its blockade of Gaza by all means, including by constructing an underground steel wall, the US and Israel will turn a blind eye to the suppression of opposition in Egypt and thereby assist Hosni Mubarek's succession plans.

For the sake of the succession of Mubarak's son and the survival of Egypt's ruling party, Egypt has become a nothing more than a patron of US interests and a mere protector of Israel.

On the 16th and 17th of January, the anniversary of the last days of the brutal shelling of Gaza last year, hundreds of activists around the world will undertake various activities to remember and commemorate this aggression.

We invite you all to join us for a silent candlelight vigil in Talaat Harb Square on Saturday, January 16, at six p.m.

Our vigil will commemorate the anniversary of the attack on Gaza, so that we do not forget.  Our vigil will also to express our rejection of the steel wall that protects Israel's security, while prolonging the survival of the National Party in power and the suffering of the people.

No to corrupt arrangements to allow for presidential succession without a democratic process!

No to deceiving the Egyptian people with false arguments about Egyptian sovereignty!

No to participating in the siege of the Palestinian people!

•April 6 Youth
•Youth who love Egypt

Main Group on Facebook
http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=9973986703

Official site of the Movement
http://6april.org

Twitter Service of April 6 Youth
Subscribe to Twitter and follow April 6 Youth
http://twitter.com/shabab6april
-----------------------

Israel Gets Over Ten Times as much U.S. Aid than Haiti

Haiti population: 9 million
Israel population: 7 million

VOA: "Clinton pledged more than $50 million in U.S. aid on top of an annual program exceeding $200 million for debt relief, food aid, counter-narcotics programs and job-creating road projects."
Via If Americans Knew: "The source for US military aid to Israel during Fiscal Year 2009 is the Congressional Research Service’s 'U.S. Foreign Aid to Israel,' written by Jeremy M. Sharp, Specialist in Middle Eastern Affairs, updated February 3, 2009. According to this report, by early February 2009, the US had already given Israel at least $2.55 billion ($2,500,000,000) in military aid for Fiscal Year 2009.

From Kayvan: Week 3.5 in Cairo #gfm

[From Kayvan who was my roommate at the hostel; Kayvan got some strong footage during the New Years Eve protests at Tahrir Square. This is a good overview piece, but I don't agree with everything here. For example the greasy spoon I frequented -- and took Kayvan and our fellow roomate Dennis to -- had whole, fried, unmashed eggplant.  --Sam]

Hello loved ones,

 

Battling Egyptian police, getting rebuffed by my own embassy, debating the Egyptian offer of allowing only 100 people into Gaza, and trying to keep up with 1,300 internationals running around Cairo - I have enjoyed spending so much time in a single location. The host of Egyptian activists (many of whom have been tortured in Egypt’s notorious prisons), lawyers, ambassadors, police officers, journalists, and citizens I have had the honor of meeting have deepened my understanding of Egypt, the ‘Mother of Arabs’. It is a shame Egypt’s leaders are intent on showing a destructive and disgusting face that only a mother could love.

 

In Egypt, people grind everything up. Ful, the ubiquitous fava bean Arab staple, is mashed beyond the point of recognition. If there is an eggplant within 100 kilometers what is not mashed into a paste I would be astonished. As humans, we tend to reproduce the conditions we are born into. It is a perfectly natural process by which some semblance of civilization has maintained itself for some years. Egypt, with a history of god-kings, has produced itself another pharaoh in the form of Hosni Mubarak and his supporting pantheon of security forces. The Father crushes the creative and proactive aspirations of his Children, and Egyptians grind the  fava beans into submission.

 

But, I think I am reading way too much into these beans!

 

Either way, the atmosphere in Egypt is one of intellectual suffocation and I felt it instantly. Syria, also a police state with a far lower median income, still seemed to maintain a semblance of hope (and a much higher human development index score, for what its worth). Something must have happened when the nationalist slogans posted all over Tahrir Square in downtown Cairo were replaced by McDonalds and Coca-Cola ads. The Freedom truck came through tossing boxes off the back as it went, without time to unload its more precious cargo. Waste and decay, especially outside the city, abound.   

 

Egypt has been in a 'state of emergency' since 1981 citing external threats. Increased cancer and disease rates, many polluted aquifers, millions of street children, billions of embezzled dollars, and two million security personnel later, I think I agree with this designation.
 
Regarding the Gaza Freedom March, I have summed up the events below. Feel free to forward the below article to anyone that may be interested.
 
Thank you for your support and, as always, I greatly appreciate your feedback.
 
