Showing posts with label Egypt. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Egypt. Show all posts

Thursday, August 8, 2013

Egypt's Coup puts fearful Christians in a Corner

Egypt's coup puts fearful Christians in a corner


ASSIUT, Egypt (AP) — It was nighttime and 10,000 Islamists were marching down the most heavily Christian street in this ancient Egyptian city, chanting "Islamic, Islamic, despite the Christians." A half-dozen kids were spray-painting "Boycott the Christians" on walls, supervised by an adult.
While Islamists are on the defensive in Cairo following the military coup that ousted President Mohammed Morsi, in Assiut and elsewhere in Egypt's deep south they are waging a stepped-up hate campaign, claiming the country's Christian minority somehow engineered Morsi's downfall.
"Tawadros is a dog," says a spray-painted insult, referring to Pope Tawadros II, patriarch of the Copts, as Egypt's Christians are called. Christian homes, stores and places of worship have been marked with large painted crosses.
The hostility led a coalition of 16 Egyptian rights groups to warn on Wednesday of a wave of violence to come, and to demand that the post-coup authorities protect the Christians who are 10 percent of the population, and suffer chronic discrimination.
Nile-side Assiut, a city of one million people 400 kilometers (250 miles) south of Cairo, dates back to the pharaohs. The New Testament says Mary, Joseph and the infant Jesus passed through as they fled the infanticidal King Herod. Today, its Christian fears are compounded by the failure of authorities to curb the graffiti-spraying and the Islamists' demonstrations, which have gone on almost nightly since the July 3 coup that ousted Morsi.
"They (the Islamists) will not stop as long as they are left to do as they please without fear of accountability," said Hossam Nabil, 38, who owns a jewelry store on Youssry Ragheb St. where the demonstration passed on Tuesday night. "They are many and one day they will trash our stores."
Like other Christians with stores on the street, Nabil shuttered his establishment until the protesters had passed. "They (the marchers) run their index finger across their throats to suggest they will slaughter us, or scream Morsi's name in our faces," he said.
A young couple arrived to shop while scores of marchers were still on the street. They froze in fear, the husband shielding his wife with his body.
Families living in apartment blocks above the stores stayed home, shutting windows and staying off balconies. Those outdoors kept their distance from the march.
Assiut's Islamists are strong because local authority is weak and religion is powerful in a region where poverty is widespread and envy of the relatively high number of well-to-do Christians runs high.
As for the graffiti, acting provincial governor Gamal Adam told The Associated Press the authorities have given up on washing it away because it quickly reappears. He also said municipal cleaners might be roughed up if caught in the act by Islamists.
For the 40 percent of Assiut people who are Christian, life has changed radically. They find their apartment blocks disfigured by painted crosses with a red X painted over them. They stay at home at night. Churches have cancelled afternoon activities. Some of the wealthy have left town.
"We had never experienced the kind of persecution we suffer now. We are insulted every day," said Nevine Kamal, a 40-year-old Christian pharmacist and mother of two teenagers. "We are angry and frustrated but we are not leaving Assiut," she said, seated at her desk at the St. George Pharmacy on Youssry Ragheb Street. Under her desk's glass is a poster of the Virgin Mary and on the wall is an image of St. George slaying the mythical dragon.
"Sadly, my children are angry with Egypt and want to leave and they don't believe us when I and my husband tell them that things will get better soon. But, personally, I have faith that all this will yield something good for us and the country. We thought the Muslim Brotherhood will rule for 80 years and they are out after just one year. Who would have believed this?" Morsi is a longtime leader of the Brotherhood.
At least seven Christians have been killed since the coup, one of them in Assiut. Scores have been injured.
This week, in a village in the province of Minya south of Cairo, a pro-military song playing on a coffee shop radio sparked an argument between a Muslim and a Christian, and the next day a mob of thousands ransacked Christian homes and stores and tried to storm a church. At least 18 people were injured and arrests warrants issued for 35.
Egypt's Christians used to shun politics, but since the Arab Spring of early 2011 they have started to demand a say in the country's direction. They took it to a new level during Morsi's year in office and the empowerment of his Islamist allies. Tawadros, the Coptic Christian pope installed last year, openly criticized the president and told Christians they were free to actively participate in politics.
It was a risky gamble for a minority that has long felt vulnerable, with its most concentrated communities, like the one in Assiut, living in the same rural areas where the most vehement Islamists hold sway.
During Morsi's year in office, some of his hard-line allies increasingly spoke of Christians as enemies of Islam and warned them to remember they are a minority. When the wave of protests against Morsi began on June 30, Media supportive of his Muslim Brotherhood depicted the movement as dominated by Christians.
Still, at the ancient convent marking the last spot where the Holy Family is thought to have stayed before it left Egypt, hundreds gathered this week for an annual festival in upbeat mood. Children played, families picnicked, people lined up to buy blessed bread.
"Those who hate us are misled," said a convent member named Martyra, speaking to the AP while standing in a cave where ancient Egyptians quarried stones to build their cities. "I am safe here in the convent but I worry and pray for those who live outside and have children." 

