Showing posts with label Mursi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mursi. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 21, 2013

The Poor, Persecuted Muslim Brotherhood!


by Henri Boulad, sj
17 August 2013
The entire Western world is outraged, offended and scandalized because the Egyptian Army has dared to dislodge the Muslim Brotherhood from the two bastions of Rabia and Nahda, where they had been barricaded for several weeks. Bottom line: more than six hundred dead in the two camps.

In no time at all, the right-thinking Western media uttered cries and whimpers asking the Security Council and international human rights associations to condemn this savage aggression with the utmost firmness.

The poor Muslim Brothers! Victims of violence! Those gentle lambs, well known for their sweetness and innocence! The object of unacceptable brutality. Consequently, it’s a duty to defend them against the devouring wolves of the Egyptian army and police. The USA, Great Britain, France, Germany, Turkey, the UN... then, should rise as one man to denounce injustice, defend those innocents, and invite the world to fly to their rescue. The international media instantly leapt upon Pegasus to charge at the guilty ones…

This lifting of shields to claim and proclaim the right of all citizens to protest "peacefully" has something tragi-comical about it.

Consider the facts:

-the Rabaa mosque, where the Brothers were holed up was a real armory where incredible arsenal of war was discovered. No denunciations from the West.
-For weeks, the Brotherhood’s militias, armed to the teeth, sowed terror among the whole population of Egypt: killings, abductions, kidnappings, ransom demands, abductions and rape of girls forcibly married to Muslims. No reaction from the West.

-More than 20 police stations looted and burned; nearly fifty policemen and officers killed and tortured in the most savage way. Silence from the West.
- Sufi mausoleums destroyed and Shiite families massacred raise NO international emotion.
-Some 50 churches, schools and Christian institutions burned in the single day of August 14. No protest on the part of the West.

-Priests and Christians attacked and killed - including children of tender age - for the sole reason that they were Christians. No Western denunciation appeared which might be accused of "Islamophobia", which today is the crime of crimes.

-Nearly 1,500 people massacred by Morsi militias during its one-year reign. Silence from the media.

- Secret agreements from Morsi to sell Egypt, piece by piece to its neighbours: 40% of the Sinai to Hamas and the Palestinians, Nubia to Omar al-Bashir, and the western portion of the territory to Libya... This is a gift for the West, since it is their doing…

When Egypt finally decides to react and put some order in the house... the West cries ‘persecution’, ‘injustice’ and ‘scandal’!

It’s a secret to no one that the presidential elections were a broad farce and that the election was tainted by massive fraud. Nevertheless, the media persisted in asserting that Morsi was the first president in Egyptian history to be 'democratically' elected and that he achieved 'legitimacy'.

The Egyptian people are easy to blame, since they agreed to play this game, saying to themselves: ‘Let’s see what they actually do.’ The result was so catastrophic - insecurity, unemployment, inflation, bread and gasoline shortages, the economy in free fall, moribund tourism - that at the end of one year the entire population requested Morsi to clear out.
Within two months, the Tamarrod movement collected more than 22 million signatures calling for his departure. In vain! Facing his obstinacy, tens of millions of Egyptians - the majority of which were the humble people who had been his former supporters - turned out on the streets of major cities to demand his departure. Still in vain!

The Army - neutral until then - decided to intervene to support the people and toss the bums out, keeping them under house arrest. During long hours of interrogation, the Army got revelations of exceptional wrongdoings that compromised both the Muslim Brotherhood and a number of foreign countries.

Faced with the Army’s power grab, the West immediately cried ‘coup d’état’. If it had been a ‘coup d’état’, it was a ‘people’s coup’, rather than military one. The Army had merely acquiesced to the will of the people. The people were fed up with a president who had betrayed, flimflammed and hoodwinked them, and they reacted with a survival reflex, calling for his departure.

A delightful little story illustrates what I am saying. A guy buys a can of something at the grocery which, once opened, appears to be spoiled. What’s he going to do? Eat it or toss it? Toss it, obviously.

It's kind of what did the Egyptian people did after Morsi and the Brothers promised the moon and the stars. Once the can was opened, they realized that it was all rotten. And so they reacted by rejecting them.

Following Morsi’s house arrest, the Army still wanted to have the Muslim Brotherhood contribute to the new Government, offering them to team up with other parties. That met with systematic and stubborn refusal.

After numerous unsuccessful attempts of dialogue and negotiations with them, a new provisional Government was set up.

It was then they decided then to go underground and sow terror; in this they were highly successful. But this strategy has only increased their unpopularity and we can say today that the Egyptian people despise and abhor them.

Equipped with the most sophisticated weapons, the Brothers are everywhere burning, attacking, killing, destroying…

The Army then decreed a State of Emergency and imposed a curfew from sunset to sunrise. But the Muslim Brotherhood considered themselves exempt from compliance. Yesterday, August 16, in my room near Ramses Avenue and Ramses Square (that were swarming with their militias), I heard explosions, single shots and submachine gun fire from the surrounding streets.
After several warnings to young people to go home, the Army decided to send in tanks to enforce the curfew. Seeing the collateral damage, well-thinking Westerners indicted the Army for having the nerve to attack 'peaceful’ demonstrators!
Whom are they trying to kid?