Kayvan
kafarc@gmail.com
 
---
 

Internationals Attacked in Egypt over Gaza March
Kayvan Farchadi


Cairo- After over a week of unprecedented civil disobedience in
Egypt, the majority of the 1,300 internationals that have been prevented from entering Gaza by the Egyptian government have returned to their respective countries.  Beginning on December 27, a coalition of international organizations and individuals representing 42 countries arrived in Cairo under the banner of the Gaza Freedom March.  The purpose of the march was to break the Egyptian-Israeli siege of Gaza which has prevented free movement to or from Gaza along its borders and has stopped Gaza’s sea and airports from functioning – resulting in an increasingly dire humanitarian crisis.   The Gaza Freedom March was accompanied by solidarity actions across the world, including a march with an estimated attendance of 2,000 in Tel Aviv.  

 

Upon their arrival in Cairo, most participants were unaware of the Egyptian regime’s December 20 statement indicating a reversal of their earlier plan to allow the march to proceed. Upon their arrival in Cairo on December 27, most of the 1,300 participants (roughly equal to the number of Palestinians killed in Gaza during the Israeli bombing "Cast Lead" one year ago) were informed that they would be prevented from going to Gaza through the Rafah crossing in the south of Gaza. The French ambassador to Egypt, Jean Félix-Paganon, indicated to the French delegation of the march that the Egyptian government was originally prepared to allow the march to proceed to Gaza, but the deal was rejected by Israel.

 

Conflict between Marchers and Egyptian Regime

 

Though the Gaza Freedom March had not originally intended to emphasize the role of Egypt in the blockade of Gaza, in response to the regime’s decision a consensus was quickly reached to immediately launch a campaign of civil disobedience in Cario. Sit-ins, protests, and vigils took place every day between December 28 and January 4. The later actions have been held in conjunction with Egyptian activists who had been all but silenced by Hosni Mubarak’s crackdown on dissent since 2005.  The UN offices in Cairo, the respective embassies of the participants, the Israeli embassy, and the Ministry of Justice were all targets of international action. The protests received at least cursory attention in the mainstream Western media, with stories running in the New York Times, Washington Post, International Herald Tribune, and the Christian Science Monitor. In Egypt, the marchers’ actions in Cairo received headline coverage in both opposition and (eventually) semi-official newspapers. 

 

Despite the participants’ commitment to non-violent civil resistance as advocated by Obama in his June 4 Cairo address, many instances of police brutality have been documented by protesters [videos can be found on blogger Sam Husseini’s website, http://husseini.posterous.com/]. At the New Years Eve protest in downtown Cairo’s Tahrir Square, riot police and plainclothes government forces were recorded dragging, kicking and indiscriminately lashing out at international activists in an attempt to force them into penned in areas. International activists have been routinely been penned into areas surrounded by riot police to prevent their exposure to the Egyptian public.

 

Viva Palestina, a concurrent international effort attempting to deliver 150 vehicles filled with food and medical supplies into Gaza, has reported 55 wounded participants and 6 arrests after riot police charged their sit-in at El-Arish on January 6 [images and video can be found on Viva Palestina’s website, http://vivapalestina.org/]. The sit-in was in response to a breach of the agreement, facilitated by the Turkish government in Aqaba, Jordan, committing the Egyptians to allow the full convoy entry to Gaza via the Rafah border crossing. Riots in Gaza over the Egyptian decision left three Palestinians and one Egyptian soldier dead on January 6. Viva Palestina was finally allowed entry into Gaza early on January 7.

 

Repression in Egypt

 

Today’s Egypt is a repressive police state - protests are virtually unheard of and brutally prevented. “Your presence in Egypt was like an earthquake,” said Suzanne, an Egyptian student. Prevented from exercising the limited freedom of assembly afforded to the internationals, Egyptians showed their support from their balconies and bus seats by waving, showing peace signs, and subtly smiling at the international delegates from behind the shoulders of rows of riot police. Plainclothes officers routinely moved through the crowds to filter out Egyptians who joined the international actions or even stopped to look.

 

Though the Gaza Freedom Marchers were handled roughly by international standards, torture, rape, and imprisonment without charge are realities for Egyptian critics of the regime. Ahmad Salah, a leader of the pro-democratic movement in Egypt, reports having been tortured almost to the point of death for his involvement in the planning of a nationwide strike on April 6, 2008. "The American activists and others beaten in the last week trying to march to Gaza…got a taste of the enormity of the police state apparatus here. It has gone from 200,000 when Mubarak took over to more than 2.5 million. Meanwhile, the army has shrunk from 1 million to 300,000. The enemy as far as the Egyptian government is concerned [are] its own people and anyone calling for democracy in the Mideast.”