Monday, August 5, 2013

Anti-Americanism/Obama Ridicule on the Rise in Egypt (VIDEO)

Anti-Americanism/Obama Ridicule on the Rise in Egypt (VIDEO)


A music video featuring an Arabic-singing belly dancer voicing profanity-laced lyrics that accuse President Barack Obama of supporting terrorism and the Muslim Brotherhood has gone viral in Egypt.
The video - "You Obama, Your Father, Mother" - features performer Sama Elmasry brandishing a sword next to Obama's photo as well as  various Photoshopped images of the U.S. president including dressed as Osama bin Laden and as a baby in diapers
Hey Obama, You Are Stupid, Bad Man: Viral Egyptian Music Video Accuses Obama of Supporting Terrorism, Muslim Brotherhood
Obama-Vid-Bin-Laden
Obama as bin Laden (Screenshot: YouTube)
Hey Obama, You Are Stupid, Bad Man: Viral Egyptian Music Video Accuses Obama of Supporting Terrorism, Muslim Brotherhood
Obama-Vid-Baby
Obama as a baby in diapers (Screenshot: YouTube)
The lyrics chastise Obama and U.S. Ambassador to Egypt Anne Patterson for their perceived lack of support for the Egyptian Army which has been in control since the ousting of President Mohammed Morsi last month.
Among the lyrics, according to the video's subtitled translation (emphasis added):
Hey Obama, Hey Obama Hey Obama, support the terrorismTraitor like the Brotherhood members
Obama say it's a coup   That's not your business dirty manObama say it's a coup That's not your father, mother business And you Patterson, stop messing Old bit** woman
Contrary to the lyrics' suggestion, the U.S. administration has not officially designated the events of early July as a "coup" which under U.S. law would have forced a stop to American financial aid to Egypt.
Hey Obama, You Are Stupid, Bad Man: Viral Egyptian Music Video Accuses Obama of Supporting Terrorism, Muslim Brotherhood
Obama-Vid-Sword
(Screenshot: YouTube)
Hey Obama, You Are Stupid, Bad Man: Viral Egyptian Music Video Accuses Obama of Supporting Terrorism, Muslim Brotherhood
Obama-Vid-Stupid
(Screenshot: YouTube)
The singer then blasts the Obama administration for its call on the Egyptian military last month to release Morsi from jail, after European countries had done the same. She sings that Obama should cede from that position or she will "stab" him and mockingly brandishes a sword against Obama's photo. She asks why he "told [secular former President Hosni] Mubarak to leave immediately," implying that Obama always wanted the Islamists to take power.
Besides her sword, Elmasry also brandishes some choice insults including calling Obama a "jerk" and telling him, "f*** you" over threats to cut back foreign aid to Egypt.
Hey Obama, You Are Stupid, Bad Man: Viral Egyptian Music Video Accuses Obama of Supporting Terrorism, Muslim Brotherhood
Obama-Vid-MB
(Screenshot: YouTube)
She sings:
You want us to release Morsi Hey Obama, you are stupid, bad man You want us to release Morsi Stop this or I will stab you Why then you told Mubarak To leave immediately?
You threaten us with the U.S. aid F*** it and f*** you You are a jerk Obaaaaa You threaten us with the U.S. aid Your ambassador is very wicked woman Al-Sisi has beaten you And Egyptian people supported him
You meet Al-Noor Islamic party HA..HA..HA Now we know all the secrets Egyptians are not idiots You meet Al-Noor Islamic party The party is sneaky and menless [sic]
She then accuses Obama of joining forces with "the terrorists," calling them "all the disgusting guys":
Hey Obama, your father, your mother You and the terrorists Listen to me Obama Our army is very strong You Obama, your father, your mother All the disgusting guys We are the people tell you You can't fool usYou tried to play it But you can't play this wicked game With us because we are the Alfa
At the 3:36 point in the video, Elmasry switches to English, in which she blasts Obama for his friendship with Israel, Turkey and Qatar. Qatar has strong ties with the Muslim Brotherhood , having provided $8 billion in aid to Morsi's government over the past two years, according to Lebanon's Daily Star. She says:
Your father and your mother Your Israel, your Turkey, and your Qatar All of you , Go to hell! Listen, Obama We are Egyptian We are civilization Are you listen, Obama?
At the end of the video, English script appears on screen saying: "When Egypt talking, should be America shut up."
During the massive demonstrations leading up to the ousting of President Morsi last month, numerous anti-American signs were seen in the crowd blasting Obama and Ambassador Patterson over their perceived affinity for the Muslim Brotherhood. An image that appeared repeatedly and was also seen in the video showed Patterson meeting with Muslim Brotherhood Spiritual Guide Mohammed Badie.
Here is the video:

