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Ed Webb

Egypt: Lessons from Iran | openDemocracy - 0 views

  • There is no doubt that Egypt cannot go back to what it was under Mubarak, but the shape of the future system is very much dependent upon the presence of the youth, women, and the working people in articulating and pushing for their democratic demands in the public sphere. A crucial lesson from Iran for the progressive secular forces - the left, liberals, feminists, artists and intellectuals - is to not sacrifice their secular democratic demands, and not to trust the army, the Islamists or the traditional elite. 
  • another lesson from Iran is that in the post-revolutionary anarchy there is always the danger that the reactionary forces use the religious beliefs of the masses to get the upper hand
  • The clerical/military oligarchy in Iran, with its intricate network of religious, repressive and economic institutions and multiple military and intelligence systems, is highly complex and also independent from any foreign power. It is a fascist-type system that still has millions on the payroll of the state and para-statal organizations, including religious foundations. It has also shown on numerous occasions that it does not hesitate to use extreme brutality against its opposition. In the long run, its fate will not be different from those of other dictatorships and authoritarian regimes in the Middle East or elsewhere, but the Iranian people unfortunately have a much more difficult fight ahead of them.
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  • The US and Israel can no longer rely on dependable and friendly Arab dictators, and will finally have to take the aspirations for genuine peace with the Palestinians seriously. The Middle East may seem to be caught between a rock and a hard place – that is, between secular dictatorships and Islamic fundamentalisms. But indeed a third alternative, a secular democratic one, does exist. We must hope that the democratic forces in all these countries will eventually be able to harness both the Islamists and the militarists.
gabrielle verdier

Lettre d'un jeune français en soif d'une autre révolution - 0 views

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    Comme les jeunes Tunisiens, comme les jeunes Egyptiens, nous avons soif de liberté et de dignité alors que nos sociétés ne cessent de s'abreuver de xénophobie et de nationalisme haineux. Nous avons aussi soif de révolution mais d'une révolution des mentalités qui passera par le courage de la pensée.
gabrielle verdier

Tunisie, Egypte, l'Union dans le mauvais tempo - Coulisses de Bruxelles, UE - 0 views

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    Seule la peur de la pression migratoire, incarnée par l'arrivée de 5 000 boat people tunisiens sur les côtes italiennes, semble sortir les Européens de leur apathie
gabrielle verdier

Egypte: Monde opprimé: libérez-vous du slogan occidental qui justifie la dict... - 0 views

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    et mis fin aux préjudices racistes qui affirment que les arabes ne peuvent comprendre la démocratie
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