Tuesday, February 15, 2011

الحكومة المصرية الجديدة لم ترفع التقارير عن نشاطاتها للشعب؟ : امتياز دياب

دخل الحكومة الجديدة كل من جابر عصفور وزيرا للثقافة، وسميحة فوزي للتجارة، وسمير رضوان للمالية، ومحمود وجدي للداخلية, وسامح أحمد يونس للطاقة والكهرباء، وممدوح مرعي للعدل.

في حين احتفظ بمنصبه كل من وزراء الإعلام أنس الفقي، والخارجية أحمد أبو الغيط، والدفاع
المشير محمد حسين طنطاوي، والبترول سامي فهمي، والمجالس النيابية مفيد شهاب.
من المفروض ان وزراء الحكومة الجديدة المصرية يعملون بهمة ونشاط، لكن لم ير الشعب المصري اي تقرير عن نشاطاتهم، اللهم الا في مقابلات هنا وهناك، لكن لم يتوفر للمواطن الشاب الذي خله الرئيس مبارك بيانات عن تقدم اعمالهم، لم نر اي وزير فكر بان يفتح موقعا على الانترنت لكي يطمئن الجماهير.
وهذا ما حصل في العراق، عندما خلعوا صدام حسين ، وتشكلت الحكومة المؤقتة، بطاقم من الوزراء، وؤعد هؤلاء بالتغيير، و كل ما رأيناه في الحكومة المؤقتة وما بعد الحكومة المؤقتة، شجارات على المصالح وعلى التمويل، وسباق على التبذير، وتشكيل منظمات مدنية للاهل والاصدقاء، لكن جميعهم تشدقوا بكلمة الشفافية.
لكن لم نر او نسمع او نقرأ اي تفاصيل عن نشاطاتهم او ميزانياتهم؟

بواب الثورة المصرية: عبد الرحمن سعد



شاي الثورة، كنتاكي الثورة.. من الأوصاف التي أطلقها الثوار على ما يأكلون ويشربون، لكن الجديد هو تعبير "بواب الثورة" الذي أطلقوه على محمد ناصر حارس بناية تطل على ميدان التحرير، إذ تعاطف معهم وساندهم حتى النهاية
محمد قادم من مركز دراو بمحافظة أسوان جنوب البلاد، ويعمل بوابا (حارسا)للبناية رقم 9 بالميدان، وهي تتوسط مقهى وادي النيل عن اليمين، ومطعم كنتاكي عن اليسار، على بُعد أمتار في مواجهة المتحف المصري.
ويُعرّف نفسه بقوله "عندي 47 سنة، ولم يكن لي في السياسة، وأول مرة أشوف هذه الأمور في حياتي، وقد خطفوا شبابا كثيرين أمام عيني، يتراوح عددهم بين عشرين وثلاثين شابا.. لا أعرف مصيرهم".
أضاف "بعض البلطجية وجنود الأمن المركزي كسروا ونهبوا المقهى المجاور، تصدينا لهم أنا وبعض البوابين، واحتفظنا بما نهبوه أمانة لدينا إلى أن تسلمها منا أصحابها".
أخلاق الثوار
ويتابع محمد ناصر "على العكس من ذلك كان الثوار غاية في الاحترام، ورأيت منهم أطباء ومحامين، ومهندسين، وبنات مجاهدات، ما شفتش زيهم، وكانوا في منتهى الأدب.

ويضيف: وعندما حاول بعض المتظاهرين فتح أحد المحلات تصدى لهم شيخ منهم، وقال لهم: لا يجوز.. دي أموال ناس.. وإحنا خرجنا لله.. "هكذا لم تحدث أي خسائر في المحلات التي كانت تحت سيطرة الثوار".

وكان بعض الثوار يختبئون في الأيام الأولى للثورة هنا في مدخل العمارة، يقول بواب الثور
اختباء ضباط الشرطة
وأضاف محمد "تعرضوا لإهانة شديدة من جنود الأمن المركزي.. وعندما انتصرت الثورة اختبأ عندي بعض الضباط والجنود من الشرطة، وكانوا يخافون من الخروج بعد أن حوصروا حتى لا يراهم الثوار، فاستعانوا بي في تبديل ملابسهم ليمكنوا من الفرار".

ووصف حالهم بأنهم "كانوا مرعوبين من الثوار، وتركوا عندي أكثر من حذاء، وبيريه خاص بهم، وبعض ملابسهم.. وفي الوقت نفسه مات على يدي ثلاثة من الشباب يوم اعتداء البلطجية علينا".

عم محمد كان قبل الثورة مؤيدا لحسني مبارك، ولكنه قال "لما شفت الشباب، والمعاملة السيئة التي تعرضوا لها، وما حكوه لي من فساد حسني مبارك، وحاشيته، وقالوا لي: بلادنا بتضيع يا عم محمد.. وما نفعله سيعود لعيالنا، قلت: ده حرام.. الفلوس بتغير النفوس، والخائن لا يبقى في بلادنا ساعة".

أحببتهم
وتابع بواب الثورة حديثه "في حياتي ما شفتش كده.. أحببت هؤلاء الناس.. وكنت أقوم على سُقياهم، وتزويدهم بالماء.. الملايين كانوا موجودين، ما شفتش معاكسة أو سرقة.. ومن كان يجد شيئا لا يخصه كان يسلمه للأمانات الموجودة في المسجد القريب".

وأضاف "هذه ثورة عشرة على عشرة، واللي عملوها مية مية.. لم أر في حياتي مثل هؤلاء الشباب في الشجاعة.. لقد جعلوا الشرطة تجري أمامهم كالفئران.. كانوا على حق".


ملك البحرين حمد بن عيسى آل خليفة يعلن تشكيل لجنة للتحقيق في أسباب وفاة شخصين في الاحتجاجات التي شهدتها البلاد على مدى يومين.

L'hôpital Moubarak dans la bande de Gaza renommé "Tahrir"

L'un des principaux hôpitaux de la bande de Gaza nommé Hosni Moubarak en l'honneur du président égyptien déchu va être rebaptisé "Tahrir" (Liberté), en référence à la place où manifestaient les protestataires au Caire, a indiqué à l'AFP un responsable.

Mubarak loyalists change stripes to fit into the new Egypt :

سبحان مغير الاحوال، هل هذا الخبر سعيد؟ ام انه منافق؟

CAIRO - For now, Osama Saraya is still editor in chief of Al Ahram, the state-run Egyptian newspaper that has long been a deferential mouthpiece for the president and its ruling party.
But his main preoccupation seems to be reinvention.
Portraits of Hosni Mubarak no longer adorn his office walls. (One is stashed under the television, others behind a curtain.) Photographs of Saraya with top government officials have been turned upside down.
It was only last week that Saraya was denouncing the chaos caused by pro-democracy demonstrators. His editorial in Al Ahram on Sunday carried a very different tune.


"A salutation to the revolution and respect to its youth," Saraya wrote. "The corrupt in Egypt were only a few that led to the destruction of the country and their era is gone now.''