Wednesday, July 11, 2012

Calls to Destroy Egypt’s Great Pyramids Begin: History Repeats?


Calls to Destroy Egypt’s Great Pyramids Begin


History Repeats?




According to several reports in the Arabic media, prominent Muslim clerics have begun to call for the demolition of Egypt’s Great Pyramids—or, in the words of Saudi Sheikh Ali bin Said al-Rabi‘i, those “symbols of paganism,” which Egypt’s Salafi party has long planned to cover with wax.    Most recently, Bahrain’s “Sheikh of Sunni Sheikhs” and President of National Unity, Abd al-Latif al-Mahmoud, called on Egypt’s new president, Muhammad Morsi, to “destroy the Pyramids and accomplish what the Sahabi Amr bin al-As could not.”

This is a reference to the Muslim Prophet Muhammad’s companion, Amr bin al-As and his Arabian tribesmen, who invaded and conquered Egypt circa 641.  Under al-As and subsequent Muslim rule, many Egyptian antiquities were destroyed as relics of infidelity.  While most Western academics argue otherwise, according to early Muslim writers, the great Library of Alexandria itself—deemed a repository of pagan knowledge contradicting the Koran—was destroyed under bin al-As’s reign and in compliance with Caliph Omar’s command.

However, while book-burning was an easy activity in the 7th century, destroying the mountain-like pyramids and their guardian Sphinx was not—even if Egypt’s Medieval Mamluk rulers “de-nosed” the latter during target practice (though popular legend still attributes it to a Westerner, Napoleon).

Sheikhs” observes, and thanks to modern technology, the pyramids can be destroyed.  The only question left is whether the Muslim Brotherhood president of Egypt is “pious” enough—if he is willing to complete the Islamization process that started under the hands of Egypt’s first Islamic conqueror.
Nor is such a course of action implausible.  History is laden with examples of Muslims destroying their own pre-Islamic heritage—starting with Islam’s prophet Muhammad himself, who destroyed Arabia’s Ka‘ba temple, transforming it into a mosque.

Asking “What is it about Islam that so often turns its adherents against their own patrimony?” Daniel Pipes provides several examples, from Medieval Muslims in India destroying their forefathers’ temples, to contemporary Muslims destroying their non-Islamic heritage in Egypt, Iraq, Israel, Malaysia, and Tunisia.

Currently, in what the International Criminal Court is describing as a possible “war crime,” Islamic fanatics are destroying the ancient heritage of the city of Timbuktu in Mali—all to Islam’s triumphant war cry, “Allahu Akbar!”
Much of this hate for their own pre-Islamic heritage is tied to the fact that, traditionally, Muslims do not identify with this or that nation, culture, heritage, or language, but only with the Islamic nation—the Umma.

Accordingly, while many Egyptians—Muslims and non-Muslims alike—see themselves as Egyptians, Islamists have no national identity, identifying only with Islam’s “culture,” based on the “sunna” of the prophet and Islam’s language, Arabic.  This sentiment was clearly reflected when the former Leader of the Muslim Brotherhood, Muhammad Akef, declared “the hell with Egypt,” indicating that the interests of his country are secondary to Islam’s.
It is further telling that such calls are being made now—immediately after a Muslim Brotherhood member became Egypt’s president.  In fact, the same reports discussing the call to demolish the last of the Seven Wonders of the Word, also note that Egyptian Salafis are calling on Morsi to banish all Shias and Baha’is from Egypt.

