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Ed Webb

Tunisia's Interim Leader Essebsi Defends Gradualist Path - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • it is more difficult to protect freedom from the proponents of freedom themselves than from the enemies
  • promises to be the first free and fair election of the Arab Spring
  • Through it all, many observers say, Tunisia appears to have stayed on track — especially in comparison with the muddle after the season’s second Arab revolution, in Egypt, where the interim military government is still ironing out a complicated multistage plan that could delay full civilian control until 2014
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  • “If the people trust their leaders, they will wait.”
Ed Webb

How Revolution Turned Sour in the Birthplace of the Arab Spring | Common Dreams - 1 views

  • a Western instinct to personalize and, in the process, trivialize the Tunisian revolution – only to ignore it as the focus moved on to later rebellions in countries deemed more important
  • "Now they are offering all kinds of help to Libya, which is already a rich country. Here, we get nothing. The economic situation just gets worse, and we wonder why we risked so much in rising up against Ben Ali and his gangsters."
  • They are angry because things are not improving fast
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  • We want justice, we don't want things going back to the way they were
  • the percentage of the population optimistic about the future has fallen to 24 per cent
  • Faith in the electoral process leading to a better future has also dissipated, with less than half of those eligible to vote in the coming polls having so far registered to do so. While Western observers wonder about the emergence of Islamists as a dominant force in parliament, the crucial issue in places such as Sidi Bouzid is stark. "It is about jobs so we can at least feed our family," said Ziad Ali Karimi. "And if the politicians can't provide that there will be another revolution."
gabrielle verdier

L'Expression - Le Quotidien - «Le CNT représente l'Otan et non le peuple libyen» - 0 views

  • le régime bâti et instauré par Ben Ali est toujours aux commandes. Ce sont les hommes de Ben Ali qui dirigent la Tunisie.
  • tous les procès qui se sont déroulés jusqu'ici, à commencer par celui de Ben Ali et son épouse, constituent un défilé de carnaval
  • l'appareil judiciaire de Ben Ali n'a connu aucun assainissement
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  • les Tunisiens ne sont pas dupes. Ils ne se satisfont pas de ce procès expéditif et savent que justice n'a pas été rendue
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    "salutaire et claire. "
gabrielle verdier

Maan News Agency: Tunisian press: Convoy waits for Egypt permission to enter Gaza - 0 views

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    "Karama "
Ed Webb

Twitter / @Dima_Khatib: Hugo Chavez says that TV p ... - 1 views

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    Virtual reality
Ed Webb

BBC News - Inside Tripoli's Rixos hotel as rebels close in - 1 views

  • Outside the Rixos hotel we still don't believe the streets are safe. And Gaddafi men are outside with guns, waiting. We still can't leave. Elsewhere I can hear gunfire - not in celebration, but in battle.
Ed Webb

Egypt's Unfinished Revolution | FRONTLINE | PBS - 0 views

  • Abbas, from a working class family loyal to the Muslim Brotherhood, now has friends who are Marxists, Christians, Nasserists, Salafists, liberals and Socialists. Some are rich kids from the posh enclave of Zamalek, a small island just across the Nile. Others are from the sprawling districts like Shoubra and Imbaba that envelop the capital. Back in January and February, these relationships were part of what Heba Morayef of Human Rights Watch called the "Tahrir moment:" a collective revelry over the gentle belief that a diverse movement had toppled a dictator and was ushering in a new Egypt
  • Despite the unified cries for justice, the protest movement has largely splintered along lines of political parties and factions. All are competing for a spot in elections scheduled for November -- and to shape events in Egypt after Mubarak. The country of 82 million is still far short of the goals of its first free and fair elections, the writing of a new constitution and the reform of the police force.
  • Maher bristles at the notion that what happened in Egypt was the first "Facebook revolution."
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  • you could see the strain of the movement. He looked tired and stressed and he spoke of a growing sense that the movement is struggling to affect change, not play politics. Maher was criticized when it was learned that he hired a Beverly Hills public relations firm to represent the movement. He and his wife have a newborn who arrived just after the revolution, their second child, and he said he was struggling to balance his family, his work as an engineer with his dedication to being an activist
  • The Brotherhood clearly has wide appeal in Egypt's largely traditional society. But there is a youth movement within the Muslim Brotherhood that has grown impatient with the old guard, like El-Erian. The Egyptian Current Party is a small faction that includes maverick youth leaders of the Muslim Brotherhood, including Abbas. The parliamentary candidate they plan to field is Islam Lotfi
  • I think I feel like a lot of Egyptians that we are going through dramatic change and we are unsettled by it and we are trying to cope in our own ways ... It is like the whole country is experiencing trauma. "We were so elated by the fact that Mubarak had to step down, but we all get pretty quiet and even a bit down when you think about how long it is going to take to bring real change, and how much real hard work there is ahead," she said. "How do we do that?" she asked, as protesters left the square in the fading light to get home before nightfall. "I think it is the question we are all asking ourselves."
Ed Webb

The Free Speech Blog: Official blog of Index on Censorship » Blocking mobile ... - 0 views

  • A year ago, BART might have gotten away with the move with less public outcry. But in the wake of the Arab Spring, any police action in the West that conjures up images of censorship in the Middle East will inevitably alarm Americans. Along with reaction to the riots in the UK, the BART incident has awoken many people to the reality that technology creates complex new means of censorship anywhere in the world.
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