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Contents contributed and discussions participated by Ed Webb

Ed Webb

Amb. Marc Ginsberg: Is Al Jazeera Fueling "Tunisteria"? - 0 views

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    Unclever
Ed Webb

Tunisia cabinet to lift party bans - Africa - Al Jazeera English - 0 views

  • "I am with you. We are not going to shoot you. What matters is that the rally is peaceful," an army captain promised the crowd, who reacted with applause.
  • "As the people of Tunisia chart a different future, political and social stability are essential ingredients for credible elections," Philip Crowley, the state department spokesman, said on the microblogging site Twitter.
Ed Webb

Arab Leaders Keep a Wary Eye on Tunisia - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • In Egypt, where the leadership continues to rely on a decades-old emergency law that allows arrest without charge, there is a lot of room for free and critical speech, offering a safety valve for expression that did not exist in Tunisia, he said.
Ed Webb

Tunisia: Booting up a Development Model or Back to the Future? | The Middle East Channel - 0 views

  • the task of building a new political order that can provide democracy and development is, if anything, even more challenging than it was for the immediate post-colonial political elites
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    I'm hoping for democratic socialism/social democracy, myself. Enough with the neo-liberalism.
Ed Webb

Brian Whitaker's blog, January 2011 - 1 views

  • without extreme vigilance on the part of the Tunisian public, the country might find itself, a few months from now, with another RCD president and a parliament still dominated by Ben Ali's party. Tunisians are going to have to remain very watchful, and keep up the pressure for change.
Ed Webb

Quick thoughts on the Tunisian revolution « Ibn Kafka's obiter dicta - divaga... - 0 views

  • Tunisia basically has a choice ahead: whether to continue as the IMF’s, the World Bank’s and Europe’s alleged best pupil in the Arab classroom, with the mixed resultsthat are plain for everyone to see, or to decide for itself, according to its own interests and sovereign decisions, what path and what policies to adopt, whether it be in the foreign policy, domestic policy or economic policy fields. Tunisia can chose to be like Turkey, Brazil, India or Malaysia, or it can pursue in its post-colonial striving for acceptance and the occasional pat on the head by its Western partners, a path followed by Jordan or Morocco with limited success.
  • For all practical purposes, this is the kind of government that Benali could have appointed himself had he had more brains – his last speech actually outlined exactly this sort of government, and he actually met with some opposition members before being deposed.
  • The Tunisian people have ousted the dictator, but they haven’t yet got rid of his institutional and political legacy. This is just the beginning, if democracy is to take hold.
Ed Webb

The brutal truth about Tunisia - Robert Fisk, Commentators - The Independent - 0 views

  • It's the same old problem for us in the West. We mouth the word "democracy" and we are all for fair elections – providing the Arabs vote for whom we want them to vote for.
  • For years, this wretched man had been talking about a "slow liberalising" of his country. But all dictators know they are in greatest danger when they start freeing their entrapped countrymen from their chains.
  • The torture chambers will keep going. We will maintain our good relations with the dictators. We will continue to arm their armies and tell them to seek peace with Israel. And they will do what we want. Ben Ali has fled. The search is now on for a more pliable dictator in Tunisia – a "benevolent strongman" as the news agencies like to call these ghastly men. And the shooting will go on – as it did yesterday in Tunisia – until "stability" has been restored. No, on balance, I don't think the age of the Arab dictators is over. We will see to that.
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