With Mubarak out of office and the National Democratic Party in shambles, Saraya is hardly alone among prominent Egyptians in trying to remake his image as quickly as he can.
Among them is Tamer Hosny, a well-groomed Egyptian pop star, who has released a song to honor the Jan. 25 revolution, with a video featuring portraits of the martyrs who were killed during demonstrations. He earlier had spoken on state television and pleaded with protesters to go home and end the crisis in Egypt. When he switched sides and went to Tahrir Square, demonstrators kicked him out.
Others are named on "Lists of the Shameful'' being circulated on the social networking sites Twitter and Facebook, which identify Egyptians said to have opposed the demonstrations or sought to suppress them. Those targeted include symbols of Egypt's movie and music industry and officials of the ministry of information, who tried to demonize protesters as hoodlums and Islamists.
At Al Ahram, reporters and editors met for four hours Sunday to discuss whether Saraya, who was appointed in 2005 because of his membership in the ruling party, should continue in his post, journalists and board members said.
Under his leadership, the paper often read like a compilation of government news releases. Last September, Saraya defended his decision to publish a photograph that had been deliberately doctored to elevate Mubarak to the head of the pack among Middle Eastern leaders walking with President Obama at the White House.
In the early days of the protests, Saraya appeared on Arabic news channels to dismiss the protesters as amounting to no more than a handful of people. In a Jan. 28 column, he warned that the demonstrations were being hijacked by Islamists and people with nefarious foreign agendas.
"He's a very obedient servant," said Ahmed el Naggar, an economics researcher at the Al Ahram Center for Political and Strategic Studies. Last month, Naggar said, Saraya refused to allow him to write about the overthrow of Tunisia's leader because he was worried about the implications for Mubarak's iron-fisted regime.
"When he changed his views in the last few days, it was again a desperate effort to keep his position," said Naggar, who is a member of the Al Ahram board. "I regard him as a catastrophe that has befallen the position of editor in chief."
Another senior journalist said he had asked Saraya last year to begin distancing the paper from the state to maintain credibility. Circulation was dropping and people were turning to independent dailies for real news, said the journalist, who asked not to be named because Saraya is still in his position.
"I understand, but no one can touch this man," Saraya replied, according to the journalist. He said Saraya had pointed to a portrait of Mubarak behind his desk, and said: "I love him.''
"His transformation is a big joke," the journalist said. "He's part of that type. They have very close ties to the security bodies in the government. They are willing to sell their souls to whoever is in power."
Saraya did not show up for a scheduled interview Sunday. His secretary said he was in a meeting in the next room and later said he was not in the office. When asked why the boxes were packed, she said he was moving to a new office.
The only picture still displayed in the room showed him with King Abdullah of Jordan. Inside an open notebook on the table was writing that praised Mubarak as a powerful "eagle" and "the living legend."
Late Sunday, Saraya answered his telephone, but then rushed off the line. "There are big problems between me and my colleagues at Al Ahram,'' he said.

Military-industrial Complex? Developmental State? Police State?: Robert Fisk

Two days after millions of Egyptians won their revolution against the regime of Hosni Mubarak, the country's army – led by Mubarak's lifelong friend, General Mohamed el-Tantawi – further consolidated its power over Egypt yesterday, dissolving parliament and suspending the constitution. As they did so, the prime minister appointed by Mubarak, ex-General Ahmed Shafiq, told Egyptians that his first priorities were "peace and security" to prevent "chaos and disorder" – the very slogan uttered so often by the despised ex-president. Plus ça change?


In their desperation to honour the 'military council's' promise of Cairo-back-to-normal, hundreds of Egyptian troops – many unarmed – appeared in Tahrir Square to urge the remaining protesters to leave the encampment they had occupied for 20 days. At first the crowd greeted them as friends, offering them food and water. Military policemen in red berets, again without weapons, emerged to control traffic. But then a young officer began lashing demonstrators with a cane – old habits die hard in young men wearing uniforms – and for a moment there was a miniature replay of the fury visited upon the state security police here on 28 January.

It reflected a growing concern among those who overthrew Mubarak that the fruits of their victory may be gobbled up by an army largely composed of generals who achieved their power and privilege under Mubarak himself. No-one objects to the dissolution of parliament since Mubarak's assembly elections last year – and all other years -- were so transparently fraudulent. But the 'military council' gave no indication of the date for the free and fair elections which Egyptians believed they had been promised.

The suspension of the constitution – a document which the millions of demonstrators anyway regarded as a laissez-passer for presidential dictatorship – left most Egyptians unmoved. And the army, having received the fulsome thanks of Israel for promising to honour the Egyptian-Israeli peace treaty, announced that it would hold power for only six months; no word, though, on whether they could renew their military rule after that date.

But a clear divergence is emerging between the demands of the young men and women who brought down the Mubarak regime and the concessions – if that is what they are – that the army appears willing to grant them. A small rally at the side of Tahrir Square yesterday held up a series of demands which included the suspension of Mubarak's old emergency law and freedom for political prisoners. The army has promised to drop the emergency legislation "at the right opportunity", but as long as it remains in force, it gives the military as much power to ban all protests and demonstrations as Mubarak possessed; which is one reason why those little battles broke out between the army and the people in the square yesterday.

As for the freeing of political prisoners, the military has remained suspiciously silent. Is this because there are prisoners who know too much about the army's involvement in the previous regime? Or because escaped and newly liberated prisoners are returning to Cairo and Alexandria from desert camps with terrible stories of torture and executions by – so they say – military personnel. An Egyptian army officer known to 'The Independent' insisted yesterday that the desert prisons were run by military intelligence units who worked for the interior ministry – not for the ministry of defence.

As for the top echelons of the state security police who ordered their men – and their faithful 'baltagi' plain-clothes thugs -- to attack peaceful demonstrators during the first week of the revolution, they appear to have taken the usual flight to freedom in the Arab Gulf. According to an officer in the Cairo police criminal investigation department whom I spoke to yesterday, all the officers responsible for the violence which left well over 300 Egyptians dead have fled Egypt with their families for the emirate of Abu Dhabi. The criminals who were paid by the cops to beat the protesters have gone to ground – who knows when their services might next be required? – while the middle-ranking police officers wait for justice to take its course against them. If indeed it does.

All this, of course, depends on the size of the archives left behind by the regime and the degree to which the authorities, currently the army, are prepared to make these papers available to a new and reformed judiciary. As for the city police, who hid in their police stations before they were burned down on 28th January, they turned up at the interior ministry in Cairo yesterday to demand better pay. That the police should now become protesters themselves – they are indeed to receive pay rises – was one of the more imperishable moments of post-revolutionary Egypt.

Now, of course, it is Egypt's turn to watch the effects of its own revolution on its neighbours. Scarcely a family in Egypt was unaware yesterday of the third day of protests against the president in Yemen and the police violence which accompanied them. And it is remarkable that just as Arab protesters mimic their successful counterparts in Egypt, the state security apparatus of each Arab regime faithfully follows the failed tactics of Mubarak's thugs.

Another irony has dawned on Egyptians. Those Arab dictators which claim to represent their people – Algeria comes to mind, and Libya, and Morocco – have signally failed to represent their people by not congratulating Egypt on its successful democratic revolution. To do so, needless to say, would be to saw off the legs of their own thrones.

Richer than Mubarak:Jason Ditz

"Military-industrial complex? Or developmental state?- editor of the Blog"


With reports putting his personal fortune upwards of $70 billion, it isn’t hard to imagine why aging dictator Hosni Mubarak was so resistant to the notion of wholesale changes in Egypt. After all, it was the status quo that allowed him to steal the world’s single largest personal fortune.
But these same factors could be at work inside the Egyptian military, which itself controls far more of the Egyptian economy and directly owns far more assets than even the ousted tyrant. With the military now directly in control, those same reforms could imperil their own collective fortunes.
Egypt’s “military” is far from just a military of some half a million poorly paid conscripts, you see. When they reached a peace deal with Israel in 1979, the military sought to justify its enormous size by setting about producing weapons of war and its own supplies. As time went on, those tax free and regulation free factories and farms quickly moved into the public sector, and the military is now amongst the region’s largest bottled water producer, grows 20 percent of its food, and manufactures large portions of its appliances. They even manufacture automobiles and shampoo.
Which is where things get messy. No one really knows how big Egypt’s military is, its industrial holdings are all “off-budget” and its profits never show up on the bottom line of anything publicly available. It is quite well documented that the off-budget wealth has funded considerable largesse for the military’s leadership, with palatial estates set aside for high ranking officers.
As this new junta looks to crack down against the protesters and especially union organizers it seems increasingly that the force, though swept into power as an “interim” ruler with a mandate for wholesale reform to Egyptian society, sees its own fabulous wealth imperiled by the prospective freedom of the population. To that end, the protesters being chased off the street may have traded in the world’s richest tyrant for the only group whose wealth and avarice surpass his, the Egyptian military leadership.

