November 8, 2012

Occupy Ourselves

With Peace in Our Hearts and Power in Our Hands

In just a few short months we have reached a point of near saturation in which the modifier “Occupy” has been applied to almost every sphere of our beleaguered political economy. Not every such application has been equally useful, but for the most part the intended meaning of the word has come through in the sense of prying open the inner sanctum of the dominant order, contesting its authoritarian workings, and agitating for new processes based on the burgeoning tenets of egalitarianism and sustainability. The incisive cultural gaze spawned by #occupy has been cast toward every sacred shibboleth of modern society, and the ripples are palpable.

Yet in the process there has been more external consternation than internal reflection. The machinations of the 1 percent are what have largely brought us to the brink of social and ecological demise, so the primary thinking goes. The ruling class has consolidated their power, skewed the benefits toward themselves, passed the burdens onto the rest of us, and continually demonstrated the illegitimacy and inherent tyranny of their reign every time force has been used on peaceful demonstrators. They have done this and are still doing it, and we must confront their wanton ways with diligence and imagination.

There are key truths and critical insights to be found in this narrative, and its teachings have served to galvanize interest and mobilize people around the world. Still, there is a piece of the puzzle missing, one that is harder to own up to and that blurs the lines of culpability in a manner that is inconvenient for the impetus to organize against entrenched power. When we begin to peel back the layers, however, it becomes apparent that they did not take power so much as we gave it to them — and it has largely been our complicity with the forces of our own oppression that has led us here.

This in no way absolves those who would pervert that power for personal gain, nor does it excuse the outright blackmail-type pressures that have been brought to bear upon many of us to accede. But we cannot and must not pass the buck altogether, since to do so both flies in the face of reality and further delivers our power back over to those who would manipulate and abuse it. In fact, the realization that we are equally to blame possesses the corollary virtue of suggesting that we can also put things right and fix the mess we have made of our social structures and the habitat itself.

So here we are: we have occupied the symbolic spaces, the tangible ones, and the subtle ones. Now it is time to Occupy Ourselves, to decolonize our minds and restore our capacity to act from a place of autonomy and collective willpower. We can refuse to comply with oppressive forces, forswear allegiance to their mandates, forgo reliance on their wares, unplug our lifelines to their conveyances, reject their medicalizations and distractions, discontinue our support for their adventurist campaigns, fail to contribute to their bailouts and schemes, ignore their technocratic designs on mind control, cease making demands on their apparatchiks, and avert our gaze from their spectacles. Yes, we can.

Instead of protesting against abominable wars, let us also stop paying for them. Rather than complaining about corporations, usurious banks, and the indentured servitude of the student loan system, we can desist from paying into their coffers. Beyond pointing the finger at bought-off politicos, there is the option of refraining from participation in their sham elections. If we do not like business as usual, let us skip the charade of fighting city hall and occupy it as shelter instead. This is the essential core of the embedded symbolism in the protest encampments, and it follows in a long line of nonviolent civil disobedience from Jesus Christ and Henry David Thoreau to Dorothy Day and Mohandas Gandhi. It is an active principle, and the locus of its engagement is everywhere.

The key is not to bear this weight of noncompliance alone, but to do so in concert and in numbers sufficient to undermine the system’s capacity to continue in its present form. We recognize that the boundaries of the law do not map directly to the dictates of morality, and that much of the legal architecture in our midst is specifically designed to protect wealth and preserve inequality. Still, we also see that laws and norms in some instances can reflect the societal wisdom of the ages, and thus we do not transgress them out of self-indulgence but rather as our solemn duty as agents of promoting a just, equitable, and sustainable world.

Indeed, as Gandhi urged, noncooperation is merely a first step. The ensuing (and more challenging) phase of sustained resistance is the cultivation of constructive alternatives with which we can wholeheartedly cooperate and lend support. For too long we have had our survival pitted against our values, being coerced to participate in oppression and degradation as a condition of mere existence. We have been carefully cultivated to embrace the consensus reality plied by plutocrats, at best maintaining a schizophrenic false consciousness and at worst being consumed by the beast’s ravages. Lacking genuine meaning in our lives, we opt for artificial replacements on sale literally everywhere. We have looked into the void, recoiled in horror, and drowned our sorrows in commercial palliatives.

Now is the time to commit ourselves to finding other methods of coping, ones that challenge authority and reclaim autonomy. This does not mean that we become absolutists or Luddites, but instead that we get to choose which accoutrements of modernity are compatible with the good society and which are little more than artifacts of control despite their market-tested packaging. We can trade technologies for tools, fast food for slower sustenance, corporatocracy for consensus. The next paradigm is already here, having been incubated for decades within the shell of the old, carefully obscured by the vicissitudes of popular culture and crass commercialism; notice how when people begin to approach its realization, they are often met with sheer force to push them back into blithe torpor.

