Saturday, 29 January 2011

Who's doing Mubarak's bidding in Washington?

#25jan #egypt

                    
Mona Street
So HClinton supports the universal human rights of the Egyptians? What about the Afghani and Iraqi's human rights?

#jan25 #egypt



Heather Brooke
RT @: Joe Biden labeled Assange a "high-tech terrorist" but is reluctant to call Mubarak a "dictator". America at its best.
Curfew just announced for Cairo, Alexandria and Suez to start in half an hour (6PM) until 7AM

Egypt - Evidence of torture and repression by Mubarak´s Police

Many well-known activists including Mohamed ElBaradei, the Nobel peace laureate, have been arrested in their homes, civilians have been wounded and even killed in clashes with Egyptian police and security forces.   As an Internet blackout imposed by the state covers the country, every citizen and grassroots organization will now be exposed to arbitrary police forces. As secret documents from US prove, during the demonstrations today, authorities might use physical threats, legal threats and extraordinary laws such the Emergency Law as an excuse to persecute and prosecute activists during the pacific demonstrations taking place in Cairo and other cities.
As described by Cable 10CAIRO64 sent from the Embassy of Cairo on 12January, 2010, “Egypt’s State of Emergency, in effect almost continuously since 1967, allows for the application of the 1958 Emergency Law, which grants the GOE broad powers to arrest individuals without charge and to detain them indefinitely”. The cable also describes how “The GOE has also used the Emergency Law in some recent cases to target bloggers and labor demonstrators”.
Excessive use of force by police during the protests led to arbitrary executions and detentions in a vast array of abuses, a situation that is known and acknowledged in the past by U.S. diplomats based in Egypt. It is important to bear in mind the long record of police abuse and torture by Egyptian police forces.
In the aftermath of protest started on Monday January 25th, many citizens, including activists and Journalists were attacked. People were detained, brutally wounded and even killed as a result of excessive use of force by Police, a situation that is known and acknowledged in the past by U.S. diplomats based in Egypt.
In a Cable sent from Cairo Embassy on 2009, Cable 09CAIRO79 the reality of the police force is described: “Torture and police brutality in Egypt are endemic and widespread.  The police use brutal methods mostly against common criminals to extract confessions, but also against demonstrators.” It was 2009 when the Government of the United States of America acknowledged the lack of concrete actions of the Egyptian government to improve the situation of police in Egypt. This same document points out how bloggers described the severe torture with electric shocks inflicted on a blogger, and how security forces stopped the torture when he began cooperating.
The suppression of dissent and collective action for change goes beyond direct use of force; it includes using legal threats to prosecute even the most harmless forms of dissent, including poetry: “A recent series of selective GOE actions against journalists, bloggers and even an amateur poet illustrates the variety of methods available to the GOE to suppress critical opinion, including an array of investigative authorities and public and private legal actions.”
As recently as February 2010, as indicated in 10CAIRO213, an activist implored the United States diplomats to get closer to the Egyptian government in order to combat torture and reduce the growing brutality of the police. The answer from Vice President Biden is that the political leader, the highest authority in the country, is not a dictator. The answer from the U.S. is silence, and dismissal of the Egyptian people´s desire to create a better future.
María Luisa Rivera @'WikiLeaks'
Evgeny Morozov
The Internet-savvy Obama administration is prepared to use all social media outlets available to stay silent on Egypt

Thousands protest in Jordan

Thousands of people in Jordan have taken to the streets in protests, demanding the country's prime minister step down, and the government curb rising prices, inflation and unemployment.
In the third consecutive Friday of protests, about 3,500 opposition activists from Jordan's main Islamist opposition group, trade unions and leftist organisations gathered in the capital, waving colourful banners reading: "Send the corrupt guys to court".
The crowd denounced Samir Rifai's, the prime minister, and his unpopular policies.
Many shouted: "Rifai go away, prices are on fire and so are the Jordanians.''
Another 2,500 people also took to the streets in six other cities across the country after the noon prayers. Those protests also called for Rifai's ouster.
Members of the Islamic Action Front, the political wing of the Muslim Brotherhood and Jordan's largest opposition party, swelled the ranks of the demonstrators, massing outside the al-Husseini mosque in Amman and filling the downtown streets with their prayer lines.
King Abdullah has promised some reforms, particularly on a controversial election law. But many believe it is unlikely he will bow to demands for the election of the prime minister and Cabinet officials, traditionally appointed by the king.
Rifai also announced a $550 million package of new subsidies in the last two weeks for fuel and staple products like rice, sugar, livestock and liquefied gas used for heating and cooking. It also includes a raise for civil servants and security personnel. 
Record deficitHowever, Jordan's economy continues to struggle, weighed down by a record deficit of $2bn this year.
Inflation has also risen by 1.5 per cent to 6.1 per cent just last month, unemployment and poverty are rampant - estimated at 12 and 25 per cent respectively.
Ibrahim Alloush, a university professor, told the Associated Press that it was not a question of changing faces or replacing one prime minister with another.
"We're demanding changes on how the country is now run," he said.
He also accused the government of impoverishing the working class with regressive tax codes which forced the poor to pay a higher proportion of their income as tax.
He also accused parliament as serving as a "rubber stamp'' to the executive branch.
"This is what has led people to protest in the streets because they don't have venues for venting how they feel through legal means," Alloush said.
@'Al Jazeera'