In other words, Morsi’s call to release the Blind Sheikh, a terrorist mastermind, may be the tip of the iceberg in coming audacity.  From calls to legalize Islamic sex-slave marriage to calls to institute “morality police” to calls to destroy Egypt’s mountain-like monuments, under Muslim Brotherhood tutelage, the bottle has been uncorked, and the genie unleashed in Egypt.

Will all those international institutions, which make it a point to look the other way whenever human rights abuses are committed by Muslims, lest they appear “Islamophobic,” at least take note now that the Great Pyramids appear to be next on Islam’s hit list, or will the fact that Muslims are involved silence them once again—even as those most ancient symbols of human civilization are pummeled to the ground?



Afghan Taliban Begin Destruction of Ancient Buddha Statues
KABUL - Ignoring an international outcry, Afghanistan's puritanical Taliban Islamic militia began demolishing statues across the country on Thursday, including two towering ancient stone Buddhas.Taliban Minister of Information and Culture Qudratullah Jamal told AFP the destruction of scores of pre-Islamic figures, designed to stop the worshipping of "false idols," had begun throughout the country.


Bhudda
Undated photo of the world's tallest statue of Bhudda measuring 53 meters (175 feet) in Bamiyan, 125 kilometers (90 miles) west of Kabul in Afghanistan. Supreme Commander of the Taliban Mullah Mohammad Omar had ordered the destruction of all statues in Afghanistan, including the centuries-old Buddha in Bamiyan, and armed Taliban troops fanned out across the country Thursday to implement the supreme leader's order. (AP Photo) 
He said militiamen started wrecking the almost 2,000-year-old Buddhist masterpieces in the central province of Bamiyan, including the world's tallest standing Buddha measuring 50 meters (165 feet), after sunrise.
"The work started about five hours ago but I do not know how much of it (the two Bamiyan Buddhas) has been destroyed," Jamal said. "It will be destroyed by every means. All the statues are being destroyed."
He said Taliban soldiers were at "work" in the Kabul museum and elsewhere in the provinces of Ghazni, Herat, Jalalabad and Kandahar.
An edict announced Monday by the militia's supreme leader, Mulla Mohammad Omar, calling for the destruction of all statues in line with "Islamic" laws, has caused shock around the world.
Afghanistan is home to an array of pre-Islamic historic treasures from its days as a key stop on the ancient Silk Road and a strategic battleground for conquerers dating back to Alexander the Great and the Aryans before him.
The two massive Bamiyan Buddhas, carved into a sandstone cliff near the provincial capital in central Afghanistan, stand 50 meters (165 feet) and 34.5 meters (114 feet) tall and were built around the second century.
Appeals for their preservation have come from the United States, France, Germany, Thailand, Japan, Sri Lanka, Iran, Pakistan, Germany, Russia, India and UN Secretary General Kofi Annan.
Koichiro Matsuura, chief of the UN Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), said he had convened an emergency meeting of members of the Organization of the Islamic Conference to try to stop the destruction.
"They are destroying statues that the entire world considers to be masterpieces," Matsuura said.
"And this is being done in the name of an interpretation of the Muslim faith that is not recognized anywhere else in the world."
But Afghan Foreign Minister Wakil Ahmad Mutawakel said the edict was irreversible. "Have you ever seen any decision of the Islamic Emirate (Taliban) reversed?" Mutawakel asked.
The Taliban, or movement of religious students, seized Kabul in 1996 and have imposed a puritanical mix of Pashtun tribal and Sharia law in a bid to create their idea of a true Muslim state.
Their regime is recognised only by Pakistan, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, and is not represented at the United Nations nor the Organisation of the Islamic Conference.
UN special envoy to Afghanistan Francesc Vendrell told AFP he discussed the edict with Mutawakel in Kabul Thursday but was told "the Islamic Emirate (Taliban) is not in the habit of rescinding their edicts."
"I told him that the international community is baffled at the moment and it would create international outrage if the edict is carried out," Vendrell said.
Afghans, baffled at first by the decree and now its implementation, quietly and sadly condemned the destruction.
"Destroyed cities can be rehabilitated. But once the statues are gone, they can never be replaced," said a resident of Kabul.
"It is not helping the war-wounded country."
Taliban officials also privately said they were not happy with Omar's decree, which is seen as absolute law in more than 90 percent of the country under the militia's rule.
"It is causing big damage to our history," said a senior official, refusing to be named for fear of retribution from the hardline militia.
"The war had taken everything else. We had only these (monuments) which are now fading."
Another Taliban official added: "Personally I am against a brick of Afghanistan being destroyed. It is very sad."  [2]