But the veil is now lifting — and consciousness once raised has a way of finding daylight. Occupy camps can be destroyed from coast to coast, but the essential illumination of protest and its eternal promise remains. This is the time to come back twice as strong, working harder and smarter, demonstrating our resiliency as a crucial factor of social and ecological survival. We will hang together, so that we do not have to hang alone. In the end, we come to realize that there is only us as we confront the true oppressor that lies within ourselves and our own complicity. In this, we find that all oppressions are interlinked, internalized, interposed, and interdependent. The struggle to surmount them lies just as much within us as it does with the robber barons in their lairs.

We can do this, and we must. I do not believe that the power has ever actually left us, but more so that we have had our attention pulled toward false idols and their machinations as the source of influence and authority. Today, we see the seeds of the better society growing up through the cracks in the hegemonic facade everywhere, sprouting forth with renewed vigor after an imposed dormancy. We will not be the consumers of this world, but its co-creators; we will not be witnesses to its destruction, but participants in its resurrection. Now, with peace in our hearts and power in our hands, the time to reclaim both ourselves and our world is upon us. This is our generational task, our shared responsibility, and our best hope for salvation. Let us meet it willingly, together.

 

Source: https://www.truth-out.org/occupy-ourselves/1323547985

Thirteen Ways Of Looking At A Revolution

1. Entrance

October 28

The man sitting behind the chain barrier between Portland, Oregon’s Lownsdale Square and the Southwest Fourth Avenue sidewalk hides one side of his face behind a black cloth and nods to no one in particular. He may or may not be worried about the unequal distribution of wealth in America, but he looks completely at home at the Occupy Portland encampment sprawled between here and Chapman Square across the street.

He turns down my request for an interview - “I guess not,” he says, in a slow-motion drawl - but he’s polite, reluctant, as if he wishes he could be a better host. He has no door to shut between us at a moment like this, but he starts to nod more intensely. Even in a tent city, there are ways to maintain privacy.

(Photo: Lance Page / Truthout)

Revolution can be awkward, especially for the media. On top of real or imagined pressures to define or interpret is the minimal obligation to accurately portray, even if something is undefinable and constantly changing.

That man’s tent, and hundreds of others, are gone now. For weeks, the two parks have been nothing but empty blocks of mud and matted leaves. Evictions of Occupy camps in several cities forced much of the movement into new and often mobile forums.

But the protesters still have their voice. And as column inches and news web sites fill up with words about what their message means now that camps nationwide are gone or threatened, the photographs that captured them at their peak take on new meaning. As the poet Wallace Stevens knew and as others haveechoed, sometimes images tell the story best.

(Photo: Lance Page / Truthout)

2. The Welfare State

(Photos: Lance Page (left), Jared Rodriguez / Truthout)

A homeless man sits on a bench eating a free sandwich. “This is luxury,” he says. “I got a kitchen. I got a bathroom. I can sleep without the cops messing with me. This is paradise.”

Junebug, as he calls himself, says he has been homeless for 17 years. He says he prefers the camp to many of Portland’s shelters, which he says open too late in the morning and don’t provide enough services.

A story in one of the local weeklies quotes multiple sources who say the presence of homeless people at the camp is disruptive; that pattern has echoed in the media around the country. But Junebug says he goes to every general assembly. He wants to show me hard copies of emails about a financial conflict on the agenda at tonight’s meeting. He leaves his dinner and takes me to the library tent, the legal tent, the media tent. All the copies are gone, but he takes my business card.

3. The Criminal Element

Steve “A.J.” Walker. (Photo:Lance Page / Truthout)

The Occupy camp is not a nightclub, and Steve Walker is not perched on a black leather stool checking ID’s. But Walker, who goes by A.J. on the peace and safety committee he heads, has that benevolent yet threatening air and a radio on his belt, and he takes his duties seriously. He says he landed the job two days after he finished a 31-month sentence for theft and racketeering, and, volunteer or not, he plans to keep it.

Walker says addiction problems landed him in trouble with the law. Now he’s sober, and he wants to work with ex-offenders as a drug and alcohol counselor. “The first thing I decided I needed to do was be successful in my transition, so when I talk to these guys, I can say, ‘This is how I did it.’”

Someone passes by with a pointed rallying cry: “Are you a journalist? It’s time to smoke pot.” If Walker is tempted, it doesn’t show.

4. The Salesman

Chris Bolduc. (Photo: Lance Page / Truthout)

“I’m just trying to figure out where I fit in,” says Chris Bolduc, who walks to the camp every day from the studio he rents nearby.

“I’m on the edge right now. If it wasn’t for help from my family, I’d be out here all the time,” he says. The Bay Area native says he used to sell Comcast Internet service door to door, but the 60-hour weeks and commission-only pay were barely survivable. So Bolduc quit, but he still hits the street two or three days a week for Occupy marches, delivering dissent instead of a sales pitch.

