January 20, 2013

Islamists And Secularists In Tunisia Stand-Off

TUNIS (Reuters) - Thousands of Tunisian Islamists and secularists staged parallel protests outside the interim parliament on Saturday in a dispute over how big a role Islam should play in society after the country’s “Arab Spring” revolution.

Tensions have been running high between the two camps since the revolt in January scrapped a ban on Islamists and paved the way for a moderate Islamist party to come to power at the head of a coalition government.

The latest round of protests was sparked when a group of hardline Islamists occupied a university campus near the capital to demand segregation of sexes in class and the right for women students to wear a full-face veil.

About 3,000 Islamists gathered outside the constitutional assembly in the Bardo district of the Tunis on Saturday, separated by a police cordon from a counter-protest by about 1,000 secularists.

The Islamists say the secularist elite which has run the country since independence from France is still restricting their freedom to express their faith. Their rivals say the Islamists are trying to impose an Islamic state in what has been one of the Arab world’s most liberal countries.

The Islamist protesters at the rally carried placards saying: “We support the legitimacy of the majority!,” “Islamic Tunisia is not secular!,” and “No to secularist extremism.”

An Islamist protester, Nourdine Machfer, said the Tunisian people had expressed their will when they handed victory to the moderate Islamist Ennahda party in an election in October.

“It’s bizarre. Today in Tunisia we are living in a dictatorship of the minority,” Machfer told Reuters. “They should respect the will of the people, who have made their views known.”

Ennahda issued a statement saying that it did not support the Islamist protest outside parliament.

ISLAMIST POWER

However, secularist opponents said they believed Ennahda’s true agenda was to create an Islamic state by stealth.

“The Islamists … want to use the constitution to take power, and stage a coup d’etat against democracy,” said one of the secularist protesters, Raja Dali.

“They want to give all the power to the prime minister,” she said, referring to senior Ennahda official Hamadi Jbeli who is his party’s nominee to lead the coalition government.

Tunisia’s struggle to reconcile the rival camps is being watched closely in Egypt, where an Islamist-affiliated party performed strongly in the first phase of a parliamentary election.

Tunisia became the birth-place of the Arab Spring when a vegetable seller, Mohamed Bouazizi, set fire to himself in protest at government repression. His suicide prompted a wave of unrest which forced president Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali to step down.

Tunisia’s revolution inspired revolutions which ousted entrenched rulers in Libya and Egypt, as well as upheavals in Syria and Yemen.

Saturday’s protest was the first time that both Islamists and secularists had staged simultaneous protest. Shouts and jeers were exchanged between the two groups but there were no clashes.

Ennahda is in an awkward position because it wants to be seen to be defending the rights of Muslims to express their faith but at the same time it is wary of alarming secularists and Western governments by appearing too close to Islamist hardliners.

The latest flare-up of tension is complicating efforts by Ennahda and its two secularist coalition partners to agree on the make-up of a coalition government.

It is also distracting the country’s new rulers from addressing the high unemployment and low incomes that are the main preoccupation for ordinary Tunisians.

One young man on Saturday stood between the rival crowds with tape over his mouth, a loaf of bread in his hand, and a placard which read: “I am with neither of you.. I am in favour of jobs and dignity.”

 

Source: http://uk.news.yahoo.com/islamists-secularists-tunisia-stand-off-133221035.html

Egypt: Between Sharia Law And Anarchy

Results of the first stage of Egyptian parliamentary elections are due to be announced on Friday. Exit polls suggest that the Islamist Muslim Brotherhood have attracted some 40 per cent of the votes.

The result of this week’s voting was to be announced on Wednesday, but the Central Election Commission delayed it twice. First it said the ballots of Egyptians living abroad had arrived late. Then it maintained it had failed to count all the ballots on time due to an unexpectedly high voter turnout, which is estimated at 70 per cent. The commission warned that the official announcement may be delayed further to Saturday.

However preliminary results expectedly point to the Muslim Brotherhood and its allies as the winners of the election, with some the brotherhood’s Freedom and Justice Party claiming 40 per cent of the votes.

Salafi party Al-Nur gathered the second-largest support base in the first round of the election. An estimated 20 per cent of ballots have been cast in their favor.

This is certain to create a bad mood among Egyptian secularists. The Muslim Brotherhood is moderately Islamic, and the Salafi have even stricter views on religion. There were fears that the two would form an alliance and turn Egypt into a theocracy, but so far the two political movements have been keeping their distance.

It is the first election held since the ousting of President Hosni Mubarak in February. It is being conducted in three stages. This week, polling was undertaken in nine out of 27 provinces, including Cairo and Alexandria. Future voting will be in rural areas, where Islamists traditionally have stronger support than in the cities, and is bound to increase positions of the Muslim Brotherhood and the Salafis.

Meanwhile, protests are continuing in Cairo’s Tahrir Square, where demonstrators demand that the Supreme Military Council steps down. The protesters believe that the general election will not bring any substantial change as long as the generals, who served Mubarak’s regime, remain in power.

Over the past few weeks there were violent clashes between the demonstrators and security officers. Forty-three people have been killed and a thousand injured in the latest high-profile instances of the ongoing violence. Protesters accuse police of using live ammunition, an internationally-banned kind of tear gas, as well as tactics of brutal intimidation.

 

Source: http://rt.com/news/egypt-vote-results-islamists-835/

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:

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

http://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