Saturday, January 28, 2012

Some in Egypt Turn Their Anger on Islamists, and the Syrian Embassy Is Attacked






Some in Egypt Turn Their Anger on Islamists, 

and the Syrian Embassy Is Attacked



CAIRO — The resentments of many young political activists toward the Muslim Brotherhood spilled into a public spat on Friday as some demonstrators who came out to mark the first anniversary of the country’s revolution turned on the group.



The protesters, who accuse the popular Islamists of being too accommodating of the military leaders who replaced the ousted president, Hosni Mubarak, surrounded a stage set up by the Brotherhood, jeering and in some cases hurling plastic bottles.

Although the exchange lasted only about a half-hour and was hardly representative of national opinion, some Brotherhood members appeared shocked by the vehemence of the verbal assaults. At one point, protesters who have grumbled privately for weeks that the Brotherhood had made its peace with the military rulers chanted, “You sold out the revolution.”

Adding to the tumult, opponents of another autocratic leader, President Bashar al-Assad of Syria, stormed into that country’s embassy a few blocks from the demonstration and caused some damage. Many Egyptian pro-democracy advocates and Syrians in Cairo believe that Mr. Assad should be overthrown as part of the Arab Spring revolts.

It was the second time in five months that Egyptian security forces failed to prevent an attack on an embassy; the previous attack was at the Israeli Embassy.

The hostility toward the Brotherhood appeared to reflect the Islamist group’s transition from outlawed opposition to part of the political establishment, as well as the frustration of pro-democracy advocates who accuse the military of thwarting revolutionary change.

The dispute broke out around sunset Friday as thousands of people in several anniversary marches converged on the capital’s Tahrir Square, where the Muslim Brotherhood had erected a giant stage.

The marchers were determined to use the anniversary to call for the military council leading the country to exit power immediately. But the members of the Brotherhood, which dominates the newly elected Parliament, came to the square in an attempt to keep the anniversary demonstration upbeat. The Brotherhood has endorsed the generals’ timetable for a handover of power by the end of June.

When the marchers reached the square, some vented at the Brotherhood, both for its approval of the military’s timetable and for the acoustic domination of its stage.

A crowd surrounded the stage, shouting insults and waving their shoes in the air, a grave affront in the Arab world.

The speakers on the stage, including several sheiks from the prestigious Al Azhar College of Islamic Studies, looked stunned. “Please, don’t do this,” one speaker pleaded. “We are all one hand!”

The Brotherhood speakers attempted to join with the crowd by leading chants of “the people want the fall of the regime” and “down with military rule.”

But the protesters appeared unconvinced. The speakers retreated under a hail of insults and an occasional plastic soda bottle.

“Young people made the revolution, but then the army brought us Tantawi,” said Abdelrahman Ahmed, 37, a telecom engineer, referring to Field Marshal Mohamed Hussein Tantawi, the top officer of the military council. “And now the Brotherhood mocks us.”

As the sun set, both Brotherhood members and some in the crowd knelt for evening prayers. But soon the crowd jumped to its feet and began chanting, “Get off! Get off!” to Brotherhood officials on the stage.

Another sound system inside a tent city in the square boomed: “No Brotherhood, no officers! Down, down with military rule!”

The Brotherhood members appeared to make a decision at that point to try to ride out the protest, sitting on the stage with their microphones and lights turned off. Eventually, the protesters melted away, replaced by Brotherhood supporters.

A man on the stage then led a new chant: “We want to go back to how it was, one hand in the square!”

The attack on the embassy also started around sunset when about 15 people broke through the front doors, pushing past armed Egyptian guards who did nothing, according to Syrian diplomats. The embassy was empty at the time.