Other recent stops on Bolduc’s journey: A phone call with his bank to get to the bottom of a $300 overdraft. The nearby tent of an unemployed friend who is struggling with “emotional problems.” And the street theater arrest of Condoleezza Rice for treason, sedition and war crimes. He smiles for the first time when he tells that story.

5. The Caretaker

Michael Stone. (Photo: Lance Page / Truthout)

Therapist Michael Stone could charge $120 an hour if he wanted to, but he’d rather not. The licensed professional counselor gives free sessions at the camp’s north end for two hours every afternoon. At his private practice, his sliding scale is $25-$55.

“I think we have to switch to kind of a creative poverty model,” says Stone. “If you have an old car, it should be applauded - not like you haven’t ‘made it’ yet.” We should use old things, make them last longer, he says. Conserve everything. With one exception:

Stone is tired of fighting the mental health battle inside a plutocracy. “You can only do so much when the system is so corrupt. You can help people find peace in their lives, but when it’s within a corrupt system? It’s hard to find peace.”

6. Food

(Photo: Lance Page / Truthout)

The fire department shows up just before dinnertime and a local TV news crew is out to film the action. Safety fliers are handed out. Instructions are given. It starts to rain, and then, to rain harder.

“They’re the 99 percent, too,” says one of the cooks. The red and black uniforms stand out against the semi-clean clothes of people who’ve been camping for weeks.

7. Clothing

A flannel-shirted man sits on an upturned box, dumping used clothing from a pillowcase into the crate in front of him. “Smell them! They’re clean!” he yells, and then yells it a few more times, like someone trying to turn a profit, except he’s not.

(Photo: Jared Rodriguez / Truthout)

(Photo: Lance Page / Truthout)

(Photo: Lance Page / Truthout)

8. Shelter

A tarp near the camp’s kitchen is pitched over a bronze statue of a pioneer family - father pointing west, son holding Bible, mother holding father and son. The center of the tarp rests on the father’s head. The statue is called “The Promised Land.”

(Photo: Jared Rodriguez / Truthout)

(Photo: Jared Rodriguez / Truthout)

(Photo: Lance Page / Truthout)

(Photo: Jared Rodriguez / Truthout)

9. Carnival

A young, brown-haired woman stands near the water fountain. Painted whiskers extend from her nose to her cheeks. A kitten on a leash drinks from the fountain. Behind them, a woman with ginger-colored dreadlocks hoists a step stool over her head.

They could have been the subjects of an early New York Times story on the Occupy protest in Manhattan’s financial district, which claimed that protesters were seizing nothing more than“the opportunity to air societal grievances as carnival.”

(Photos: Lance Page / Truthout)

But the cat woman’s theatrical makeup is inconspicuous here. Across the walkway, a television news reporter stands motionless in an immaculate trench coat under the center of a worn tarp, waiting out the rainstorm as it draws a wet line a few feet from his polished shoes. Unless he’s the master of ceremonies, he’s the one who looks to be in costume.

10. The Margins of Society

According to an AP story: “In Portland, for example, protests were initially peaceful gatherings. Then the city’s large number of homeless people moved in, transforming the camp into an open-air treatment center for drug addiction and mental illness.” In the experience of Stone, the professional and volunteer counselor, the division wasn’t quite so neat.

(Photo: Jared Rodriguez / Truthout)

(Photo: Lance Page / Truthout)

(Photo: Lance Page / Truthout)

He says he spoke with many people who appeared to be suffering from illnesses such as schizophrenia and bipolar disorder, and “the other half of what I’m doing is people coming here with stressors and life issues.” Stone also offered protesters free sessions at his regular office. He said one man took him up on it: “He was an upper-class person whose life fell apart because he lost his job and his health insurance.”

11. Anger

(Photos: Lance Page / Truthout)

The media tent is Junebug’s last stop with me on our search for the printed emails about accusations of financial misconduct by members of the protesters’ financial committee. The concerns included incorporation papers filed with the secretary of state on behalf of Occupy Portland, a decision Junebug and a media representative, Jude, say was made without the permission of the General Assembly.

The tent’s copies are all out today, but the outrage is not. Junebug and Jude start to paraphrase the labyrinth of suspicions and resolutions, but in the end, Junebug throws up his hands: “How can I ask for accountability from Congress and the Senate if I can’t get accountability from these motherfuckers down here?”

12. The Promised Land

November 17

A strand of barbed wire tops the chain link fencing that guards where the camp used to be. Across the barrier, the only sign of life is a woman resting her head on her husband’s shoulder. He wraps his arm around her and points west while their son holds his Bible. But if this isn’t the promised land, they’ll never get there - the bronze family is anchored to a slab of granite.

(Photo: Lance Page / Truthout)

About a mile north of the statue, Christopher Yarrow drums on his washtub on the Steel Bridge’s pedestrian walkway, timing his rhythm to a chant he learned at the Wall Street protests.