 

Beyond the March

 

Though the Gaza Freedom March did not achieve its original goals, participants point to several important victories for the pro-Palestinian movement.  First, through increased media coverage, the march has raised the profile of voices (especially American voices) against the blockade of Gaza.  Second, at a group meeting on January 1, organizers of the march unveiled the Cairo Declaration [http://www.gazafreedommarch.org/article.php?id=5269]. Spearheaded by the South African delegation, an international committee drafted the document proposing a unified international action plan for the BDS (boycott, divestment, and sanctions) movement against Israeli apartheid intended to “compel Israel to comply with international law.” As of January 5, the Cairo Declaration included 128 initial signatories from 16 countries. Third, under the guidance of former Ambassador Ibrahim Youssri, the march has produced an international class action lawsuit against the Egyptian regime to be tried in Egyptian court.

 

However, for millions of Palestinians who routinely feel abandoned by the international community, the most poignant effect of the Gaza Freedom March may be the message of worldwide solidarity embodied by marchers. “During these years, we have felt unheard, unnoticed, and even unworthy,” writes Zeina Abu Innab, a Palestinian resident of Jordan. “You have revealed that this is no longer the case…You have shown us that somewhere, sometime, there are people who hear the cries of Palestinians under siege and occupation.…You have given us strength by proving to us that we are no longer alone. This is an aspiration that we do not take lightly.” Mohammed Omer, a resident of Gaza, adds, “For us, a population of 1.6 million being imprisoned and starved, the gratitude we express to you, the Gaza freedom marchers, is immense. Thank you all from the depth of our hearts!”

On FAIR's CounterSpin

This week on CounterSpin -- It had the elements of a nightly news story: Protestors, including some Americans, being abused by officials in an Arab country. But this story was a non-starter with U.S. media. We'll talk to Sam Husseini of the Institute for Public Accuracy, who just left Egypt where a delegation of human rights activists were abused by Egyptian police when they protested that country’s refusal to let them cross the Egyptian border into Gaza for a Freedom March.
http://www.fair.org/index.php?page=3992

Interviews Available: Roots of Terrorism

> Institute for Public Accuracy
> 980 National Press Building, Washington, D.C. 20045
> (202) 347-0020 * http://www.accuracy.org * ipa@accuracy.org
> ___________________________________________________
>
> Tuesday, January 5, 2010
>
> Roots of Terrorism
>
> Interviews Available
>
> ABC News reports that "President Obama convenes a meeting of > national security officials in the Situation Room today."
>
> AHMED SALAH, asea1009@yahoo.com, http://6aprilmove.blogspot.com/
> A leader of the pro-democratic movement in Egypt, Salah said > today: "I see the threat of groups like Al Qaeda growing by the day > and much of it is the result of the actions of the Egyptian > government. Egypt has been in a state of emergency since 1981. When > Mubarak took over that year, Egypt was 44th in terms of economic > development according to the UN. Now we are 113th. We have millions > of street children who will grow up to be full of hatred and anger. > We have a tiny elite around the government that is making billions > of dollars from corruption. All this eventually will come crashing > down and the rich will flee the country to their villas in Europe, > the U.S. and the Caribbean."
> Salah, who has testified before U.S. congressional committees, > added: "The American activists and others beaten in the last week > trying to march to Gaza got a taste of how much collusion there is > between the Egyptian dictatorship and the U.S. and Israeli > governments. They also got a taste of the enormity of the police > state apparatus here. It has gone from 200,000 when Mubarak took > over to more than 2.5 million. Meanwhile, the army has shrunk from 1 > million to 300,000. The enemy as far as the Egyptian government is > concerned is its own people and anyone calling for democracy in the > Mideast.
> "We are now receiving reports of 2,000 Egyptian riot police > surrounding the Viva Palestina convoy at [the Sinai port of] Al > Arish. This convoy has been held up by the Egyptian government for > weeks, having to go from one port to the next. It shows that the > Egyptian president is helping to suffocate Gaza because that's what > Israel wants. I believe he is ingratiating himself to the Israelis > and the U.S. so they will support him and help arrange for his son > to become the next president of Egypt."
>
> For more information, contact at the Institute for Public Accuracy:
> Hollie Ainbinder, (615) 893-0495
>

Al Arish update from Dad

Different Egyptian TVs are reporting different versions of what happened. One version that things are calm after using water cannons against the convoy members but the convoy is still held in Alarish. Another version is that things quited down and the convoy with members proceeded to Gaza!!


Aljazeera  Direct just started covering  protest s in Istanbul  against the Egyptian embassy.,  with speakers  very excited. I could understand  the  Arabic words like "Ya Rabbi" My God  and on and on.

Egyptian Tv is showing pictures of the gate in question where you can see fires around.