The group tore through the building for about 15 minutes, smashing pictures of Mr. Assad, who has orchestrated a bloody crackdown on protests against his rule. The attackers damaged office equipment and tore open files in the ambassador’s office. Then, after about 15 minutes, they left without any resistance.

Youssef Ahmed, the Syrian ambassador, said he saw no connection between the attack and the invasion of Israel’s embassy after a demonstration last September.

“The Israeli Embassy was attacked by the revolutionaries of Egypt because Israel is the first enemy of the Arab nation,” he said. He placed blame for the attack on his own embassy on “barbarians moved by money” that he asserted had been provided by unnamed Persian Gulf countries bent on Mr. Assad’s ouster.

But like the Israelis, he criticized the Egyptian authorities for failing to fulfill their treaty obligations to safeguard the embassies of other nations. “We warned them so many times to protect our embassy,” he said.

One Syrian diplomat said that Egyptians had told Syrian authorities that their embassy needed no additional guards because it was in a secure zone near the American and Canadian Embassies.

Security cameras recorded the event Friday, but the identity of the attackers, whether they were Syrians or Egyptians or both, was unclear.

Dina Salah Amer contributed reporting. source:


Post-Mubarak Egypt is facing profound challenges with its unfinished revolution and looming economic crisis. The last thing it needs is to pick a fight with the United States. Yet the military rulers have done just that, demonstrating contempt for civil society and an old ally.

On Dec. 29, security forces raided as many as seven nongovernmental groups in Cairo, including three American-financed democracy-building groups — the International Republican Institute, the National Democratic Institute and Freedom House. Employees were hauled in for questioning in a bogus criminal investigation.

On Thursday, the Egyptian government confirmed that it had barred at least six Americans — including I.R.I.’s Egypt director, Sam LaHood, the son of Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood — from leaving the country.

The generals make the specious charge that recent unrest was caused by “foreign hands.” Outside forces didn’t drive Egyptians to courageously rise up against Hosni Mubarak. And outside forces aren’t driving them to keep pressing the military to keep its promises and move fully to civilian rule. If Egyptians want outside help to make that transition, they should be allowed to accept it.

I.R.I.’s president, Lorne Craner, said that in his organization’s 30-year history, it has never been treated like this by any country, including Russia, China and Venezuela.

Egypt’s military receives $1.3 billion in annual aid from Washington. It is beyond us why the generals would keep pressing this destructive dispute, even after hearing remonstrations from President Obama, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton and Defense Secretary Leon Panetta. They must let Mr. LaHood and the others go immediately.

Thursday, January 26, 2012

As The Brotherhood Takes Office



As The Brotherhood Takes Office Can we Keep Faith with the People?

by Shoshana Bryen
An Egyptian man chants pro-democracy slogans during a rally outside the Egyptian Embassy in London to mark the one-year anniversary of the beginning of protests in Egypt, Wednesday, Jan. 25, 2012. (Photo:AP)
In London, hundreds of Egyptians stood in front of the Egyptian embassy, with some speeches calling for solidarity with the Egyptian people and other revolutions of the Arab Spring, condemning Western meddling in some Arab nations.


The Egyptian Parliament re-opened this week with the Muslim Brotherhood in charge and the Salafists in second place. Googling liberals were far behind. It is not surprising as the vast majority of Egyptians are rural, poor, and religious, but since majority rule should never be confused with democracy, the Obama administration is in a tight spot.

The U.S. wants western-style capitalism and free markets in a country that looks and acts like ours. The State Department appears to believe it is America's job to tell the Brotherhood what it wants and what it expects.

Spokesperson Victoria Nuland said Deputy Secretary of State William Burns' meeting with the Brotherhood's Mohammed Morsi was, "an opportunity to reinforce U.S. expectations that Egypt's new government will support human rights, women's rights and religious tolerance and support Egypt's peace treaty with Israel." CNN reported that Burns' message was, "We want to work with your government. We want a meaningful partnership that fully accepts your government and we want to work with you on your primary goal, which is economic development as long as we feel you are building a democracy that respects human rights and freedom and supports regional peace."

Mr. Burns may believe that economic development should be the Brotherhood's "primary goal," and national survival may bring it to the top of the list right now, but the Muslim Brotherhood stands for the establishment of an Islamic society based on its understanding of God's requirements for man. Mr. Burns is likely to be disappointed when those requirements don't include universalized "human rights and freedom" or "regional peace" for Israel.