Yarrow’s drumbeat echoes across the Willamette River and over the sound of the news helicopter that hovers above a crowd about a quarter mile away. About 200 people mass together to wait across the street from the bridge’s westbound vehicle crossing.

(Photo: Jared Rodriguez / Truthout)

13. Law and Order

“I’m not ready to get arrested quite yet,” says Yarrow, who has worked as an importer for ten years. “I kept my record really squeaky clean - you know, just going through airports internationally.”

The rest of the protesters will attempt to take the bridge, but they haven’t moved yet. From where the crowd gathers, the view of the westbound side is blocked except for one patrol car, but 16 police officers guard the eastbound exit. Some wear riot gear, their face shields still flipped open to reveal their eyes.

 

Source: https://www.truth-out.org/thirteen-ways-looking-revolution/1323283309

Moscow Set For Major Protest Against Putin

Tens of thousands of people are expected to protest in Russia today in what could be the biggest demonstration since the collapse of the Soviet Union.

Around 30,000 are expected to gather in Moscow in the biggest challenge yet to prime minister Vladimir Putin’s grip on power. The gathering is simply called ‘For Fair Elections’.

Organisers say they want to overturn the result of last Sunday’s parliamentary election which they say was rigged in favour of Mr Putin’s United Russia party.

It lost over 20% of its seats in the Duma and critics and observers say even that result was inflated by fraud. International observers reported widespread ballot-stuffing.

Organisers are hoping a symbol of their movement will be established in the form of a white ribbon.

If today’s protest is a success, they face the challenge of developing a long-term plan as to how the opposition can make a real impact.

Mr Putin still enjoys an approval rating of around 60% and remains peerless on the Russian political scene.

Around 50,000 police and interior ministry troops have been deployed to control the event which organisers admit could get out of hand, with anger reaching boiling point.

An initial demonstration in Revolution Square, a stone’s throw from the Kremlin, was abandoned amid fractious rows between the opposition.

The authorities had only sanctioned it for 300 people before offering an alternative location for 30,000 in a less obtrusive location, Bolotnaya Square, on an island on the other side of the river from Russia’s seat of power.

Many of today’s demonstrators are first-time protesters, mobilised by corruption and Mr Putin’s stranglehold on Russian politics.

This morning, interior ministry trucks filled with troops lined the streets in preparation for the crowds.

Snow began to fall as organisers set up the stage that will be the focal point and platform for opposition leaders like Boris Nemtsov, one of the hundreds who have been arrested in smaller protests over the past week.

 

Source: https://uk.news.yahoo.com/photos/moscow-set-major-protest-against-putin-photo-16127451_400x240-074724105.html;_ylt=AtQBCy9.nfWkXVNRnMr2YZ3p0Mh_;_ylu=X3oDMTQzdGZyajBmBG1pdANBcnRpY2xlIFJlbGF0ZWQEcGtnAzg0OWJiNTI1LWNhNjAtM2FjYy1iNTEzLTk2MDUwYjc2ZTJhNgRwb3MDMQRzZWMDTWVkaWFBcnRpY2xlUmVsYXRlZAR2ZXIDYWI5MjE4YzAtMjMwNi0xMWUxLTliZjktYjhiNWVmMjg2ZmMz;_ylg=X3oDMTJwODA5ajh1BGludGwDZ2IEbGFuZwNlbi1nYgRwc3RhaWQDNjUzYzllODYtYWY2My0zMDQ2LWExYjYtNzJmY2U4MWU5MzVkBHBzdGNhdAMEcHQDc3RvcnlwYWdlBHRlc3QD;_ylv=3

Arab Revolutions Choose Islam

First post-revolution elections in Arab countries turn out to be pro-Islamist. In Tunisia and Egypt, the majority of the people voted for Islamist parties.

The first round of Egypt’s elections is led by the Freedom and Justice Party (ex-Muslim Brotherhood which had been banned by Mubarak for decades). It was supported by 40 percent of the voters. Next comes Al-Nour, a radical Salafi party. None of the democratic movements except The Egyptian Bloc have made it into the coalition government. Although the final results will only be known on January 13, the general election trend is already quite clear.

Observers report a similar, pro-Islamist choice prevalent in Tunisia which was the firestarter of Arab revolutions. Tunisian Islamists won the elections but have to share the power with secular parties. Now, the victorious Islamists claim that they’re not radical at all and pledge to retain all the democratic values, including women’s rights, which is a serious issue in Islamic countries. Arab countries have two scenarios – a radical or a democratic one, depending on the country’s specific circumstances, an expert in Oriental Studies Sergei Demidenko believes:

“The domestic and foreign policies of Arab countries will depend on the historical circumstances in which they have found themselves. Turkey’s leading Justice and Development Party took the helm as a moderate Islamist movement and now it’s not Islamist at all. So we shouldn’t jump to conclusions.”