Navi Pillay (ONU) appelle les autorités de Bahrein à renoncer à la force

نا في بيلي تطلق نداء للسلطات في البحرين بوقف استعمال العنف ضد المظاهرات السلمية

La Haut commissaire des Nations unies aux droits de l'homme, Navi Pillay, a exhorté mardi les autorités de Bahreïn à renoncer à un "usage excessif de la force" contre les manifestants pacifiques après les décès de deux d'entre eux.
"J'exhorte les autorités (de Bahreïn) à cesser immédiatement leur recours disproportionné à la force contre des manifestants pacifiques et à relâcher tous (ceux) qui ont été arrêtés", .

Yémen: l’effet domino?Les soulèvements populaires en Tunisie et en Égypte en préfigurent-ils d'autres dans des pays similaires?: marine poirier

Les mobilisations du 3 février au Yémen ont rassemblé des centaines de milliers de Yéménites à travers le pays. Corroborent-elles l’hypothèse d’une « contagion » des révoltes tunisienne et égyptienne à la seule République de la péninsule Arabique ? Si les protestations en sont solidaires, elles s’inscrivent pourtant dans des dynamiques internes spécifiques au champ politique yéménite.


Jeudi matin à Sanaa, des milliers de personnes se sont rendues aux portes de l’université pour demander le changement, la réforme du système politique et la lutte contre la corruption, voire, de façon plus minoritaire, le départ immédiat du président Ali Abdallah Saleh, au pouvoir depuis 1978. La dynamique protestataire yéménite n’est évidemment pas étrangère aux développements politiques régionaux. Les manifestants, qui rendent hommage et expriment leur soutien aux peuples tunisien et égyptien, semblent en effet fortement inspirés par le « gouffre immense dans le mur des dictatures arabes » occasionné, selon un journaliste local, par la chute de Ben Ali. En témoigne également la reprise par certains groupes des slogans scandés par les foules en Tunisie et en Égypte, relevés par la presse yéménite et diffusés en boucle sur les chaines satellitaires arabes au cours des dernières semaines : « Dégage », « Le peuple veut faire tomber le système » ou encore « Dehors les corrompus ».

A Bahrein, les femmes manifestent derrière les hommes

نساء البحرين وراء الرجال، يدا بيد وصوت واحد ينادون الحرية ان تفتح ابوابها امامهن وامام اهالي البحرين

http://www.rue89.com/2011/02/15/a-bahrein-les-femmes-manifestent-derriere-les-hommes-190665

AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL-Bahrain protest deaths point to excessive police force

Amnesty International has condemned the heavy-handed tactics used by Bahrain’s riot police earlier today after the second death in two days of protests calling for political reform in the tiny Gulf state.

Fadhel ‘Ali Matrook was among a crowd of people mourning the death yesterday of ‘Ali ‘Abdulhadi Mushaima’, killed in clashes between protesters and police, when he was shot dead by police earlier today in Bahrain’s capital, Manama. Riot police are said to have opened fire on the crowd without warning during the funeral.

“This second killing within two days is both tragic and a very worrying development,” said Malcolm Smart, Amnesty International’s Director for the Middle East and North Africa.

“The Bahrain authorities must thoroughly investigate what occurred, stand down the police involved in these shootings and make clear to the police that the use of excessive force will not be tolerated.”

“An independent investigation is also urgently required to establish the facts, particularly whether the level of force used by the police, both yesterday and today, can possibly be justified.”

“Eyewitness reports of today’s shooting received by Amnesty International suggest strongly that Fadhel ‘Ali Matrook’s death was caused by excessive force, in which case the police responsible must be brought to justice.”

Over 10,000 people reportedly joined today’s funeral procession for ‘Ali ‘Abdulhadi Mushaima’, who died on Monday during clashes with riot police in the village of al-Daih, east of Manama.

An eyewitness told Amnesty International that police opened fired on the procession of mourners without warning, as they chanted slogans criticizing the government and calling for Bahrain to have a new constitution and a democratically elected government.

“Peaceful protesters were chanting ‘Khalifa leave’ and within minutes of the procession beginning, we got attacked by the riot police; bullets were showering the peaceful protesters and there was tear gas everywhere. Several wounded are being rushed to the hospital and many are screaming,” Maryam Al-Khawaja, from the Bahrain Center for Human Rights, told Amnesty International.

Fadhel Ali Almatrook was shot dead close to al-Salmaniya hospital in Manama. According to the Bahrain Youth Society for Human Rights, more than 20 people required hospital treatment as a result of injuries caused by the riot police on Monday.

Monday’s “Day of Rage” protests in Bahrain, organized on Facebook and Twitter and apparently inspired by unrest in Egypt and Tunisia, took place mainly in Shia villages around Manama.

“Like many in the region, those in Bahrain who feel their dignity has been compromised are demanding change. The authorities must listen to these calls, rather than retaliating with violence,” said Malcolm Smart.

On Friday, Amnesty International highlighted the deteriorating human rights situation in Bahrain with its report Crackdown in Bahrain: human rights at the crossroads.

The organization called on the government to ensure proper investigations into allegations of torture and other serious abuses by the security forces.

In August-September 2010, the Bahrain authorities swooped on 23 opposition political activists, detaining them incommunicado for two weeks during which some allege they were tortured.

The authorities have also curtailed freedom of expression, closing critical websites and banning opposition publications. Hundreds of people have been arrested or imprisoned for participating in protests.

A Poem From Egypt-شعر مصري في فنون الضرب القصيدة هدية من جميلة

http://ikhras.com/2011/02/a-poem-from-egypt/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+Ikhras+%28Ikhras%29

El Kadhafi participera à une manifestation populaire pour faire tomber son propre gouvernement: A. Chalabi

Le groupe "opposant" au régime d’El Kadhafi a réussi à collecter près
de 2000 signatures, dont un groupe portant le nom de « Garçons et filles de la
Libye sont fiers de leur chef Mouamar El Kadhafi» en vue de parer à toute
action visant la déstabilisation de la Libye.

Mais, la surprise est venue du journal « Eddar », qui a rapporté que le
président El Kadhafi a décidé de se solidariser avec son peuple et de
descendre dans la rue pour prendre part à la manifestation visant à faire
tomber le gouvernement. Cette information a fait un grand scandale médiatique,
après qu’elle eut été reprise par plusieurs sites pour devenir ensuite une
information « marrante », surtout que c’est l’information la plus visitée
et la plus commentée. Parmi ceux et celles qui ont été étonnés par cette
information et qui l’ont trouvée « marrante », Yasmine d’Égypte, qui dit
: « Il a dit qu’il partira et prendra son peuple entre ses mains avant que ce
dernier ne le chasse », une position qui n’est pas étrange pour le
président libyen. Nous avons de tout temps entendu des anecdotes, la plus
marrante était celle liée à Moubarak, pour qui, El Kadhafi avait révélé
qu’il n’avait pas d’habits et qu’il allait l’aider avec des vivres.

وأخيرا قيلت الكلمة الممنوعة في ليبيا، تنحي معمر القذافي في الحال هو مطلب شعبي: امتياز دياب

طالبت اكثر من 200 شخصية ليبية بتنحي الرئيس معمر القذافي من سدة الحكم التي شغلها لفترة تزيد ان الاربعة عقود، وسمت المجموعة نفسها بضحايا تشاد.
هذا وتناقت وسائل الاعلام الاجتماعي اخبار الدعوة للنزول الى الشارع في تظاهرة ضد الحكومة الليبية ، فما كان من الرئيس الليبي وكعادته بالتظاهارات المجنونة والتي يعتبرها هو خفة دم وأيد التظاهرة ووعد بالنزول الى شارع يوم الخميس مع المتظاهرين مطالبا باسقاط الحكومة الليبي متهما اياها بالفساد!!!!!!!
واراد معمر القذافي من هذه الحركات، افراغ المظاهرة من معناها ومطلبها الاساسيين وهما التعبير عن الغضب من الاستبداد المتواصل، والمطالبة بالمتسبب بمأساتهم.
وصرح عدد من المجموعات العنكبوتية، بانهم حصلوا على آلاف التواقيع من المتضامنين مع هذه المظاهرة، ووعودا تؤكد بنزولهم للشارع للتظاهر مع اخوانهم، وللتخلص من حكم جثم على الصدور بجميع اشكال الاستبداد والفساد.