In Egypt, Tunisia, Libya, Syria, and Iran, not to mention Hezbollah and Hamas, the best organized groups are in political ascendance—and they are also the ones who deeply reject American political, moral, and social standards. They believe in an international Islamist revival, and it underestimates them to assume they are closet capitalists and free-thinkers.

We cannot demand and should not expect, but the United States has had experience dealing rationally with countries whose systems of government do not include democratic norms and principles, placing ourselves on the side of the people and ensuring that both the rulers and the dissidents know where we stand.

We've done the Cold War.

After decades of ignoring Soviet depredations against their own people, and an uncomfortable experience as wartime allies, the occupation of Central Europe made it impossible to accept the Soviet system as compatible with our own. Certainly we recognized the Soviet Union, talked to it, negotiated with it, traded in some measure with it, and generally tried to avoid war with it. But we also generally did our best to defend against it, restrict it, deny it victories, and keep faith with its people.

Our diplomats knew the names of dissidents and prisoners, and they asked about them in Moscow—and Secretary of State George Shultz's 1987 Moscow Seder was an extraordinary moment for the West. We had trade restrictions, the Helsinki process, COCOM, and Radio Liberty/Radio Free Europe to tell prisoners of communism the news of the West and the news of their own countries. When the Soviet Union collapsed, the dissidents said, "We knew you were there; we knew you were on our side."

That is a huge point. During the Cold War, we were good at the distinction between the people and their government. We didn't expect the Soviet government to be like us, but only to know that we were watching and their choices would cost them.

Our Western heritage—not so much electoral politics, but free speech, rule of law, free market economics, independent judiciaries, property rights, and tolerance—is, in fact, responsive to the economic and social conditions confronted by people across the Middle East and North Africa. But while the U.S. demands that Egypt and others be "democratic" and tolerant, we pay only lip service to the universal benefits of Western Civilization, primarily by supporting the winners of referendums masquerading as elections.

Victorious Islamist governments are unlikely to listen to the message of the West, but many people in the region want us and need us. If we don't see the active assertion of our values as part of our policy, future generations in the Arab world will fall farther and farther behind economically and socially.

The West is in a difficult twilight period with the Middle Eastern Arab world plus Iran, Afghanistan, and Pakistan; not so much a "long war" as a "cold war." There are no military answers or easy "soft" answers, but scholar and author Robert Kaplan drew up a concise set of priorities for our government to manage as we go forward:

1.     Regime type matters. Authoritarian regimes, including Russia and China, face uprisings and should not be considered stable partners. To the extent that they permit joint economic activity within the rule of law, we can work with them for the benefit of their people.

2.     Military matters. American influence in the world is proportional to our ability to protect our interests. As we plan to draw down in the Middle East and "pivot" toward Asia, we have to ensure that we have sufficient resources for defense.

3.     Europe matters. Despite their current economic problems and ours, they are the "go to" ally. China doesn't appear to want the responsibilities that go with economic clout, nor does India. Brazil and Turkey have not been helpful, and their longevity as rising economic powers is unclear, and finally,

4.   America matters. No one else is us. Unless we abdicate our leadership, we can exercise it. And we should. source:

El-Katatni: From prisoner to Egypt's Speaker of Parliament


El-Katatni: From prisoner to speaker of parliament

Nearly a year ago, the Muslim Brotherhood was politically restricted by the former regime; El-Katatni one of the group’s leaders is parliamentary speaker