Professor of the Moscow State Institute of Foreign Relations Veniamin Popov explains the success of Islamist parties:

“The Arab revolutions were secular but Islamists were active in the revolutions’ final stages, which is natural as they had been the most persecuted groups under the previous regimes and they were more organized than young rebels who were brought together by social networks only and had no parties or factions. That’s why the Islamists were more efficient.”

Popularity of radical movements is also inspired by external pressure, which can be seen in Syria. The country’s opposition, which is supported from abroad, rejects any dialogue and therefore, unrest continues, which creates a vicious circle.

Although experts find talks about total islamization premature, they nevertheless warn that the rise of political Islam could affect the whole of the Middle East, and mainly the Arab-Israeli conflict. 6 mln Jews in Israel are surrounded by about 400 mln Arabs and the latter may be tempted to attack the country, having gained support from other 1,5 mln Muslims from all over the world. Thus, the global community needs to encourage the settlement of the conflict right now, mainly in Palestine and Israel, as radical Islamic sentiments may be slowed down by the creation of an independent Palestinian state and the protection of Israel.

 

Source: https://english.ruvr.ru/2011/12/02/61398611.html

At Least 23 Dead In Intensifying Syria Violence

BEIRUT (Reuters) - At least 23 people were reported killed in Syria on Saturday as violence intensified in the eighth month of unrest against President Bashar al-Assad, pushing the death toll close to 4,600, according to a leading activist group.

In a three-hour, night-time battle in the north-western city of Idlib near the Turkish border, seven members of the security forces, five army rebels and three civilians were killed, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR) said.

Five civilians were shot dead by security forces in central Homs province, and a man’s body was returned to his family five days after he had been arrested.

The United Nations’ top human rights forum has condemned Syria for “gross and systematic” violations by its forces, including executions and the imprisonment of some 14,000 people.

Syrian authorities say they are fighting foreign-backed “terrorist groups” trying to spark civil war who have killed some 1,100 soldiers and police since March.

An “Arab Spring” of revolts - triggered by an uprising in Tunisia in January - has reshaped the political landscape of the Middle East this year and toppled leaders in Egypt, Libya and Yemen.

Syrian opposition groups say defectors from Syria’s conscript army are increasing their attacks on government security forces trying to suppress revolt against 41 years of Assad family rule.

Syria faces deepening international and regional isolation, with the Arab League, the European Union and the United States piling on increasingly tough sanctions to pressure Damascus to stop the bloodshed and talk to its opponents.

China and Russia oppose sanctions and last month scuppered Western efforts to pass a U.N. Security Council resolution condemning Assad’s government.

SECURITY FORCES IN ACTION

The state news agency SANA gave a detailed account of operations by Syrian security forces, including clashes with “terrorists,” arrests, the explosion of roadside bombs and the defusing of explosive devices.

It said special forces caught dozens of wanted men in the area of Tel Kalakh who had been smuggling weapons, drugs and armed men from Lebanon into Syria.

Special forces also captured 14 gunmen who, SANA said, had been killing and kidnapping civilians and soldiers.

According to the British-based SOHR, nearly a quarter of the 4,600 on its death toll are from Syrian security forces.

In Deraa, “special forces clashed with armed terrorist groups trying to attack security centres in rural parts of the province. One of the gunmen was killed in the exchange of fire,” SANA reported.

“Special forces also clashed with armed terrorists in Idlib after they tried to attack a public roads building and several security detachments. Special forces were able to kill one of the gunmen and wound a number of others. One member of the security forces was injured.”

Army engineers in Hama disabled two improvised explosive devices planted in the city, the agency reported.

The SANA correspondent said a source told the agency two other IEDs had exploded, one when a security patrol was passing near a sports stadium, injuring two. The second IED explosion caused no injuries.

In Lattakia, an IED exploded in front of an electrical workshop, starting a fire in which two people died, the agency reported.

NO STRATEGIC IRAN TIES POST-ASSAD

The head of the opposition Syrian National Council (SNC), said the isolation of Syria was accelerating and he was pushing for more international intervention against Damascus and seeking Russian support.

Burhan Ghalioun told the Wall Street Journal that he envisioned a post-Assad Syria distanced from anti-Western Iran and Hezbollah and would move closer to the Arab League as well as Gulf Arab states - countries that are Sunni-led and wary of Iran, which is a non-Arab, Shi’ite power in the region.

Syria has fostered close ties with Tehran since Iran’s 1979 Islamic Revolution.

The United States accuses Damascus of helping Iran funnel weapons to Hezbollah, a powerful militant and political Shi’ite Muslim movement in Lebanon that fought a 34-day war against Israel in 2006.

“There will be no special relationship with Iran. This is the core issue - the military alliance,” Ghalioun told the U.S. paper, though he said he did not oppose maintaining economic ties. “Breaking the exceptional relationship means breaking the strategic military alliance.”

