Author: issandr
$$ Egyptian Art $$
The discussion of the art itself isn’t particularly insightful–I didn’t get much of a sense of what distinguished the work of the artists featured, other than the fact that they all could be sold internationally. And I was left wondering how Egypt compares to other countries in the Middle East, like Lebanon and Iran, and to Abu Dhabi–where the art market is by all accounts booming and the Louvre is opening a franchise. But it’s nice to see that there’s some hope of financial support for Egyptian visual artists.
Confiscated books
The other is a little book called “عشان ما تنضربش علي قفاك,” or “So As Not To Be Hit On the Back of Your Neck”. (To hit someone on the back of the neck is a gesture of deep disrespect–a big “fuck you”–in Egyptian culture.) It’s a manual, in Colloquial Egyptian Arabic, by a former police officer and lawyer, explaining their rights to Egyptian citizens and giving them advice on how to deal with the police. It’s written in question and answer format, and addresses questions such as when the police have the right to search you, when they have the right to take you to the station, etc. Of course it’s terribly revealing that the Egyptian authorities have confiscated a book that does nothing but inform citizens of their legal rights (the tone of the book is carefully respectful of the police).
Also, let me just explain that these books were confiscated, not banned. Al Azhar has the authority to censure books that deal with religious topics, but other than that In Egypt there is no agency with the mandate to ban books. What happens, though, is that if a book is charged with “disturbing the public order,” “defaming Egypt,” or some such nonsense, then state security confiscates the book from the market while the investigation and eventual court case takes place. I’m not sure if this confiscation is legal or not. What I do know is that “confiscated” books are often still available–book sellers and newspaper vendors hide them away, then sell them (“Psst, I have a hot book for you!”) at a slightly inflated price. It’s actually often a boost to the book’s sales.
Links for June 12th
Links from my del.icio.us account for June 12th:
- Welsh speaker boycotts Israeli ambassador
(AFP) – Not a lot of Jews in Wales, I guess - Barak: Labor will back dissolving Israel Knesset
(AP) – Yet another political crisis in Israel - The Angry Arab News Service/وكالة أنباء العربي الغاضب – Angry Arab has interesting info on Somalia peace process
- Hizb ut-Tahrir and the fantasy of the caliphate, by Jean-Pierre Filiu – Hizb Tahrir in Palestine and elsewhere
- Return of the Jihadi| Andrew Exum for Democracy: A Journal of Ideas – Ex about what might happen when Iraq's foreign jihadists return home
- Liban : paix et cannabis – Proche-Orient – Le Monde.fr – Cannabis and politics in Lebanon
- Arab Reform Bulletin: June 2008 – Carnegie Endowment for International Peace – Sandmonkey interview, Morocco's MAD, Jordan MB and more
- Egypt’s President Urges Family Planning – washingtonpost.com – 27 years into his rule, Mubarak introduces two-child policy
Father of nation cares about the little people
Gotta love it:
CAIRO (AFP) — Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak ordered an extension to exam time at a school south of Cairo after his convoy brought traffic to a standstill causing students to show up late, according to Thursday’s press.
“A humanitarian gesture by Father Mubarak to high school students of Six October,” read a headline in the French-language Progres Egyptien.
On Wednesday, Mubarak took a tour of Six October City, a southern suburb of Cairo, to inspect housing projects close to Al-Nasr School where high students were due to sit their “thanawiyya amma” exams, the national test taken by all graduating high school seniors.
But the president’s convoy, which often causes serious traffic disruptions as major roads are sealed off for long periods to clear the route for the fleet of about a dozen cars, caused many students to show up late for the exam.
When news of panicked students reached the president, he instructed Prime Minister Ahmed Nazif “to visit the school and make sure the students do not complain about any time shortage,” ordering an exceptional half-hour extension to the exam duration.
[From AFP: Egypt’s Mubarak turns back time for late students]
Al Jazeera tries to report on AIPAC conference, told to #$@^ off
Cabaret
“Salata Baladi” screening
Links June 8th to June 10th
Links from my del.icio.us account for June 8th through June 10th:
- New boss is determined to keep the faith at Al-Jazeera | Media | The Observer – New MD at Al-J English faces distribution discrimination
- Al-Ahram Weekly | Region | Can Qatar do it again? – Is Qatar trying to do for the Palestinians what it did for the Lebanese?
- Egypt population could more than double by 2050: Mubarak – Yahoo! News – Hosni carps on about population growth
- Tough Words From This Cheney on U.S. Mideast Policy – washingtonpost.com – Liz Cheney says US policy not neocon enough at AIPAC panel
- Muting the Alarm over the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict – Harvard – Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs – Academic study shows NYT misreports IP conflict
- Egypt’s Growth Tested by Food, Oil Turmoil – WSJ.com – On how the Nazif govt is dealing with rising prices
- FT.com / Reports / Youth in the Middle East & North Africa – FT Special, many interesting articles
- FT.com / Comment & analysis / Editorial comment – Demographic time-bomb in Mideast – FT Special argues "the scale of advance the region needs is not possible while despotism persists."
- The Daily Star – Repression, the Arab state’s foul habit – Rami Khouri on Egypt and institutional decay in the Arab world
By Rami G. Khouri
Daily Star staff
Wednesday, June 04, 2008The Egyptian Parliament's decision last week to extend emergency rule for another two years, including sweeping powers to detain
- US professors face hostile reception in Jerusalem | World news | The Guardian – Walt & Mearsheimer in Israel
- In Yemen, a Mostly Concealed Sectarian Fight Endures – Article on Yemen troubles looks at the influence of Iran-Saudi rivalry
- Mr. Obama’s Middle East – washingtonpost.com – Editorial says after AIPAC speech on "indivisible Jerusalem" that on Middle East, Obama is Bush-plus
- FT.com / In depth – Oil: Key players and movements – Nice Flash interactive map of oil geopolitics
Links May 31st to June 4th
Links from my del.icio.us account for May 31st through June 4th:
- The Daily Star – Politics – Cairo bars rights group from UN AIDS talks – Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights, which fights for AIDS rights, blacklisted by own govt
- ei: Haaretz.com promotes website advocating genocide and terrorism – Rather nasty
- Al-Qaeda chief dies in missile air strike | World news | The Observer – Abu Suleiman al-Jazairi, alleged mastermind of European networks, killed
- Making Sense of Darfur » Is Sudan a “Post-Islamist” State? – Looking at Darfur as as an inside-regime, inter-Islamist conflict
- In Egypt, YouTube Trumps Facebook: PostGlobal on washingtonpost.com – Our Alaa on what's the most important web tool for activists