For Palestinian police in West Bank, Israel is still laying down the law : Amira Hass

Last week's column, which in Hebrew was titled "Dispersing a demonstration with a French scent," prompted a visit to the headquarters of EUPOL COPPS, the EU Police Coordination Office for Palestinian Police Support, which trains the civilian police force in the West Bank. The initiative was theirs, and the perfume, it turns out, was Jean Paul Gaultier.
Jean Frederic Martin, one of two Frenchmen training the Palestinian Special Police Force, (anti-riot division ), pointed this out following a presentation of principles and methods of operation that form the basis of the training program he and his colleague devised (addressing, among other issues, human rights and how the concept has developed since the era of the Magna Carta. ) With the same purposeful tone he used to deliver his presentation on non-lethal methods of controlling disturbances, he pointed to his shirt collar, revealing what perfume he wears.
The intervention of other forces - such as the Palestinian Authority Intelligence and the Preventive Security Force, which enjoy close ties with the ruling Fatah party - in ordinary police duties is not looked upon kindly by the civilian police and the Europeans. This, at least, is was what I was led to understand during the visit.
"I work with the civilian police force, which has 7,700 members," says Henrik Malmquist of Sweden, the head of the mission and a lawyer by training. Of these, he notes, 1,300 are part of the special police force. Together with the other six Palestinian security forces in the West Bank, there are about 35,000 security personnel (with roughly 10,000 members of the U.S.-trained "Dayton's Army." )
"The fact that there are a number of different security agencies does not necessarily make matters easier," he says. "When we look into what you have been checking [the dispersal of demonstrations], for example, it is difficult to know who was in charge at the scene, the police or another group. Shared responsibility is no responsibility. I would have preferred that the civilian police be the main agency, and if they needed help, then they could ask for it. If one of the other agencies is not behaving well [while dispersing a demonstration or public meeting], this could spill out to the civilian police even if its members behave better than the others. In principle, [the political echelon] can decide exactly what the limits are, where the police should act and where the other agencies should."
Is the training of the Palestinian police different because they are under occupation and not in a sovereign state?
"No and yes. No, because the training is done just like in any other place. And yes, because everything we do is done with the approval of the State of Israel. Any equipment we bring in has to be approved by the Coordinator of Government Activities in the Territories. In addition, the police force works under the mental programming of life under occupation. The reality on the ground affects how they see the future. When I meet my counterpart, the head of the Palestinian police force, for example, he is genuinely concerned about the absence of [Israeli] concessions. The absence of concessions makes it difficult to motivate members of his force when they carry out the mission of maintaining law and order . . . Currently it seems to me that they are not affected by political concerns. If there is an order, they will carry it out professionally. But the question is always there - how much can they be pushed, how much can be demanded of them to act against their own people, if there is no progress in the peace process?
"There's also another factor - the 'picnics' of the army inside Ramallah and other areas. A high-ranking Israeli official used the word 'picnics,' even though a more appropriate term would be 'incursions.' Two jeeps that enter Ramallah or another area have a great effect on the Palestinian police. Everyone can come with a jeep and a flag and declare that he is the one in control. I requested of high-ranking Israeli officials to refrain from this practice because it has a destructive effect on the morale of police. I was told that there is always a justified reason for this, that it comes in the wake of a thorough examination of the situation."
Do you have any idea what the crime rates are?
"We get statistics. I have no way of knowing how reliable the figures are, but they reflect something that I am impressed with in various ways - that the crime rate is very low. This is characteristic of a society in which the familial and clan basis is very strong and which is still closed. People don't move in wide circles and crime is not anonymous. It's reminiscent of Europe 40 or 50 years ago."
Do you take into account that this is a society which has its own traditions of dealing with crime, methods of mediation to which people in the West are also returning these days?
"No, but perhaps that's a mistake that should be debated: Does the international community act appropriately when it doesn't support these traditional practices and instead builds a mirror image of the institutions existing in Europe, the United States or Israel?"
Have representatives of the PA raised this issue with you?
"No."
P.S. On Friday evening, when Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak finally announced his resignation, several hundred Palestinians assembled in Ramallah's Al Manara Square to celebrate the Egyptian revolution. A very small group of Palestinian policemen stood by but did not interfere. "Two regimes have gone and now it's time for another 20," one of the slogans read. "We're No. 5 in line," someone was overheard saying into his cellular phone. The Israeli occupation, he explained, could only be eradicated afterward. Among the shouts of joy, I couldn't hear whether the number already included Egypt and Tunisia.

Umma Islamic Party, Saudi Arabia's First Political Party, Formed By Moderate Scholars

تأسيس أول حزب سياسي في العربية السعوديةوطالبوا الملك بالاعتراف به.
تزامنا مع الثورات الشعبية ضد الاستبداد وقمع الحريات، بدأت المملكة السعودية بالاستعدادت التجميلية لصورتها الرجعية

Saudi Arabia — Ten moderate Saudi scholars say they've formed the kingdom's first political party and have asked the king for recognition.
After the turmoil in Egypt and Tunisia, there have been demands for reforms in Saudi Arabia, which follows strict Islamic rule.
Sheik Mohammed bin Ghanim al-Qahtani said on Thursday he is on the coordination committee of the newly formed Umma Islamic Party. He says the party sent a letter to the Royal Palace on Wednesday requesting recognition.
His statement says it's time to endorse political rights, including the right to elect a government, promote the role of women in society and preserve women's rights.
The party's nine other founding members are university teachers, political activists and businessmen.





Asali speaks at the University of Oxford about State-Building Program

Pass the sick bag Alice...

Recent events in Tunisia, Egypt and elsewhere have demonstrated that the Arab public is no longer willing to overlook corruption, mismanagement and bad governance. The international community must learn that stability cannot be maintained at the expense of responsible governance based on rule of law, functioning institutions and viable economies. The Palestinians seem to have anticipated this through a pioneering program that is bringing Palestine closer to independence even as it starts providing the public with improved governance.


that should bring a smile on your face!



For decades, the political process simply meant negotiations about the often-repeated final status issues. Hopes were raised and then dashed in extended clusters of negotiations, numerous international conferences, TV appearances and commentaries by politicians and pundits that yielded no meaningful progress toward resolution of the conflict.

Little attention was paid to what was actually happening on the ground, its impact and implications for the peace process, the need to rebuild the Palestinian society after decades of occupation especially after the devastating impact of the second Intifada, and how to prepare it for statehood.

The institution-building program of the Palestinian Authority Government which addresses these issues is surrounded by a great deal of confusion and misunderstanding. This may be a function of the very nature of the program: a political project that has its foundation in the technical aspects of building a nation.

At a first glance, the program appears to be only technical, steeped as it is – and as it should be – in security sector development, governance reform and economic policies. Indeed, what has made it so noteworthy, and so different from the traditional hollow pronouncement of reform by most Arab governments, is the fact that the program has already delivered improved security, better governance and economic growth. It is remarkable that the most successful and wide-ranging Arab reform program should happen in the most unlikely locale. Palestine, with its reality of occupation and a political culture, reflecting that reality, which has traditionally focused on liberation at the expense of governance, has accrued these elements of national strength.