With pressure rising against Damascus, only four countries voted against the U.N. human rights forum’s condemnation of Syria which sets the stage for possible action by U.N. political bodies in New York.

Russia does not want to provide the West with what it believes could be a justification for military intervention in Syria, like the NATO air campaign that helped rebels topple Libya’s Muammar Gaddafi in August.

Ghalioun said the opposition is still trying to persuade Moscow that steps such creating a buffer zone, a humanitarian corridor or a no-fly zone to protect civilians would not lead inevitably to armed intervention.

“This is different than the organized military intervention that happened in Iraq for regime change,” he said. “We count on Syrians to bring down the Syrian regime…We want the international community to stop the oppression of the Syrian people.”

Western powers have shown little appetite for armed intervention in Syria because of the complexity of its sectarian divisions and the risk of escalation posed by its alliance with Iran.

 

Source: https://uk.news.yahoo.com/overnight-clash-north-syria-kills-15-activists-094143819.html

Egypt: El Baradei Outed by Own Movement as Western Puppet

Now almost a year after the US-engineered “Arab Spring” began, it seems protest leader Mohamed ElBaradei has predictably outlived his usefulness, albeit much sooner than expected.

According to Egypt’s Almasry Alyoum, a member of ElBaradei’s own National Front for Change, Mamdouh Hamza, has outed him as “having strong ties to Zionist institutions” and sitting directly on the board of trustees of George Soros’ International Crisis Group. ElBaradei, who has been fighting similar (and true) accusations for months, is now facing perhaps an irrevocable setback emanating from within his own movement.

Speculation over Hamza’s latest accusations centers on his prominent role in helping ElBaradei carry out the Western-backed destabilization of Egypt and now the possibility of some sort of rift forming within the movement. News sources confirm Hamza’s role in facilitating the protests, where he has been providing logistical support to protesters in addition to his leadership role.

He has also joined April 6 in Tahrir Square on several occasions and shared the stage at events with Google’s Wael Ghonim. His involvement with the US-trained, funded, and equipped April 6 movement stretch back as far as at least February, 2011.

Hamza’s Background
Upon researching Hamza’s background, startling information can be found. In 2004, on invitation of the Queen of England he traveled to London for a “special reception.” He was then placed under house-arrest after being accused of plotting the assassination of four senior Egyptian government officials. The would-be London-based assassin allegedly approached by Hamza, turned out to be an undercover British agent running a “sting operation.” He was tried and finally acquitted in 2006. Both British MI5 and the US FBI are notorious experts at entrapment, and it may have been at this point Hamza became a compromised foreign collaborator.

Hamza and his “Hamza Associates” engineering conglomerate are now deeply rooted in British corporate-financier interests as well as a chief facilitator in bringing in Wall Street and London’s insidious NGO “civil society” overlay - a modern day imperial network.

Hamza’s Ties to Foreign Corporate-Financier Interests
Hamza himself is listed as an individual member of the British-Egyptian Business Association (BEBA) and his Hamza Associates listed as a corporate member. BEBA of course includes the summation of London’s corporate-financier interests in Egypt including HSBC, Shell, Barclays Bank, British Petroleum, Hess, Sygenta (GMO), Financial Times, Standard Charter Bank, Unilever, Vodafone, GlaxoSmithKline, Credit Swiss, and G4S security contractors, while the board of directors includes the current British Ambassador to Egypt, Dominic Asquith and executives drawn from both Egyptian and British corporations.

Knowing full well that Hamza is at least one member of BEBA who played a leading role in the foreign-backed unrest in Egypt, Ambassador Asquith’s words in the BEBA 2011 annual report are quite revealing:

“These are truly historic times. To be a part of them is a privilege. Egypt had its popular uprising early, but the consequences will take some time to work through not least because the third Prime Minister and his team have yet to crystalise their policies – and there is likely to be a fourth before the year is out.

The birth pains of democracy have been felt by the economy. Economists forecast that overall growth for FY 2011 will be around 3% rather than the 5.7% which had been expected. The transition government has placed a real emphasis on the need to accelerate economic reform, tackle corruption and wastage and improve further the climate in Egypt for international investment. There is a silver lining to every cloud!”

Asquith would then go on to enumerate the vast potential in exploiting Egypt’s 80 million strong domestic market and concluded by stating that “British goods and services are held in high regard in Egypt and the UK enjoys a good reputation in the market.” That might change however, should Egyptians ever learn how those who make these highly esteemed “goods and services” conspired to destabilize their nation and fill their streets with chaos while they filled political offices with co-conspirators.

Hamza’s Ties to Globalist “Civil Society”
Hamza’s conglomerate, Hamza Associates, also appears to be facilitating the creep of Wall Street and London’s “civil society” into Egypt. Hamza is listed next to Proctor & Gamble, USAID, Vodafone, and the European Commission as partners supporting the “National Council for Childhood and Motherhood.” Hamza is also cited as a supporter for Unicef’s Girls Education Initiative.

