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Arab Spring, Egypt, Egypt and Muslim Brotherhood, Egypt and Protests, Egypt Coup, Muslim Brotherhood, War Crime
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04 Thursday Jul 2013
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Arab Spring, Egypt, Egypt and Muslim Brotherhood, Egypt and Protests, Egypt Coup, Muslim Brotherhood, War Crime
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03 Wednesday Jul 2013
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Egypt, Egypt and Mubarak, Egypt and Muslim Brotherhood, Egypt and Protests, Egypt Coup, Mohammed Morsi, Politics πΌ π³ πͺ, UN, USA πΊπΈ
No one has benefited from the army’s decision to oust the country’s first democratically elected President – not the Muslim Brotherhood and their supporters who took 51 per cent of the vote in the national elections, nor the celebrating mob who at best can conjure up 25 per cent at the ballot box.
Already, there is talk of putting in place a strong man, someone who will be able to deliver stability. And that may well be the best solution to prevent this nation from breaking apart.
For no election can ever be regarded as anything more than a sham, after what has just happened in Egypt.
The Muslim Brotherhood must have known they were living on borrowed time, but not even in their worst nightmares could they have imagined that they would last just one year.
Egypt has taken a step back today – the journey to modernity championed by Arab intellectuals has succumbed to the power of the mob, that Arab Street that the West has so warned us all of.
Perhaps, intellectuals in the West are right – the Arab mind is not capable of understanding a process as brilliant, yet as nuanced as democracy.
It hasn’t worked in Iraq, and now it’s completely failed in Egypt.
No one forced the crowds out on the street, they came of their own accord, and they will have to live with the consequences of their actions which could reverberate for decades to come.
Egypt may never recover from the army’ s prehistoric actions.
And as a result, we may just seen the beginning of the break-up of this north African state.
(Pictured above – the head of Egypt’s armyΒ Gen Abdul Fattah al-Sisi on state TV announcing that the constitution had been suspended and that the chief justice of the constitutional court would take on Mr Morsi’s powers)
Posted by The Template News, Current Affairs and Sport Website | Filed under Analysis π, Comment, International News, Politics πΌ π³ πͺ, Terrorism
03 Wednesday Jul 2013
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Democracy, Egypt, Egypt and Mubarak, Egypt and Muslim Brotherhood, Egypt and Protests, Egypt Coup, Mubarak, Muslim Brotherhood
With the army’s ‘sort it out’ deadline approaching, the democratically elected government of Mohammed Morsi remains defiant.
The Muslim Brotherhood did after all win elections for the presidency and the prime minster’s office, with turn out high.
That was history – the first time Egypt had ever allowed its people choose who leads their nation.
And yet a year on, some people are trying to bring it to an end.
This is not the birth pangs of a new democracy in Egypt, but rather an attempt by a mob to overthrow a ruler chosen by the majority of people.
As a result, those of the street will set back a process that had only just begun, a process that was taking this third world country into the modern age.
At best, Egypt will become another Tunisia or Algeria, with weak governments who answer to the military.
Perhaps, the best indicator of who is behind the scenes we are witnessing on television comes from the demeanor of the fallen dictator, Hosni Mubarak.
At his trial, he lay in bed, a man said to be dying.
At his retrial, he seemed to have miraculously recovered.
In fact, he seemed to know something that the rest of us didn’t.
Perhaps that it’s still the country’s military that rule the roost and that they were finding allies quickly.
Those who believe that the hated dictator never left may well be right.
30 Sunday Jun 2013
In 1992, the Algerian military fearing the establishment of an Islamist government canceled the country’s elections. The Military also banned the group that had won the first two rounds of the democratic process, namely theΒ Front Islamique du Salut.
As a result, the country was plunged into civil war that resulted in the deaths of some 100, 000 people.
Already, there are echoes of that bloody conflict in the chaos that is becoming known as Egypt.
This time, the Islamist government of Mohamed Morsi was allowed to the win the country’s elections. However, a year into his Presidency and there are already crowds demanding that he leave.
If the crowds at Tahrir Square don’t get their way, there are some predicting that there will be violence.
If the government of Mohamed Morsi is not allowed to serve its full term, then that will be to the detriment of the democracy in Egypt, the laboratory from where the Arab Spring was created.
And it will also send a signal to the young in the Arab world, many of whom support Islamist movements, that democracy, the greatest political idea invented by man, is a sham.
25 Tuesday Jun 2013
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TEMPLATE ANALYSIS
The Arab Spring began in 2011 with an attempt to topple the long-standing dictator of Egypt, Hosni Mubarak.
Eventually, it succeeded and with that came the first result of a process that continues to this day and is clearly to make an impact in Gulf states such as Bahrain, where the Emir has just handed power to his son.
It was time, said Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani, to let the new generation take over.
Of course that generation, would be allowed to vote for their new leader, like they have done in Egypt and the Palestinian Territories
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19 Wednesday Jun 2013
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11 Tuesday Jun 2013
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07 Friday Jun 2013
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28 Tuesday May 2013
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25 Saturday May 2013
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