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Egypt

Egypt opens Rafah border

Egypt opens Gaza border following IDF raid on aid flotilla

Egypt opens Rafah crossing amid a storm of international criticism of Israel’s blockade of the enclave, to let Palestinians cross until further notice.

By Reuters

Egypt opened its border with the Gaza Strip on Tuesday, letting Palestinians cross until further notice amid a storm of international criticism of Israel’s blockade of the enclave, officials in Egypt and Gaza said.

The move, urged by the Palestinian Islamist movement Hamas against whom the embargo has been directed, prompted dozens of people to race to the crossing point in the southern Gaza Strip town of Rafah, though the gates appeared still to be closed.

It is the only point on Gaza’s borders that is not fully controlled by Israel. Cairo, coordinating with Israel, has opened it only sparingly since Hamas Islamists, who are allied to Egypt’s opposition, seized control of Gaza three years ago.

A permanent opening of the crossing, which lies above a stretch of desert frontier riddled by hundreds of smuggling tunnels, would be a major boost for Hamas and a blow to efforts by Israel and its Western allies to cripple the Islamists.

The Interior Ministry run by Hamas since it seized control of the Gaza Strip from Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas in June 2007 said in a statement: “Rafah crossing is open every day from 9 A.M to 7 P.M.” Since Hamas took over, Egypt has opened the crossing only sporadically and with restrictions.

Egyptian security source told Reuters: “Egypt opened its border with the Gaza Strip on Tuesday to allow humanitarian and medical aid to enter the Strip.

“The border will remain open for an unlimited time,” the source said, letting Palestinians enter and leave Egypt.

Aid convoys, to which Egypt has in the past allowed only limited access, would be allowed to use the crossing, subject to following Cairo’s limitation that only food and medical supplies be transported.

“Hard materials” – apparently including concrete and steel which Gazans want to repair damage from last year’s Israeli offensive – would have to go via Israel, the Egyptian source said. Israel has made clear since it halted a Turkish-backed aid convoy at sea on Monday that it will not ease its embargo.

Egyptian Statement in Solidarity with the Flotilla

Dear all,

I am writing to you on the behalf of the “We are all resistance” movement (Kollona Muqawama). We salute all of you and each and everyone involved in organizing the Gaza flotilla. We also issued a statement in this occasion that a 234 Egyptian political leaders, members of parliament, labour activists, and student activists signed in support of the mission, all belonging to various types of political movements in Egypt (mostly on the left, Arab nationalists, and Islamic left). We would be very happy if you can forward this statement to our brothers and sisters on borad the ships. The least we could do is show solidarity at this moment. We are also holding a protest in front of the Egyptian parliament on June 1st to protest the extension of the emergency law. This protest has been scheduled for over two weeks now. We contacted the protest organizers and they welcomed lifting banners in solidarity with your mission in the protest, as most of the organizers have already signed this statement.

Key signatories include, Sun’ala Ibrahim, Egypt’s best novelist, and also one who rejected Egypt highest prize in literature before; Hamdeen Sabahi, an MP and popular nominee for Egyptian presidency; Ibrahim Yousri, ex-ambassador and key figure in the national movement; Magdy Hussien, leader of the labour party and currently serving two years in prison for having crossed to Gaza during the war in definace of the embargo; Abdelhalim Kandil, the general coordinator of the kefaya movement; Yahya al-Qaza, Mohamed Sharaf, Saeid El-Nashaei, all key figures in Kefya; Ahmad Fouad Nejm, one of Egypt’s top poets; Wajdi Ghoniem, and Maher Amr, key scholars of religion; known writers Ahmad El-Khamisi, Safinaz Kazim; and key syndicalists, Mohamed Abdel Qudus, and Yehia Qalash–among many other prominent signatories.

with all respect and best wishes,

Mohamed Waked,

Kollona Muqawama (we are all resistance) movement.

Egypt ‘aids in breaking Gaza siege’

AlJazeeraEnglish — 29 mai 2010 — Egypt has often been accused of being a silent partner with Israel in its siege of Gaza by refusing to let goods and people through the Rafah border crossing, between Egypt and Gaza, since the Strip was taken over by Hamas.

However, it is an accusation the country rejects.

Al Jazeera has been given rare access to the Ouja commercial crossing between Egypt and Israel, which Egyptian officials say is a fast track for humanitarian aid into Gaza.