While these benignly titled organizations seem to be a force of good, and their websites rife with pages of smiling children enjoying their new UN-funded schools, in reality they represent the erosion of national and individual sovereignty as unelected, corporate-funded international arbiters featuring nebulous leadership and agendas, move in to socially engineer Egyptian society to conform to a contrived “international standard.” For Egypt, it is up to the people and their local and national governments to self-determine what constitutes their rights under their own laws, how their families function, how their children are cared for, raised, and educated, as well as how other social issues should be resolved.

Hamza’s Move to the Lead
Quite clearly, while Mohamed ElBaradei represented a pliable and easily compromised puppet of the West, Mamdouh Hamza, his accuser and likely successor, possesses a better hidden and broader operational capacity to actually carry the current destabilization he is a leading member of and the building of a Wall Street-London centric order in the ashes of the premeditated Arab Spring he helped bring to fruition.

While it is not clear yet why Hamza has turned on ElBaradei, a likely explanation involves ElBaradei’s terminally negative public perception and an opportunity for Hamza to score political points as “exposing a collaborator” thus shoring up his movement’s hobbled legitimacy. Through Hamza’s skillful exploitation of the “Zionist” card and its expected Pavlovian response amongst protesters, he and his foreign-backers may believe they have succeeded in earning the trust of their impressionable followers where ElBaradei had failed. In any case, it appears that the entire leadership of the National Front for Change constitutes entirely compromised foreign collaborators, one worse than the other. Coupled with the presence and support of US-trained, equipped, and backed April 6, they are poised to lead the nation of Egypt into an unfortunate future.

Source: https://flipthepyramid.com/index.php/entry/egypt-elbaradei-outed-by-own-movement-as-western-puppet

Islamist Muslim Brotherhood Leads Polls In Egypt

Egypt’s Islamists claim they’re leading the polls in the country’s parliamentary election. The first poll of its kind in years there saw millions turn out to vote for their future, with results from the first round expected within hours.

 

Egypt ‘Virginity Test’ Victim Waits For Her Verdict

CAIRO: Samira Ibrahim, one of the 13 Egyptian women who was forced to take a “virginity test” in the military prison in Hikestep after attending a protest in Cairo in March, has to wait till December 27 to hear her verdict.

“The prolongation of her case can be seen as another step by the military to bear down attempts of women to speak up and fight against the military’s misuse of power, especially with regard to human right violations,” Neveene Edeid, working at the New Woman Foundation (NWF), stated.

“A postponement of such an urgent case bears evidence that it is not taken seriously enough. It is a bad sign of trying to manipulate her case,” she continued.

“However, on the other hand,” Edeid added, “having time till December gives us the possibility to build up more pressure as at the moment everybody is so enthusiastic about the ongoing election process.

“We need human right groups, the youth and women activists for her case but at the moment their thoughts circle around the election.”

Ibrahim, who was electrocuted and forced to take a “virginity test” after attending a protest in Cairo in March in Tahrir Square, was the only out of 17 women who filed an official complaint with the military prosecution to pursue criminal action against her alleged abusers, and registered a case with the State Council Administrative Court to appeal the use of ‘virginity tests’ in all military facilities.

Her verdict, which was supposed to take place on Tuesday, November 30, was expected to be either a “monumental day for women’s rights in the Middle East, or if history repeats itself, […] a shameful day for women’s rights.”

With the postponement of her case to December 27, the latter might come true. “I know the odds are against me” but “I have to speak up about this and fight for justice,” Ibrahim said.

Human Rights Watch interviewed Ibrahim and another victim, Salwa al-Hosseini, and reviewed the testimony of two others obtained by doctors at the Nadim Centre for the Rehabilitation of Victims of Torture.

All four concurred in their statements that on the morning of March 10, two officers went into the prison cell holding the 17 women and asked them who among them was married and who was not.

“Then they told the seven of us that they were going to examine us to see if we were really virgins. They took us out one by one. When it was my turn they took me to a bed in a passageway in front of the cell.”

“There were lots of soldiers around and they could see me. I asked if the soldiers could move away and the officer escorting me tasered me. The woman prison guard in plain clothes stood at my head and then a man in military uniform examined me with his hand for several minutes. It was painful. He took his time. It was clear he was doing it on purpose to humiliate me.”

“I was beaten, electrocuted, and forced to strip naked in front of male officers,” Ibrahim told Human Rights Watch.

The official complaint before the Administrative Court states that Ibrahim “was exposed to the ugliest forms of humiliation, torture and a violation of the sanctity of her body.”

In a court hearing on October 25, the State Council lawyer denied this allegation and called for the dismissal of the case based on lack of evidence.