Much has been said and written about Prime Minister Fayyad’s government program, and I will not repeat what you undoubtedly know. I would only like to emphasize that the judicious efforts towards reform must continue if the program’s potential is to be realized. This is a political program par excellence in terms of its ultimate objectives, impact, and what is needed to sustain it. It is precisely because of these political implications that the world must provide the Palestinians with the necessary financial and technical support needed to properly implement reforms.

From its very inception, the entire program of building Palestinian institutions and a sovereign state has been explicit and unapologetic about its objective: the Palestinians are building their institutions under the occupation with the ultimate aim of ending the occupation. If the project becomes – or is seen to become – a tool of maintaining the status quo and beautifying the occupation, it will be abandoned – not only by the Palestinian public, but by the very leaders who initiated this program.

This is an inspirational and aspirational program the credibility of which is based on building concrete as well as systemic facts on the grounds while it generates support. It has already had an undeniable political impact both domestically among Palestinians and upon the foreign policy realm.

Domestically, it is helping to shift Palestinian political cultural from the understandable yet ultimately self-defeating sense of victimhood and entitlement into one of self-empowerment, where adversity is seen as challenges to overcome. Since the program was initiated in August 2009, the two thousand projects already implemented offer clear evidence that a good portion of Palestinians’ fate lies in their own hands. This ongoing paradigmatic shift is changing what Palestinians expect from themselves and their governing elites and is introducing new political criteria for judging the success or failure of political actors.

Critics have claimed that this program has brought nothing new and is nothing more than a political theater. This assertion cannot withstand the test of reality, as can be witnessed by anyone who has regularly visited the West Bank over the last decade. Nor is it consistent with the assessment of international organizations like the World Bank which have judged the reform trajectory sufficient to form the foundations of a vibrant Palestinian state.

Arab citizens throughout the region are demanding governmental reform and Palestinians are no exception. Finger pointing, complaints and rhetoric in lieu of action have become unacceptable responses by the leaders. The public need for good governance which provides both accountability and competence must be met. Appointing cabinet members qualified to meet these needs, as well as holding Presidential, Legislative and Municipal elections are expected by the public.

In foreign policy terms, the enhanced security developments have enabled the resumption, though not the continuation, of peace negotiations. The state and institution-building program, which has initially received some support in Israel because it was perceived as consistent with what was called “economic peace” has increasingly been viewed as a threat. However, a significant segment of the Israeli military and security establishment, witnessing a new, deep-seated doctrine and professionalism of the Palestinian security forces, has begun to advocate for the program within the Israeli establishment.

The institution-and state-building needs political decisions to protect it. In terms of the Palestinians, the greatest obstacles to implementation in areas under PA control have been the resistance from some within the old Fatah establishment and the security challenges of Hamas. Fatah has to understand that the success of this program, while it might undermine its networks of patronage, is a success for the national-secular Palestinian project and will benefit all moderates.

Israel for its part needs to understand the stability and security that such a project brings about. In order to secure its stated national project of achieving a democratic state as a homeland for Jewish people, Israel must break out of the habit of denying the Palestinians access to land and tightening its squeeze on the ground and the people. Institution-building should be insulated from the diplomatic squabbles of the negotiations by willful political decisions and oversight by the Quartet and its constituent members.

Most importantly, the program must produce political dividends in order to be sustainable. The Palestinian public must feel that they are moving towards statehood and an end to the occupation. Otherwise, the institution-building process becomes vulnerable to accusations of beautifying the occupation. These charges can only be answered by political deliverables foremost among these is a credible peace process. However, even in prolonged periods of overt diplomatic impasse, progress can be shown through steady extension of Palestinian authority over expanded areas in the West Bank, as well as curtailing and then stopping Israeli forces’ incursions in Palestinian cities and towns. In the meantime, statistics show that the numbers of Palestinians who go back to live in Palestine is slightly more than those who leave it- a significant reversal of a trend that lasted for many years.

The international community needs to treat this program as much more than a development project handled by development agencies. It is an essential component of peacemaking that requires both financial and political support at the highest levels of foreign policy-making. Defining a two-year time horizon, demonstrable achievements on security, governance and the economy, as well as an energetic Palestinian diplomacy have created a global sense that Palestinian statehood is inevitable.

The uprising that wasn't : Dr. Anat Kurz

Under circumstances of prolonged impasse, one local violent event that spins out of control would put Israel and the Palestinians on a collision course.

The political and media tempest generated in the Palestinian arena by Al Jazeera's disclosure of documents pertaining to Israeli-Palestinian peace talks abated very quickly. Publication of the documents by the Qatar-based network, which has connections with Hamas, was designed to stimulate public protest against the Palestinian Authority and undermine its status. The PA, however, survived the crisis - not only because the topic of the documents was displaced from the public agenda by the turmoil in Egypt. Even without the attention-grabbing events in Egypt, it is doubtful that the disclosure of the documents would have achieved its objectives.

Al Jazeera, whose broadcasts fanned the popular protests that erupted in Tunisia and Egypt, failed in its effort to ignite disturbances against the PA in the West Bank. This failure bore witness to the limits of efforts to stir revolts in places where the public has no interest in them. External provocation alone does not send the masses to the streets; popular protest is predicated upon authentic desire for change. And in the West Bank, popular motivation is moving in the exact opposite direction: There is a desire to regulate the process of institution-building that is currently under way under the leadership of Prime Minister Salam Fayyad, with the support of President Mahmoud Abbas.

The peace process impasse has not frozen this institution-building process, a process that began at a time when negotiations between Israel and the PA were still on track. The security situation in the West Bank has stabilized; the economy shows signs of growth; and national institutions are slowly gaining the public's trust. To be sure, the PA is subject to criticism at home, especially due to the cooperation of its security forces with the Israel Defense Forces, particularly in the continuing effort to stifle Hamas' attempts to drag Israel and West Bank residents into renewed violent conflict - and that without political progress toward the establishment of a Palestinian state.

Nonetheless, in both the West Bank and the Gaza Strip, support for the PA exceeds that for Hamas. These circumstances furnish at least a partial explanation of why West Bank residents recoil from rising up against the PA, in protests that could turn into a conflict with Israel and overturn gains earned by reforms in security, economic and other spheres.

It could be claimed that support for the PA reflects sympathy for its current position regarding the resumption of peace talks with Israel. The PA's demands for recognition of East Jerusalem as the capital of Palestine, and for a complete freeze on settlement activity, in addition to its categorical refusal to recognize Israel as a Jewish state, are popular with the Palestinian public. However, the PA also enjoyed support when the Annapolis dialogue was in full swing; this support implies an understanding that the vision of a Palestinian state cannot be realized in the absence of political-territorial concessions. For this reason, disclosure of secret peace discussions, even regarding sensitive final status issues, did not come as a complete shock or surprise. This lack of surprise, along with a fear of a general deterioration of events in the West Bank, explains why there was no uprising there when Al Jazeera disclosed the documents.

Moreover, the diplomatic offensive conducted by the PA inspires hope among residents of the West Bank and the Gaza Strip, even if the vision is consigned to a distant future. The current trend of in-principle recognition of a Palestinian state, which has swept through countries in South America, will be long in crossing the Atlantic Ocean to reach Europe - if the trend makes such a crossing at all. Like the U.S. government, the European Union is committed to negotiations between Israel and the PA as the means of establishing a Palestinian state. In the meantime, Palestinians would like to see the international support that is consolidating for a state translate into increased pressure on Israel. This hope will be shattered should residents of the West Bank lose their patience and rise up against the PA. Diplomatic momentum would be lost in any event, whether an uprising would produce anarchy or bring Hamas to power in the West Bank.