Sunday, July 7, 2013

Dear Mr. Obama - Regards From Egypt





We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.--That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed, --That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness.US Declaration of Independence, July 4, 1776





watch the video & do your math .. 





Dear Mr. Obama,
For the past 15 years your CIA brains have been planning to change Egypt into another Iraq. Well, NICE TRY. You have FAILED. You don't understand a lot about Egypt, sir. Maybe you should ask your Kenyan Muslim relatives about the status of our country in the Holy Qur'an, or how Prophet Mohamed, peace be upon him, described our army. Egypt has been mentioned in our Holy Book five times, and is described as a secure country where people live in peace and harmony. Prophet Mohamed (pbuh) has described our soldiers as the best on the planet, stating clearly that our army and the Egyptian people remain united till the end of time .. In the Bible, the Egyptian people are described as the blessed nation of Jesus Christ .. So Mr. Obama, you can kindly oblige us by calling in your lady of doom Mrs. Anne Patterson back home to the USA, as she is no longer welcome in Egypt .. We hope you have learnt that not all countries yield to manipulation and that you should not attempt to spend the money of American tax payers creating dictatorships in countries of independence and sovereignty .. We call upon all Americans whom we know as a peace loving people to seriously investigate their government's sincere endeavors to aid terrorists imposing a fascist regime, is this what they pay taxes to achieve? Are these the human values upon which you have been elected??

Respectfully,
The Egyptian People

There were many open minds and a golden chance for the MB to prove that they were not the dictatorial theocratically twisted power grabbing inhuman creatures they proved to be after one year of a chance ..They have not kept their word one time, lied constantly, stole Egypt's resources & so many other treacherous acts ... never mind the fascist agenda which made heretics of Moslems all over Egypt and athiests of Christians ... they've had one year and done incredible damage ... even tourism which has flourished for at least 10 years has come to a total standstill .... most of those outside their ranks who voted for them to give them this chance are now kicking themselves for having done so ... everyone wanted to get rid of them before we drown totally and are no longer the Egypt we know .... this is the will of the people, this is ground level democracy in action .. In Italy they changed presidents maybe 7 times in the space of 4 years, in Greece 3 in 2 years ... it's not a phenomena .. what is a phenomena is to have between 33 to 50,000,000 people in the streets all over Egypt for nearly a week demanding the removal of this destructive government NOW and this after 2 months during which more than 22 million ballots were filled demanding their immediate step down ... Egypt was not being run by Mursi or the (hahahaha) "Freedom & Justice Party" but by the illegitimate Muslem Brotherhood, whose own founder, Hassan el Bana, regretted forming after the assasination of Nokrashy Pasha ...... this is the will of the Egyptian people and it is correct, accordingly, that the army and the police of the people, should act on behalf of the people who tried to remove this cult from power peacefully by demanding early elections after withdrawing confidence from them ...
Thanks to google satellite imagery - BBC World News reported a record-braking 33,000,00 Egyptians took to the streets – That's a LOT of people who had reached their absolute limit and demanded their country back from yet another authoritarian system - ousting a president and rejecting his political party and it's Islamist ideology – The Muslim Brotherhood had coveted the seat of power for over 80 years but it took them only 1 year to lose it! Just saying!

Never before did so many people in human history be so unified against a failed government .. As time will tell and its my deepest of hopes that Egypt can finally break the cycle of authoritarian rule!

Imagine what a nation can do if it channels all its energy from June 30th into building a representative government that’s by and for the people with a universal sense of justice and equality .. Like the pyramids – we're really good at doing the big stuff, it's the details that we need to get better at. But now we're back on track and showing the world - Egypt is not a religious state, we never have been and hopefully never will be again ..

Here are some amazing pictures to check out:

http://www.thedailybeast.com/galleries/2013/07/01/anti-morsi-protests-sweep-egypt-photos.html#5d45b0a1-1c01-457c-8696-040178b8a074
This is not a coup in all the languages of the world : http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ugs_9bKCYdc




                                         This is how we behold our army .. yes Mr. Obama it sure looks like a coup .. ! :)

Wednesday, July 3, 2013

Egypt Today ..


EGYPT'S COUP, OR NOT? The events in Egypt today have put the country on a path towards a very insecure future. President Morsi has been ousted by the military forces who have formally declared their commitment to the freedom of expression and the freedom of the media, wasting no time undermining their own claims by immediately closing down three local TV stations that were affiliated with the Muslim Brotherhood, even arresting the crew of the Misr25 channel. General al-Sisi stated that the armed forces have responded to the cries for help of the Egyptian people, and in a sense they have. Without the support of the military the masses on the street could never have ousted the increasingly authoritarian Morsi. Even now, the former president refuses to admit his loss and has released a statement in which he asks the people to reject the military coup d'état and asks the population not to respond to it - oblivious to the millions and millions of exuberant Egyptians flocking the streets as we speak. In order to prevent an irreparable rupture from dividing Egyptian society, the army has to make clear that there is a future for the Muslim Brotherhood within political arena, but fears are that it is already too late. Reports of clashes between supporters and opponents of Morsi, and attacks from both camps feed fears of a civil conflict. At the time it is impossible to say whether we have witnessed a coup d'état by the Egyptian military, it all depends on which route they will take from here. If they abide by the rules set out by their 'roadmap', all could end well. If, however, they will be corrupted by the taste of power they have now experienced, and decide to demand a larger piece of the national pie (of which they already own 25%!) the revolutionary story of Egypt is all but over.