Egypt's parliamentary election


With Islamists from the Brotherhood's Freedom and Justice Party and the fundamentalist Salafist Nour Party winning 70 per cent of the seats in the first democratic election in six decades, victory for Speaker Saad el-Katatni was never in doubt. With it comes formalisation of the challenging new reality in the Arab world's biggest and most influential nation, namely that Islamists from an organisation long forced to operate in the shadows and which exerts profound influence (if not control) over the likes of Hamas, now have democratic legitimacy and are on the cusp of achieving political power that never seemed likely to be their destiny.
The new parliament will nominate a committee to draw up a new constitution. For the time being, the ruling military council retains the whip hand. It will do so until presidential elections in June. But with Islamists -- including Salafists demanding an extremist sharia law regime involving gender segregation, regulation of women's dress and a ban on alcohol sales as in Saudi Arabia -- so overwhelmingly in control of the parliament, it is unlikely the generals will be able to hold out against the political forces now so strongly in the ascendant in a country formerly a pillar of moderation in the Middle East.
The parliamentary assertion of muscle by the Islamists, backed by a massive popular vote, is undoubtedly a watershed moment not only for Egypt but also for the Arab Spring. It raises a range of questions. Not least is what impact the Islamist triumph symbolised by Mr Katatni's election will have on the peace treaty with Israel, which has for so long been the linchpin of Middle East peace but is an agreement bitterly opposed by the Muslim Brotherhood's creation, Hamas. Its an issue on which the Islamists need to think long and hard. The last thing Egypt's new democracy needs is another war with Israel, a conflict they would be bound to lose. That moderation has served Egypt well in the past is unquestionable. The Islamists, while understandably savouring their election victory and asserting their authority in the new democratic parliament, would be foolish to ignore that reality. source:

El-Katatni of the Muslim Brotherhood greets other members of parliament in Cairo (Photo: Reuters
On 27 January 2011, Mohamed Saad El-Katatni and tens of other Muslim Brotherhood leaders were arrested as the government of Hosni Mubarak sought to repress the growing popular uprising.

Nearly a year later, it is fair to say that the Brotherhood has turned the tables on the toppled regime, with El-Katatni overwhelmingly elected as the new parliamentary speaker, while former president Mubarak faces charges in court.

Last January’s mass arrest of Brotherhood figures was not instigated through clear legal avenues or formal charges issued by the prosecutor general.

Rather, it was widely seen as an impulsive attempt by the Mubarak administration to pile pressure on the Brotherhood, to dissuade them from being in the streets during the January 25 revolution.

Such a move, needless to say, did not pay off, as with other oppressive measures applied by Mubarak’s government, eventually overthrown on 11 February last year.
Brotherhood and Mubarak’s regime switch roles
As the 18-day revolt intensified and prison gates were mysteriously opened, El-Katatni along with hundreds of inmates were freed, days before Mubarak and his oligarchy were brought down.

The aftermath of the revolution saw the Brotherhood realise their long-held dream by establishing a political party, the Freedom and Justice Party (FJP), which gives the group the solid political representation Islamists did not have under Mubarak.

Before the revolution, Brotherhood members and other Islamists used to run for parliamentary elections as independent candidates and not through political parties. They were unable to form political parties due to restrictive conditions imposed by the former regime, in addition to the prohibition of parties with religious frames of reference.  
Several leading Brotherhood figures served prison sentences in Mubarak’s Egypt.

Since February, it is Mubarak and many of his oligarchs who have been in court. The 83-year-old former president faces charges of corruption and suspected involvement in the killing of peaceful protesters during the uprising.

Some of former associates of Mubarak are already in jail, such as former interior minister Habib El-Adly who was found guilty of corruption and is currently serving a 17-year prison sentence.

Although several observers have noted limitations to the Mubarak trial in terms of leniency shown towards the defendants, the fact remains that many Egyptians would never have imagined such a trial taking place.

Those who imprisoned the Brotherhood and other opposition figures are now in court or prison, while the Brotherhood dominates the new People’s Assembly.

After the establishment of the FJP, El-Katatni, who a year ago was incarcerated in Wadi El-Natroun prison, was appointed as the party’s secretary general.
The FJP recently emerged as the biggest winner of the parliamentary elections and now comprises 47 per cent of the People’s Assembly.

El-Katatni officially announced his nomination for the position of the People’s Assembly speaker in the opening session on Monday, and was elected after amassing 399 votes out of 508 in a ballot held shortly afterwards.
  
He opened the People’s Assembly session the following day.

Mini Factbox
El-Katatni was born in the Upper Egyptian governorate Sohag on 4 March 1952.  He is a microbiologist and worked as a professor at the Science Faculty of Minya University from 1994 to 1998. He also conducted Islamic studies

The 59-year-old first joined the Brotherhood in 1981 and was elected to the Guidance Bureau in 2008

El-Katatni represented the Brotherhood in parliament  from 2005 until 2010.

From 1990-2006 El-Katatni served as secretary general of the Minya University’s Teaching Committee.

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