AI fears abusive govt powers in new “anti-terror law”

Amnesty International issued a statement Friday expressing concerns over the govt’s new “anti-terror law” currently in the making.
One of Mubarak’s promises during his “electoral campaignâ€� last year was the abolishing of the notorious Emergency Law, with which he ruled Egypt since 1981, and replace it with an “anti-terror law.â€� The Emergency law is regarded as the Grim Reaper in the nation’s political scene. It gives the government abusive powers to lock any suspect for 6 months, break demonstrations, and stiffle political life. Though the government claims it’s only used against “terrorists and drug dealers,” it’s clear who is the law used against: Sharqawi, Sha3er, 3alaa, Ibrahim, Kamal, Wael, and hundreds of other activists from the movement for change, as well as thousands of detainees who are languishing in prisons since 1981, and millions of Egyptians in their daily life encounters with the Egyptian police.
Of course, as we know, our president’s promise went with the wind (together with few others) as the NDP-controlled parliament voted last April to extend the law for another two years, fearing a “legal vacuum if the emergency law is abolished nowâ€� as Mubarak put it.
Now that the regime’s legal experts are well cooking the new anti-terror law, Amnesty International echoed the fears expressed by Egyptian rights activists and opposition group in a statement and memorandum sent to Mubarak.

Police ban another pro-Gaza demo

It seems the demo that some bloggers tried to hold Friday in front of the Israeli embassy in Giza, never materialized.
The blogger who issued the initial call for the demo, Asad, wrote an account of what happened. It’s in Arabic, so to cut a long story short: some people showed up, but did not dare to start a demo due to the massive security presence. Asad reports there were thousands of CSF troops and State Security agents, who banned anyone from assembling or approaching the Nahdet Masr statue, that was announced to be the meeting point. The Friday ban comes after police agents banned a demo in solidarity with Gaza last Wednesday.

New tale of rendition

The New York Times published today a touching story on the rendition of an Algerian suspect from Tanzania to Afghanistan. The man was held for 16 months in the US-run gulag, before he was freed and flown back to Algiers without being tried or charged.

Algerian Tells of Dark Odyssey in U.S. Hands
By CRAIG S. SMITH and SOUAD MEKHENNET
ALGIERS — Two years ago, a motley collection of prisoners spent night after night repeating their telephone numbers to one another from within the dark and dirty cells where they were being held in Afghanistan. Anyone who got out, they said they agreed, would use the numbers to contact the families of the others to let them know that they were still alive. Continue reading New tale of rendition

UN urges Israel halt violations

The UN Human Rights Council has passed a resolution demanding a halt to Israel’s offensive in the Gaza Strip. The Council also decided on dispatching a fact finding mission to Gaza.
Thursday witnessed more bloodshed by Israeli occupation troops, that left 23 Palestinians dead. One Israeli soldier was kiled by a sniper shot. Meanwhile the Palestinian government declared martial law in Gaza, and called up on the Palestinian security forces to join the resistance factions in fighting the Israeli invasion.

Call for boycotting government publications Sunday

Journalists for Change have called for a national boycott of state-owned publications, like Al-Ahram, Al-Akhbar, and Al-Gomhorriya on Sunday, in solidarity with the 12 independent and opposition papers which are to go on strike on the same day.
The activists have also called for a demonstration 11am in front of the parliament to protest the proposed new Press Law, which has been denounced by the Press Syndicate as “designed to protect government corruption.”

Zarqawi’s successor imprisoned in Egypt?!

The debate around the identity of Zarqawi’s successor is getting really “Kafkaesque” as Arabist reader SP wrote me in an email exchange.
Now Islamist lawyer, and former Egyptian Islamic Jihad activist, Mamdouh Ismail is saying Abu Ayub al-Masri, Zarqawi’s alleged successor, actually is and has been in an Egyptian prison for the past seven years.
This comes after Islamist lawyer Montasser al-Zayat suggested he was another man by the name Youssef al-Dardeeri, while London-based Egyptian Islamist exile, Yasser al-Sirri, claimed the man did not even exist.

Kifaya’s corruption report and more

I will be traveling and not posting much for the next few days. I was going to write something about the new report on corruption by Kifaya (basically that I think it’s a great, concrete move by the movement that should hush critics who say it’s not accomplishing anything) but don’t have time, so read Abu Aardvark’s post which mentions it, further discusses the press situation, and meanders through the moral maze of Arab democracy promotion. But hopefully Hossam will keep you informed in the next few days too. And if anyone has the text of the report in an electronic format, the email address is issandr – at – arabist.net. I quickly checked the Kifaya site but they had some kind of technical error.

More Golia on land reform

I’ve linked before to Maria Golia’s Daily Star columns, in which she’s currently exploring Egypt’s catastrophic and little-discussed land problems — the way it is administered, what’s being farmed on it, what’s being built on it, and what the government is doing about planning for the future of an ever scarcer resource. In her latest missive she takes another look and land reform, what’s being proposed and what’s (not) being done. Unfortunately, the Daily Star has recently started putting them behind a wall, so it’s reproduced below for your enjoyment. And remember to buy her book on your way out.

The line between famine and abundance is clearly drawn in Egypt, a green vein of Nile-fed land surrounded by lifeless sand. Yet administrative and public denial of land and water shortages is nothing short of suicidal. Given accelerated unplanned growth, only a cathartic reassessment of Egypt’s situation coupled with comprehensive land reform can rescue this uniquely challenged nation from ruin.

Continue reading More Golia on land reform