At the moment, five human rights organizations are supporting her case, including the Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights, the Nadim Center for the Rehabilitation of Victims of Violence and Torture, the Hisham Mubarak Law Center, the New Woman Foundation, Nazra for Feminist Studies, and the No to Military Trials Group.

A verdict for Ibrahim could be a remarkable victory not only for Ibrahim, but also for all Egyptian women subjected to sexual assault as most of rape and sexual assault cases in Egypt go unreported.

This is not at least evident by the fact that while Ibrahim’s battle has received adequate attention in international press, local Egyptian media has given the 25-year-old little to no coverage.

“It breaks my heart that international outrage over my case is stronger than that of my fellow Egyptians,” Ibrahim says.

Violations against women are therefore hugely underreported in Egypt – one recent report from 2003 found that as many as 98 percent of rape and sexual assault cases are not reported to authorities.

 

Source: https://bikyamasr.com/49852/egypt-%E2%80%98virginity-test%E2%80%99-victim-waits-for-her-verdict/

Update: Egypt Imports 21 Tons Of Tear Gas From The Us, Port Staff Refuses To Sign For It

CAIRO: The arrival of 7 and half tons of tear gas to Egypt’s Suez port created conflict after the responsible officials at the port refused to sign and accept it for fear it would be used to crackdown on Egyptian protesters.

The shipment has been moved by the ministry of interior to its Cairo storage facility, amidst strict and secretive security measures. Local reports say the staff, initially under investigation, have been spared investigation after having a discussion over the matter with their superiors.

Local news sites published documents regarding the shipment shows that the cargo that arrived in 479 barrels from the United States was scheduled to be delivered to the ministry of interior.

The reports also mentioned in the documents that a second shipment of 14 tons of tear gas was expected, making the total 21 tons, in one week.

The importing of tear gas comes after thousands of tear gas canisters were fired at Egyptian protesters last week as clashes raged in downtown Cairo, just off from the iconic Tahrir Square, where thousands of protesters had gathered.

The gas used has angered activists, who say the effects of exposure has yet to wear off, with a number of protesters telling Bikyamasr.com that they have coughing fits, chest pains, blurred vision and their arms often shake. According to the Journal of Royal Medicine, the use of CS Gas – the most common choice of Egypt’s police last week – can have lasting symptoms for over one year.

Egypt’s al-Shorouk newspaper reported that upon the arrival of the shipment, massive disagreements broke out between employees, where five employees refused to sign for the shipment, one after the other.

The five, being dubbed by activists as the “brave five”, were to be refereed to a investigative committee as to why they refused to perform their duties, which has since called off.

The news about the shipment’s arrival stirred the Twittersphere, after it was consumed all day with the country’s first post-revolution elections, and activists mocked the reinforcement of weapons that is being used against them.

Many commented, saying that “gas bombs are definably more important than importing wheat to make bread”.

Source: https://bikyamasr.com/49799/egypt-import-tear-gas-from-us

Libya: Saif Gaddafi warns captors about Islamist leaders in new video

By telegraph.co.uk on November 22, 2011 - 11:54AM GMT

Shot on the day of his capture, a new video shows Saif al-Islam Gaddafi smiling with his captors before issuing them a warning about Libya’s new radical leaders.

Follow the latest developments in the Arab Spring with our live coverage

New footage of Saif al-Islam Gaddafi’s first hours in captivity has emerged showing his Libyan revolutionary captors posing with the injured son of late dictator Muammar Gaddafi.

The footage was filmed at the safe house to which he was brought before his transfer to Zintan.

Standing in stark contrast to the behaviour of the soldiers who captured his father, Saif’s captors are filmed treating the 39 year-old with respect.

The fighters who ambushed his car can be seen and heard offering him food and drink, discussing his medical needs and assuring him of his safety in their custody.

With his fingers bandaged after a Nato air strike outside Bani Walid, Saif even manages a smile after his headdress is carefully removed by one soldier.

They soon learn that although humbled, Gaddafi’s son has not changed his views on the threat posed to Libya by radical Islamists such as Abdulhakim Bilhadj, leader of the Tripoli military council.

Belhadj is believed to have links with the Taliban and al-Qaeda after fighting in Afghanistan with the Mujahiddeen after the Soviet invasion in 1979.

He was later arrested and allegedly tortured by the US Central Intelligence Agency in 2004 before being returned to Libya where he was jailed in Tripoli’s notorious Abu Salim prison before his release in 2010.

Saif warned: “Just give them a couple of months or max one year and you will find out the reality but please don’t deny that on the day Saif al Islam was taken prisoner he warned you of all that.”

Sources:

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/africaandindianocean/libya/8906620/Libya-Saif-Gaddafi-warns-captors-about-Islamist-leaders-in-new-video.html

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2064829/Libya-descend-conflict-weeks-predicts-captured-Saif-hero-tribesman-claims-forsook-million-euros-betray-Colonel-Gaddafis-son.html