Al Jazeera’s Amr El-Kahky reports from the crossing. (29 May 2010)

Hamas slams Egypt for tunnel deaths

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The Hamas movement has criticised Egyptian security forces after four Palestinians were killed when a smuggling tunnel from the country’s Sinai desert region into the Gaza Strip was destroyed.

Al Jazeera’s Ayman Mohyeldin said Egyptian authorities had warned the Palestinians that the tunnel would be destroyed, before using gas canisters and dynamite to blow it up on Wednesday.

“Every few weeks, every few months, there are these incidents where the Egyptian authorities drop gas canisters followed by dynamite or explosives into the tunnels in trying to collapse them,” he said.

“The Egyptians often warn the Palestinians [before the attacks]. Whether or not that warning is heeded though is really dependent on who is there at the specific time.

He said that the tunnels are poorly constructed.

“Many of them collapse. In fact, more than 45 Palestinians have died in cave-ins. More than 40 has died as a result of direct attacks by the Egyptians in these attempts to stop [smuggling].
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ElBaradei can inspire change in Egypt

The 6 April clashes in Cairo show Mubarak’s vulnerability, and ElBaradei’s celebrity clout can help those below take advantage

Thursday 8 April 2010 15.00 BST

He looked to be in his early 20s. With his shirt ripped open and blood trickling down one side of his face, it took all the energy he could muster to momentarily writhe free of the six thugs dragging him off to a police truck and issue a final, desperate appeal to the stunned tourists watching from the other side of the street.

“This is the real Egypt!” he yelled as the plainclothed security forces hauled him back down to the ground. “Go back and tell your countries what democracy in Egypt really looks like!”

I don’t yet know his name, though it can be found somewhere on the list of 92 detainees locked up by the Egyptian state on Tuesday for having the temerity to stand outside parliament and peacefully call for free and fair elections and an end to arbitrary emergency rule.

As popular landmarks in central Cairo became locked down under police occupation on Tuesday, I witnessed one unarmed demonstrator after another being viciously assaulted by riot police and undercover government muscle; women were thrown to the ground (one had her arm broken), youths were hit on the head with truncheons, and journalists – myself amongst them – were grabbed, punched and in the case of some female colleagues, groped, all in an effort to relieve them of their cameras and notebooks.

Fighting with sticks, fists and bullets has become the stock response of a government that affirms its growing lack of legitimacy with each cracked skull and handcuffed wrist. The question for activists now is how to capitalise on that weakness, as momentum builds towards the forthcoming sham elections.

It’s a question that inevitably draws in the former head of the UN nuclear watchdog, Mohamed ElBaradei, who has emerged as an unlikely focal point for disparate anti-Hosni Mubarak mobilisations since his return to Egypt earlier this year, and who declared Tuesday’s events to be “an insult to every Egyptian”.

ElBaradei has garnered an unusually large amount of international (and domestic) media attention in recent weeks due to his diplomatic credibility on the world stage. It’s a journalistic obsession which some Egyptian campaigners feel understandably miffed at considering the long and brave heritage of pro-democracy crusaders in the country who have struggled for years to win any meaningful coverage of their struggle, and even ElBaradei’s supporters recognise the dangers of focusing on the “one-man saviour” narrative too intensely.

“What’s happening in Egypt is much more than the ElBaradei story,” bestselling author Alaa al-Aswany told me earlier this week. “He symbolises everything we’re fighting for, but he came in the night – the struggle has been going on all day.”

Prominent blogger and activist Hossam El-Hamalawy went further when he said: “For me the issue is not about ElBaradei or the presidency … whoever comes and heads the state under its current structure is going to behave more or less like Mubarak. I’m not interested in cosmetic changes; I want to see change from below.”

What’s interesting, though, is that to a large extent ElBaradei agrees. In the Guardian’s exclusive interview with the Nobel Peace Prize winner last week, he told me that “change will have to come from within the country … there is no one coming in on a white horse that is going to [do that] for you.” In all his public statements, the 67-year-old has bent over backwards to insist that his aim is not necessarily to run for office, but rather to use his influence to create enough political space in this most moribund of political landscapes to enable change from below to flourish. And history is on his side.