Does the relative quiet that now grips the West Bank exempt the PA and Israel from a need to revive the peace process, in an attempt to forge an agreement? Definitely not. The atmosphere there reflects aspirations for a better future. In contrast, a continued stalemate in the peace process would be likely to pollute this atmosphere, and bring the West Bank to the boiling point. Under such circumstances of prolonged impasse, one local violent event that spins out of control would be enough to throw Israel and the Palestinians back on a collision course - in fact, under such circumstances, incendiary broadcasts by Al Jazeera would not be needed to ignite an uprising in the West Bank. When it comes to uprisings, the history of the Palestinian people is laced with its own distinctive sources of inspiration.

Taking to the streets is not a mere act of protest. It is an act of self-determination : Hossen Agha

Taking to the streets is not a mere act of protest. It is an act of self-determination.

For decades, the Arab world has been drained of its sovereignty, its freedom, its pride. It has been drained of politics. Today marks politics' revenge.
ان ما يا يحدث في العالم العربي ليست مظاهر احتجاج، وانما مطالب بتحقيق حق المصير:حسين آغا
على مدار عقود استنزف العالم العربي من حق تقريره لمصيره ومن حريته ومن كبريائه ومن سياسته.
اليوم، يضع العالم العربي الحدود، وصرخ كفاية، اليوم هو الانتقام لعقود من الاستبداد
حسن آغا مفكر عراقي يقطن في لندن منذ عقود




Ce que l'on sait de la fortune des Moubarak :REUTER

Selon les informations parues la semaine dernière dans le Guardian, et ABC News, qui se basaient sur l'analyse d'experts du Moyen-Orient, la fortune des Moubarak pourrait atteindre 30 à 70 milliards de dollars, ce qui ferait du président Egyptien l'un des hommes les plus riches de la planète.
Mais il faut être très prudent à l'égard de ces chiffres, qui s'ils sont validés par certains experts, ne reposent pas sur grand-chose, comme le rappelle le professeur de politique au Moyen-Orient à l'Université de Durham, Christopher Davidson (Voir l'interview ici). Il est en effet très difficile d'estimer précisément les avoirs du clan : le secret des données financières, l'opacité de l'actionnariat des entreprises égyptiennes, autant que la peur d'un régime autoritaire ont limité la diffusion de l'information. Forbes, qui effectue chaque année un classement des plus grandes fortunes mondiales, doute fortement des estimations avancées. Pour le magazine américain, les experts cités par le Guardian et ABC News extrapolent à partir d'informations dont la vérification se heurte à des obstacles importants.

D'où vient cette fortune ?
Pour comprendre d'où vient cette fortune, il faut revenir à une époque où Moubarak n'était pas encore président d'Egypte. Bien avant 1981 en effet, Hosni Moubarak, alors officier général de l'armée, devient un puissant homme d'affaire qui négocie d'importants contrats d'armement, avec les Soviétiques notamment et les Américains. De ces contrats, Moubarak prélève d'importantes commissions qui, selon ABC News, constituent la base de son enrichissement. Lorsqu'il devient vice-Président, en 1975, il commence à acquérir des terrains de l'armée qu'il fait ensuite classer d'utilité publique, notamment dans les zones touristiques. Le prix des terrains flambe et il engrange de substantielles plus-values.
Mais pour bien comprendre comment Moubarak s'est emparé d'une partie de la richesse du pays, il faut avoir à l'esprit le fonctionnement économique de nombreux pays du Maghreb. Dans ces pays en effet, il est assez fréquent que les pouvoirs politiques exigent des entreprises étrangères s'implantant sur leur sol de donner à un partenaire local une part de leur capital. Ce système de joint-venture permet aux pouvoirs politiques de conserver la mainmise sur l'économie : n'importe quelle entreprise qui veut mettre un pied sur le territoire doit s'associer à une entreprise locale. En Egypte, la part détenue par les égyptiens dans les co-entreprises serait ainsi de l'ordre de 20%, selon les experts.

A l'occasion de ces deals, la famille Moubarak aurait capté une partie du capital des entreprises. Durant ses 30 ans de règne, le président égyptien aurait donc eu accès à tous ces investissements hautement profitables. Un des exemples de l'imbrication des intérêts privés et publics des Moubarak est Orascom. Ce géant des télécoms, qui dispose d'une joint venture avec France Télécom, a toujours été proche du clan Moubarak. Le fils ainé du président, Alaa Moubarak, est l'un des actionnaires importants du groupe. En retour, Naguib Sawiris, le président d'Orascom, sait qu'il dispose d'appuis politiques décisifs pour ses affaires. Ce qui ne l'a pas empêché de prendre récemment ses distances avec le régime.

نداء الساعت الاخيرة لثورة البحرين:الاحرار

غدا يبدأ، بعون الله، المخاض لولادة نظام جديد في ارض اوال بعد عقود من الاستبداد الذي فرضه الخليفيون على ارض البحرين وشعبها. فعندما يفجر المواطنون غضبهم ضد هذا النظ& #1575;م الحاقد، لن يتوقف ذلك الغضب الثوري حتى يسقط الديكتاتور الذي تفرعن وتجاوز في ظلمه واجرامه ما فعله زين العابدين بن علي وحسني مبارك اللذين سقطا في مزبلة التاريخ. لقد صبر الشعب على حكم الطاغية عشرة اعوام فكان جزاؤه سجن العلماء والمفكرين والنشطاء، وتعذيبهم بدون رحمة او شفقة. لقد امعنوا في التعذيب والظلم والفساد وازهاق الارواح حتى اصب 581; دم البحراني بلا قيمة. فقد ازهق ارواح الشهداء ابتداء بمحمد جمعة الشاخوري ومهدي عبد الرحمن، وعباس الشاخوري وعلي جاسم. وسجلت المنظمات الحقوقية الدولية سجلات سوداء للتŸ 3;ذيب والمعاملة الحاطة بالكرامة الانسانية، وصدرت تقارير واسعة منها تقرير منظمة هيومن رايتس ووج من سبعين صفحه بعنوان "عودة التعذيب" في مثل هذه الايام من العام الماضي، 608;تقرير المنظمة الاسلامية لحقوق الانسان بعنوان: الوعود المكسورة". وصدر يوم امس آخر تقرير عن منظمة العفو الدولية بعنوان: "هجمة في البحرين: حقوق الانسان على مفترق طرق"

هذه الشهادات الدولية تضاف الى السجل السياسي الاسود للديكتاتور حمد بن عيسى آل خليفة وطغمته. فقد التف على دستور البلاد الشرعي بميثاقه الذي فرضه بالخديعة والمكر بع 583; ان خلق اجواء مهرجانية واسعة في 2001 واخلف وعوده التي قدمها قبل التصويت على ذلك الميثاق، ومنها الوثيقة التي وقعها بمجلس السيد علوي الغريفي والتصريحات التي ادلى بها وزير العدل للاعلام بالحفاظ على دستور 73 واعتباره حاكما على الميثاق. ثم غير الدوائر الا نتخابية بشكل كرس الفرز الطائفي. وتوازى مع ذلك مشروع تغيير التركيبة السكانية عبر التجني ;س السياسي الذي ليس له سابقة في تاريخ البلاد. وفي الشهور الستة الاخيرة ارتكب هذا الديكتاتور جرائم التعذيب بنمط غير مسبوق حتى بلغت اجبار علماء الدين على شرب الماء في شهر 85;مضان بالاضافة للصعق الكهربائي والتعليق والحرمان من النوم والضرب المبرح على كافة انحاء الجسد. وأمر فرق الموت التي اديرت من قصره باختطاف الاطفال والشباب في سابقة فريد ة من نوعها في البلاد، وتعرض هؤلاء لتعذيب وحشي في بيوت سرية لم تعرف مواقعها حتى الآن. وعين خالد بن احمد آل خليفة وزيرا للديوان لتنفيذ مشروع التشطير الطائفي وفق اجندته ال 8;ي احتوتها قصائده سيئة الصيت التي نشرت في 1996. ونهب الطاغية وزمرته اراضي البلاد وثرواتها، فصادر الاراضي البحرين المدفونة ووضع يديه على جزيرة ام النعسان كلها، وجزر حوار 48; واستحوذ على اموال الشعب فاشترى العمارات في اوروبا وآخرها فندق "فور سيزونز Four Seasons في لندن بمبلغ بلغ مليار دولار!