Burn Baby Burn

The Fall of the American Wall: Tunisia, Egypt, and Beyond

Flight Club

Illustration: exiledsurfer
madison
All this praying shit on cnn! Two hands typing do more than 1 million praying! Fact not cliché!
exiledsurfer
history in realtime in your tweetdeck. amazing. . This is the beginning of the arab spring and the death of US ME policies.

#25jan #egypt

Clashes in Cairo Extend Arab World’s Days of Unrest

More photographs #jan25 #egypt

exiledsurfer

A riot policeman fires tear gas at protestors in front of the l-Istiqama Mosque in Giza on January 28, 2011 in Cairo, Egypt Photograph: Peter Macdiarmid/Getty Images

Cairo NOW #jan25 #egypt

(BIG thanx to 'exiledsurfer' - click for more photos)

Friday, 28 January 2011

The Internet in Egypt – and the P2P alternatives

Mona Street
"You cannot repress ALL of the people ALL of the time"

Tahrir Square #2

Statement - Vodafone Egypt

All mobile operators in Egypt have been instructed to suspend services in selected areas. Under Egyptian legislation the authorities have the right to issue such an order and we are obliged to comply with it. The Egyptian authorities will be clarifying the situation in due course.
HERE 
Lucky I am NOT with them as if I was I wouldn't be now!!!

Now it's starting in Jordan

Thousands of Jordanian opposition supporters have taken the streets in the country's capital demanding the prime minister step down and venting their anger at rising prices, inflation and unemployment. About 3,500 opposition activists from the main Islamist opposition group, trade unions and leftist organizations have gathered in Amman. The crowd is denouncing Prime Minister Samir Rifai's unpopular policies. Many are shouting: "Rifai go away, prices are on fire and so are the Jordanians." Another 2,000 protesters in cities of Irbid and Karak have made similar calls. Friday's rallies mark the third consecutive day of protests in Jordan inspired by Tunisia and Egypt's unrest that has demanding the governments' downfall. King Abdullah II has promised some reforms.
@'Winnipeg Free Press'
Osama Ghazali Harb has also been arrested
LIVE STREAM
Sultan Al Qassemi
Al Jazeera reports that its veteran journalist Ahmad Mansour has been "attacked" by plain clothed police officers in Cairo

#jan25 #egypt محمد البرادعي

Reports that Mohamed ElBaradei has been arrested.

Sultan Al Qassemi
BBC Arabic reporter Asadullah Al Sawi was injured by an undercover policeman in civilian clothing in Cairo.

Tahrir Square

Reports now of police firing on crowd in Cairo with rubber bullets...

A timely cable release

"Torture and police brutality in Egypt are endemic and widespread. The police use brutal methods mostly against common criminals to extract confessions, but also against demonstrators, certain political prisoners and unfortunate bystanders. One human rights lawyer told us there is evidence of torture in Egypt dating back to the times of the Pharaohs..."
WikiLeaks Cable  
09CAIRO79

UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon says:

"In that regard ... shutting down all this Internet service ... I believe that one of the ground principles of democracy should be to protect the freedom of speech of the people
...All concerned people or leaders should ensure that the situation in that region, and particularly now in Egypt, does not and should not lead to further violence."
Al-Jazeera reports that teargas has been fired at protesters in Alexandria.

#jan25 #egypt

Al Jazeera English - Live Streams

Protests in Egypt - live updates

John Perry Barlow
Reminder: There were a number of successful revolutions before we had the Internet. It can be done without it.
Everything ██is█████ ████ ████fine ███ █ ████ love. ████ █████ the ███ Egypt ███ ████ government ██
benwedeman
Just saw blue fiat entering main tv building in Maspiro when guards opened trunk, full of baseball bats. Car allowed in

Victims of Spanish 'stolen babies network' call for investigation

Egypt Leaves the Internet

William S. Burroughs on Keef (late 70's)

Via
And all of THIS is up for sale!!!