Egypt’s anti-government protests under the three-decade reign of Mubarak have waxed and waned in cycles, as Rabab El-Mahdi has demonstrated, and each cycle has helped build the conditions necessary for the next one to follow. Over the past decade, for example, demonstrations supporting the second Palestinian intifada in 2000 gave activists a presence on the street for the first time in many years, which emboldened campaigners to ramp up their activities three years later in response to the US-led invasion of Iraq, culminating in a 40,000-strong civilian occupation of Cairo’s central Tahrir Square and the widespread adoption of the motto “el-shari’ lin” (the street is ours).

The police response in 2003 led many political groups to start directly addressing the injustice of Mubarak’s presidency rather than simply taking issue with specific policies pursued by his cabinet, and future protests now made this a central pillar of the campaign.

Since then we’ve seen the Kifaya (enough) movement coalesce around the constitutional amendments of 2005, followed by a critical challenge by the judiciary to government vote-rigging and the more recent mushrooming of workers strikes and sit-ins aimed at resisting the state-led assault on their pay and conditions (as well as exposing the shallowness of government boasts regarding economic growth and neoliberal-orientated stability).

At each stage no single segment of society or one leading political actor has been the sole or even primary catalyst for broad-based regime dissent. Instead, it has been the interplay of specific circumstances, domestic structural crises and a series of overlapping, mutually reinforcing grassroots initiatives that has heralded outbreaks of activism – often with rogue sections of the fragmented elite playing a part as well.

If ElBaradei can use his intellectual and celebrity clout to help prise open a crack in the political system, there’s no reason why a myriad of different, bottom-up groupings – including the 6 April youth movement that organised Tuesday’s protest – can’t take advantage of that.

Tens of millions of Egyptians have been left disenfranchised and alienated from an entrenched leadership focused relentlessly on self-enrichment and self-preservation. The majority are reluctant to publicly express their opposition but as El-Mahdi points out, when private hatred of the elite runs so deep even minor shocks can blow the most seemingly unshakeable of cabals wide open and generate a fast-spreading bandwagon of opposition.

Oppressive autocracies the world over have a dizzying array of tactics in their arsenal to cling on to power – from media manipulation to strategic support from superpowers – and it is only when they are feeling at their most vulnerable that the basest of these tactics, naked violence, is resorted to. Tuesday’s clashes indicate that in Egypt those vulnerabilities are bubbling to the surface; both ElBaradei and the grassroots campaigners below him are in a position to take advantage.

source

‘I Did Not Know Peacocks Could Fly’

Photographed by: other, Book Cover

Fri, 26/02/2010 – 14:35
Ali Abdel Mohsen

Imported dogs, useless cats, and flying peacocks are all featured in acclaimed Egyptian author Bahaa Taher’s newest collection of short stories, “I Did Not Know Peacocks Could Fly.” The book marks Taher’s return to the medium after a lengthy yet fruitful absence—in the eleven years since the publication of his last collection of short stories, “I Went to the Waterfall,” the author has received the inaugural Arab Booker Award for his landmark novel, “Sunset Oasis.” While the much-celebrated novel was epic in both scope and effect, “I Did Not Know Peacocks Could Fly” offers something else entirely—six deceptively simple tales full of loss, mystery, and the occasional symbolic animal.

The book begins with an endearing tale of an elderly man’s attempts at communicating with his destructive two-year-old grandson. In the hands of a lesser author, this story could have been a load of sentimental pap, but Taher’s dry sense of humor and keen eye for immediately familiar details elevate the narrative to a level that can withstand the weight with which he imbues his characters. When Taher, as the narrator, describes the thoughts going through his head as he helplessly watches his grandson chew through the pages of yet another volume of classic Russian literature, it is humorous because it is the characters, rather than the situation, that feel true.

Taher’s writing is elegantly concise; conjuring strikingly vivid imagery without sacrificing the flow of events. The settings in which his stories take place are captivating and often surreal—an artificial oasis crawling with cats in a flat and barren desert; a lush corporate garden populated by peacocks; a seemingly abandoned, yet heavily guarded mansion looming mysteriously over a run-down neighborhood—however, Taher does not depend on atmosphere alone. The characters, no matter how brief their role may be, appear fully formed and real, with entire lives that extend far beyond the excerpts which the author has chosen to display as evidence of the strangeness of our daily existence.