بعد هذا السجل الاسود الذي استمر عشرة اعوام، هل يمكن اصلاح هذا النظام الذي يتربع الطاغية حمد بن عيسى على رأسه؟ لقد قرر شباب البحرين ان يثوروا ضد هذا النظلم ليس من اج ;ل طرح اية مطالب عليه، بل من اجل اسقاطه، بعد ان اثبتت تجربة العقود الثلاثة من النضال والتضحيات استحالة اصلاحه. فهو أسوأ من نظامي بن علي ومبارك اللذين اسقطهما الشباب بسو ;اعدهم وارادتهم، وعون الله الذي لا ينقطع عن المظلومين.

Comment l'Algérie gâche ses richesses économiques: Elie Patrigeon

Problème, comme dans tous les pays du Maghreb, ce trésor est une rente qui ne profite qu'à quelques privilégiés. Malgré les immenses revenus générés par la production de gaz et de pétrole, la société algérienne est confrontée à de gigantesques problèmes en matière de logement, d'emploi, d'éducation... Le gouvernement algérien, s'il a réussi à assainir ses finances, n'a su ni redistribuer la manne gazière ni diversifier une économie devenue complètement dépendante du prix des matières premières.

... Mais les Algériens restent pauvres
Le taux de chômage est officiellement autour de 12% de la population active mais beaucoup estiment qu'il est largement sous-estimé. Ainsi, selon les statistiques officielles, le chômage des jeunes serait passé de 45% à 21,5% entre 2003 et 2008 alors que la plupart des experts doutent de cette baisse fulgurante et le situent plutôt entre 30 à 40%. Soit une situation comparable à celle de la Tunisie. Or, avec un quart de la population qui a moins de 15 ans, l'économie doit intégrer des centaines de milliers de nouveaux arrivants chaque année sur le marché du travail alors même que le secteur marchand est totalement atone. Aujourd'hui encore, 140.000 personnes quittent l'Algérie chaque année pour trouver un avenir meilleur à l'étranger.

Dans le même temps, 28% de la population vit sous le seuil de pauvreté. Soit beaucoup plus qu'en Tunisie (15 à 20%). Ce qui rend la population très sensible aux variations de prix des biens de première nécessité. La mortalité infantile est l'une des plus fortes de la région et l'alphabétisation ne progresse plus. Cette dernière est particulièrement faible chez les femmes dont le taux d'activité ne dépasse pas 14%. Il était de 17% il y a 10 ans.

Autre plaie de la société algérienne, le logement. Dépassé par l'accroissement démographique, le secteur ne suit pas. Les Algériens les plus modestes s'entassent à la périphérie des villes dans des immeubles vétustes et mal construits. Ces constructions faites à la va-vite, dans des conditions financières souvent occultes, sont très sensibles aux séismes. En 2003, le tremblement de terre dans la région d'Alger, qui avait fait près de 3000 morts, avait attisé la colère et placé le logement au rang de priorité nationale. Depuis, les promesses ne se sont pas concrétisées.

Une économie rentière et corrompue

Pourquoi ce constat alors que le pays est le plus riche de la région? Comme l'indiquait l'économiste Lahcen Achy en janvier à l'Expansion.com, l'Algérie vit sous un régime d'économie dirigée dont les plans quadriennaux sont la colonne vertébrale. "Pour autant, l'économie algérienne est mal gérée et n'est jamais passé à l'économie de marché, malgré plusieurs tentatives", expliquait-il. L'efficacité de la dépense publique est ainsi largement remise en cause. Et pas seulement parce qu'elle est source de gaspillages. Si elle permet au pays de se bâtir des infrastructures, elle n'est en effet pas assez orientée vers les investissements productifs. Dès lors, la création de richesses, hors secteur gazier, est trop faible pour subvenir aux besoins de la population. Au final, la croissance ne dépasse pas 3% en moyenne alors que le Maroc et la Tunisie, sur la même période, connaissaient un accroissement respectif de 5% et 4%.

الميلاد: حبيب عيسى

الآن ، قد يكون الحلم أقرب إلى التحقق بعد انقضاء تجارب بالغة الثراء ، رغم أنها تجارب مرة من حيث المسارات والنتائج ، فالشعب العربي على يد جيل عربي جديد بدأ يقبض على مصيره وقراره بعد أن تحررت إرادته ، وإذا عرف كيف ينتقل إلى بناء مؤسساته الإجتماعية والسياسية والثقافية ويمارس الجدل الإجتماعي فإن الأمة العربية في طريقها لتأخذ مكانها الذي تستحق في هذا العالم ، والجديد الجديد أن الجيل العربي الجديد يمارس الفعل مباشرة ، ويوجّه ، ويقرّر ، وينفذ ، ويستشهد ، لاينتظر إنقلاباً ، ولاقوى خفية ، لاداخلية ، ولا خارجية ، وإنما ، بيديه ، وبصدور عارية وبضعةأحجار يلاحق الطغاة والغزاة ...


وإذا كان هذا ينطبق على جمع القوى والتيارات والاتجاهات بما يتضمن المراجعة والتجديد والانتقال من أحزب الأفراد والعائلات إلى أحزاب الوطن والبرامج ... فإن المشروع القومي العربي التقدمي يولد من جديد مطهراً من سلبيات الماضي والتجارب المرة ، ولعل القوميون العرب التقدميون الجدد يقررون ، الآن ، بالضبط الآن ، أن الأون قد آن لإشهار ميلاد الطليعة العربية في الأجزاء ، وفي الكل العربي ، وفي المهاجر بناء على أسس ومعايير كاملة الأوصاف ، وطوبى لمن ينير الشعلة الأولى ...

لقد لحق بالمشروع القومي العربي التقدمي الكثير من التشويه ، والتصقت به تجارب بالغة التشويه والسلبية ، وحدث انفصام حاد بين الشعارات المرفوعة والممارسات المشينة ، وقد أدى هذا كله إلى أن تلك الشعارات القومية العربية فقدت مصداقيتها بعد أن مرّغها الذين حولوّها من أهداف نبيلة إلى مجرد غطاء لممارسات سلطوية متوحشة ، وقد فاقم من الأزمة غياب المؤسسات القومية التي كان يمكن أن تفرز القوى والمواقف ، إضافة إلى ماتعرض له المشروع القومي التقدمي من تهجم القوى المضادة ، داخلية ، وخارجية مما دفع إلى الخلط بين الأهداف النبيلة ، والممارسات المشينة ، الآن على الطليعيين العرب الجدد أن يقطعوا تماماً مع الممارسات السلبية التي نُسبت إلى المشروع القومي العربي التقدمي دون مواربة ، فهي ُتنسب لمن مارسها ، ولا ُتنسب إلى المشروع النهضوي العربي التقدمي ، وهذا يقضي وضع البرامج والأسس والمنطلقات والغايات بما يجعل الميلاد الجديد للطليعة العربية معرفاً ، ومعروفاً من المنطلقات إلى الغايات ...

إنه الميلاد الثالث للقومية العربية ، الأول كان بمواجهة التتريك مع بداية القرن العشرين ، والثاني كان بموجهة التقسيم وسايكس – بيكو ، ووعد بلفور والاستعمار الأوربي ، والآن الميلاد الثالث بمواجهة الاستبداد والتجزئة والتبعية والفساد ...