via Roar Magazine

Monday, July 1, 2013

Egypt Update




NOW: Hundreds of thousands gather in front of the Presidential Palace in Cairo, as the armed forces give Morsi's government a 48-hour ultimatum to "meet the demands of the people". Egyptian TV stations are now showing the countdown on their broadcasts. Army helicopters flew over Cairo earlier carrying Egyptian and army flags. We may be witnessing the early stirrings of a military coup (albeit one with fairly widespread popular support).
LIVESTREAM: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rbL_q1i7-Pk

For more background, visit ROAR: 'Millions take to the streets in Egypt’s biggest protest ever'.

http://roarmag.org/2013/07/egypt-tahrir-revolution-biggest-protest-ever/

Sunday, June 30, 2013

From Taksim to Tahrir, from Bulgaria to Brazil



From Taksim to Tahrir, from Bulgaria to Brazil, we fight the same struggle against oppressive state structures that benefit only a tiny wealthy elite ...

Open letter by the Egyptian activist collective ‘Comrades from Cairo’.

To you at whose side we struggle,
June 30 will mark a new stage of rebellion for us, building on what started on January 25 and 28, 2011. This time we rebel against the reign of the Muslim Brotherhood that has brought only more of the same forms of economic exploitation, police violence, torture and killings.

References to the coming of “democracy” have no relevance when there is no possibility of living a decent life with any signs of dignity and decent livelihood. Claims of legitimacy through an electoral process distract from the reality that in Egypt our struggle continues because we face the perpetuation of an oppressive regime that has changed its face but maintains the same logic of repression, austerity and police brutality. The authorities maintain the same lack of any accountability towards the public, and positions of power translate into opportunities to increase personal power and wealth.

June 30 renews the Revolution’s scream: “The People Want the Fall of the System”. We seek a future governed neither by the petty authoritarianism and crony capitalism of the Brotherhood nor a military apparatus which maintains a stranglehold over political and economic life nor a return to the old structures of the Mubarak era. Though the ranks of protesters that will take to the streets on June 30 are not united around this call, it must be ours — it must be our stance because we will not accept a return to the bloody periods of the past.

Though our networks are still weak we draw hope and inspiration from recent uprisings especially across Turkey and Brazil. Each is born out of different political and economic realities, but we have all been ruled by tight circles whose desire for more has perpetuated a lack of vision of any good for people. We are inspired by the horizontal organization of the Free Fare Movement founded in Bahía, Brazil in 2003 and the public assemblies spreading throughout Turkey.

In Egypt, the Brotherhood only adds a religious veneer to the process, while the logic of a localized neo-liberalism crushes the people. In Turkey a strategy of aggressive private-sector growth, likewise translates into authoritarian rule, the same logic of police brutality as the primary weapon to oppress opposition and any attempts to envision alternatives. In Brazil a government rooted in a revolutionary legitimacy has proven that its past is only a mask it wears while it partners with the same capitalist order in exploiting people and nature alike.

These recent struggles share in the fight of much older constant battles of the Kurds and the indigenous peoples of Latin America. For decades, the Turkish and Brazilian governments have tried but failed to wipe out these movements’ struggle for life. Their resistance to state repression was the precursor to the new wave of protests that have spread across Turkey and Brazil. We see an urgency in recognizing the depth in each other’s struggles and seek out forms of rebellion to spread into new spaces, neighborhoods and communities.

Our struggles share a potential to oppose the global regime of nation states. In crisis as in prosperity, the
state — in Egypt under the rule of Mubarak, the Military Junta or the Muslim Brotherhood — continues to dispossess and disenfranchise in order to preserve and expand the wealth and privilege of those in power.
None of us are fighting in isolation. We face common enemies from Bahrain, Brazil and Bosnia, Chile, Palestine, Syria, Turkey, Kurdistan, Tunisia, Sudan, the Western Sahara and Egypt. And the list goes on. Everywhere they call us thugs, vandals, looters and terrorists. We are fighting more than economic exploitation, naked police violence or an illegitimate legal system. It is not rights or reformed citizenship that we fight for.

We oppose the nation-state as a centralized tool of repression, that enables a local elite to suck the life out of us and global powers to retain their dominion over our everyday lives. The two work in unison with bullets and broadcasts and everything in between. We are not advocating to unify or equate our various battles, but it is the same structure of authority and power that we have to fight, dismantle, and bring down. Together, our struggle is stronger.

We want the downfall of the System.

Comrades from Cairo