Despite the fact that the stories comprising “I Did Not Know Peacocks Could Fly” are not necessarily cheerful, the book is still strangely uplifting. As the title might suggest, there is a liberating sense ofnewfound wonder and joy found in the stories, but it is strongly tinted with the pain of having discovered it a little too late in life. Age appears to be a theme, with characters generally sticking to either end of the spectrum, and romantic relationships all seemingly scarred by the passage of time. Yet things are never unnecessarily downbeat. Taher is not an author who relies on melodrama or the suffering of his characters in order to be taken seriously. Instead, Taher writes stories about life–about the growing history of emotions, relationships, dreams and concerns that exists in every one of us.

Perhaps the best thing about “I Did Not Know Peacocks Could Fly” is the ease with which it reads. Taher’s style is instantly accessible, incorporating familiar settings and characters into his intriguing and dreamlike narratives. As a result, the book flows like good conversation between old friends, complete with warmth, humor, and the occasional hint of regret.

“I Did Not Know Peacocks Could Fly” is published by Dar el-Shorouq, and is available at all good bookstores.
source

What does ElBaradei want?

A member of the ElBaradei family sporting this great home-made T-shirt.
After spending most of yesterday at Cairo Airport covering Mohamed ElBaradei’s return to Egypt, it’s worth taking a step back from the infectious enthusiasm of his supporters and listening more carefully to what they say — and what people close to ElBaradei believe he intends to do.

A member of the ElBaradei family sporting this great home-made T-shirt.But before I do that, I think it’s fair to note that yesterday’s welcoming committee was a success. There were over 1,000 people at the airport, the story got covered everywhere, and it has legs. It energized his campaign, even if many were disappointed that ElBaradei did not speak at the airport. I think he probably should have, but the conditions there were not good: supporters and journalists were crushing each other, there was no platform, and too many people to be controlled easily. One important reason for the success of the welcome was its timing. I think it might be no coincidence that ElBaradei decided to return to Egypt on the day that Egypt faced its Universal Periodic Review at the UN Human Rights Council and the day that Barack Obama met with Egyptian democracy activists Gamal Eid and Bahai Eddin Hassan. There was a lot of international attention on the question of democracy and human rights in Egypt that day. The regime’s propaganda may have scared off some (newspapers had reported on-the-spot fines of LE1,000 — $182 — and massive security presence, both of which were untrue) but plenty turned out and a repressive approach was simply not possible.

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Internationally Renowned Translator Johnson-Davies Speaks at AUC


In the first of its lecture series, In Translation, AUCs newly established Center for Translation Studies, hosted leading Arabic-English translator Denys Johnson-Davies who shared his memories and encounters with Arab writers during his extensive literary career, including Naguib Mahfouz, Tawfik Al Hakim, Yusuf Idris, Yahya Hakki, Edwar Al Kharrat, Tayeb Saleh and Salwa Bakr.

Start speech Denys Johnson-Davies at 23:40

Tanta workers continue sit-in protest downtown

Protesters from the Tanta Flax and Oils Company outside the headquarters of the Cabinet of...

Workers from the Tanta Flax and Oils Company continued their sit-in in front of the headquarters of the Cabinet of Ministers in downtown Cairo yesterday. The protesting workers have not received salaries for January and are calling on Prime Minister Ahmed Nazif to solve their dispute with Saudi investor Abdullah al-Kahki, who closed the company and threatened to dismiss the workers.

The 400 protesters said they submitted a memorandum to the prime minister’s office on Tuesday demanding that they be allowed to enter early retirement in return for financial compensation of no less than LE45,000. The workers from Tanta also demanded the payment of their salaries for January and their share of profits since 2005.


The workers said officials from the cabinet promised to respond within two days, but didn’t propose any preliminary solutions

Two members of parliament have been supportive of their demands, the workers said

Abdel Hadi el-Qasabi, member of the Shura Council for the National Democratic Party, offered to allow 170 workers to enter early retirement, but the workers turned down the offer saying they wanted a plan to include all workers, they said

Youssri Bayoumi, a Muslim Brotherhood member of the People’s Assembly, told the workers he was going to ask People’s Assembly Speaker Fathi Sorour to examine their problem immediately.

The protesters called on President Mubarak and his two sons to intervene, chanting slogans like, “Why is the future bleak? Gamal, what are you going to do?” and “Alaa, tell your father the Tanta workers love him.” Protesters also chanted that Prime Minister Nazif is taking Egypt “back to the [King] Farouk era.”

Translated from the Arabic Edition.

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