Révolte du 17 février 2011 : pour en faire une journée de colère en Libye : الأفق


نداء للتظاهر في ليبيا ضد الفساد والاستبداد ، نداء الى جميع افراد الشعب في ليبيا بالنزول الى الشوارع يوم الخميس القادم للتضامن معا في يوم الغضب
Des appels à manifester jeudi contre la corruption et le népotisme en Libye ont été lancés depuis quelques semaines sur Facebook, dans la foulée des révolutions en Tunisie et en Egypte limitrophes.
Sous le slogan "Révolte du 17 février 2011 : pour en faire une journée de colère en Libye", un groupe Facebook, qui appelle à un soulèvement contre le régime de Mouammar Kadhafi, avait réuni lundi plus de 4.400 membres.
Un autre groupe regroupant plus de 2.600 membres invite le peuple libyen à descendre dans la rue pour "une journée de colère contre la corruption et le népotisme", en commémoration de la mort d’au moins quatorze manifestants à Benghazi (nord-est) le 17 février 2006.
Au moins quatorze personnes avaient été tuées et 69 blessées dans des heurts qui avaient opposé le 17 février 2006 les forces de l’ordre libyennes à des manifestants qui avaient attaqué le consulat d’Italie, pour protester contre la publication de caricatures de Mahomet.
Par ailleurs, dans une pétition reçue par l’AFP, plus de 200 signataires et des organisations d’opposition libyennes basées à l’étranger ont souligné "le droit du peuple libyen d’exprimer son opinion dans des manifestations pacifiques, sans aucune forme de harcèlement, provocations ou menaces par le système ou ses éléments".
Ils appellent aussi le colonel Kadhafi et sa famille à quitter le pouvoir et à abandonner toutes les autorités et les pouvoirs "révolutionnaire, politique, militaire et sécuritaire".
Cerné par deux révolutions populaires en Tunisie et Egypte, le régime libyen a tenté de prendre des mesures préventives pour calmer la population et discréditer les appels à la révolte.
Les autorités de ce riche pays pétrolier ont ainsi rétabli des subventions sur des biens de première nécessité et ont facilité l’accès de la population à des crédits sans garantie et sans intérêts.
Dimanche soir, en marge d’un prêche du colonel Kadhafi à l’occasion de la fête du mouled célébrant la naissance du prophète Mohamed (570 après JC), la parole a été donnée à un "représentant des familles des martyrs de Benghazi" pour "renouveler leur allégeance et fidélité" au Guide de la révolution libyenne de 1969.

continuous detention of journalist ‘Ali al-‘Abdullah:RAPID ACTION NETWORK

The Writers in Prison Committee of PEN International is seriously concerned about the continuous detention of journalist ‘Ali al-‘Abdullah, whose two-and-a-half year sentence for his dissident writings and peaceful opposition activities expired in June 2010. Abdullah now faces new charges of ‘disseminating false information’ for an article he wrote in prison. He appeared before a Military Court in Damascus on 7 February 2011 and pleaded not guilty to the charges. PEN International considers that journalist ‘Ali al-Abdullah is targeted solely for the peaceful exercise of his right to freedom of expression as guaranteed by Article 19 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, to which Syria is a party, and calls for his immediate and unconditional release.

According to PEN’s information, Abdullah has been kept in prison since the expiry of his two-and-a-half year sentence on 16 June 2010. His continuous detention stems from the publication of an article in late 2009 in which he criticised Syrian-Iranian relations. He appeared before a Military Court on 7 February 2011 on charges of ‘disseminating false information’. During the court session, Abdullah told the court that his statements did not “constitute a crime for which he should be tried because he has a natural right to his opinion”.

‘Ali al-Abdullah was arrested on 16 December 2007 and sentenced on 29 October 2008 to two-and-half years in prison for “disseminating false information with the aim of harming the state”, “membership of a secret organisation designed to destabilise the state” and “inciting ethnic and racial tension” for his dissident writings and peaceful opposition activities. Abdullah was arrested with his son Muhammad ‘Ali al-‘Abdullah following their participation in a peaceful demonstration outside the Supreme State Security Court (SSSC) on 22 March 2007. Another of ‘Ali al-‘Abdullah’s sons, Omar, has been detained since 18 March 2006 for his involvement in a pro-democracy youth movement. Their arrests are part of an ongoing crackdown on government opponents who are being targeted for their peaceful opposition activities.


‘Ali al-‘Abdullah was previously arrested in May 2005 and detained for over five months for his opposition activities.

Un deuxième manifestant tué a Bahreïn شهيد الثورة الثاني في البحرين


"Fadel Salman Matrouk a été tué par des balles à fragmentation devant l'hôpital Souleimania à Manama où les gens s'étaient rassemblés pour les funérailles du premier martyr", a déclaré M. Khalil Ibrahim al-Marzooq, un député de l'opposition chiite.
La police bahreïnie avait déjà dispersé lundi en faisant usage de gaz lacrymogènes quelques centaines de manifestants dans plusieurs villages chiites. Ils s'étaient mobilisés à l'initiative d'internautes qui avaient appelé sur Facebook à manifester pour réclamer des réformes politiques .

! شهيد البحرين الثاني ، قال البعض بانه سقط في في تظاهرة احتجاجية
الم يقرأ الناس حقيقة هذه المظاهرات بعد؟
انها تظاهرات الثورة من اجل الحرية وضد الاستبداد
عجبت من تعابير الجزيرة التي ساندت هذه الثورة ومن استعمالها لكلمة احتجاج بدل ثورة من اجل الحرية، وثورة ضد الاستبداد، وهناك فرق كبير ، وشتان ما بين هذا وذاك
امتياز دياب
!

Une bloggeuse de 19 ans condamnée à 7 ans de prison en Syrie: Reuters


طل الملوحي دخلت سجون سوريا بتهمةالتجسس لحساب دولة اجنبية!.."
طل الملوحي لا يتجازعمرها ال 19 عاما ولكن كان عمرها 17عام عندما وجهت لها هذه التهمة البشعة.
طل الملوحي افتتحت موقعا على الانترنت، شيء عجيب في سوريا، وشئ اعجب في سوريا ان يقول شاب وعلنا بانه يحلم ان يكون له دوراسوريا عندما يكبر، وشيئ اعجب بل مواز لارتكاب جريمة

قتل ، ان يتضامن مع ثورة مصر او تونس
ما زال حزب البعث او حزب الأسد يعتقدون بان ما حصل في مصر او في تونس ، ما هي الا مظاهرة احتجاجية من شباب طائش، ولم يقرؤا الاحداث الكبرى كما يجب، لم يفهموا بعد بأن لعبةالدومينو قد اسقطت حجرين منها، والحجر الثالث والرابع في البحرين ، والخامس في الجزائر ، والسادس في اليمن ، كلها حجارة آيلة للسقوط، . ان هذه ليست تظاهرات احتجاجية وانما ثورات ضد الاسيبداد، كما كانت الثورات ضد الاستعمار، زال الاستعمار وامن مكانه حكاما استبدوا بشعوبهم وقبضوا الثمن، وجاءت الصحوة ويا ويلك يا ظالم -امتياز دياب
".
La bloggeuse syrienne Tal al Mallouhi, 19 ans, a été condamné lundi à 7 ans de prison pour espionnages pour un pays étranger, après un procès tenu à huis-clos, ont rapporté Al Jazeera et l'agence
La jeune bloggeuse avait 17 ans quand elle a été arrêtée en 2009. Elle était détenue depuis par les autorités syriennes. Des associations de défense des droits de l'homme inscrivent cette décision de justice dans le contexte d'une intensification de la pression sur les mouvements d'opposition à la lumière des révolutions en Egypte et Tunisie.

Al Mallouhi avait écrit sur son blog qu'elle voulait "jouer un rôle pour le futur de la Syrie", un pays depuis 50 ans sous contrôle du parti Baas. Elle avait aussi appelé le président américain Barack Obama a agir davantage pour la cause palestinienne.

Les autorités n'ont cependant pas clairement lié son arrestation à son blog. Le chef d'accusation officiel est la "révélation d'informations devant rester cachées à un pays étranger". La sentence a été rendue pour "espionnage pour un pays étranger". Le pays étranger en question n'a pas été révélé.