You can find the pix here.
Good job ya Nasser…
You can find the pix here.
Good job ya Nasser…
On a seperate note, Ahmad is getting married on Wednesday… Mabrouk ya basha!Â
Egyptian blogger Fantomas dedicates it to el presidente.
-A pro-resistance women’s candle vigil in Tahrir Square, on 2 August
-I’ve added more pix by Amr Abdallah of Artists & Writers For Change’s pro-Hizbollah demo, on 3 August
-Muslim Brothers’ protest at the Lawyers’ Syndicate in solidarity with the resistance, on 5 August
-A Kefaya demo in front of the Egyptian Foreign Ministry, demanding the expulsion of the Israeli ambassador to Cairo, on 6 August
(UPDATE: Wael Abbas posted some good photos of the FM protest here.)
-Bassam Haddad also sent this video of Washington DC protests
10th August, 2006
We, the undersigned writers, gathered for a festival of literature in the idyllic Brazilian town of Paraty, cannot but help think of the innocent victims of wars in the Middle East.
The Israeli invasion of Lebanon is only the most recent addition to the litany of war and occupation. The deliberate destruction of the social infra-structure of Lebanon and the massacres of Marwahin, Qana and Srifa should awake the conscience of the world.
The mosque came under the siege of security forces since the morning. Plainclothes thugs were deployed by the police inside the mosque’s courtyard. The thugs clashed with the demonstrators, banning them from marching in the streets.
Photographer and friend Nasser Nouri was there…
Kefaya’s website reported a pro-resistance demo took place today in the town of Snoris in the Fayyoum oasis. Police cracked down on the demonstrators, arresting Kefaya activist Ahmad Fayedd. Another solidarity demo went out from Seedi Ghareeb Mosque in Suez.
No reports yet on the Zagazig and Damanhour demos…
Makram Mohammed Ahmed, a prominent state columnist/editor who was instrumental in the government’s negotiations with the Gamaa Islamiya and broke the story in his magazine, al-Mussawar, several years ago, wrote in al-Ahram recently that the whole thing is an attempt by Zawahri to reclaim some of the limelight stolen by Hizbullah. And, apparently, to divert attention from this, he has announced (and it has been echoed by security sources in other newspapers) that he has begun a dialogue with imprisoned Islamic Jihad leaders. Initial reports suggest that individual members are amenable to the same kind of recantation the Gamaa carried out, but that there are difficulties because of Jihad’s much more cellular structure.
All of this suggests that Zawahri’s recent statement was, overall, a failed and badly thought-out PR coup. I like to think about it as the jihadist equivalent of a bunch of gangta rappers, having found fame and fortune and moved from South Central to Beverly Hills, defensively sing about how they’re “still G” and from the hood. A bunch of ex-Gamaa types who are on the run or in prisons really doesn’t amount to much, much like Zawahri himself (also on the run) struggles to remain in the media’s eye even though he really is old news. Does anyone really think that the people behind, for instance, yesterday’s airplane alert in Britain are taking direct directions from Zawahri, Bin Laden or former Gamaa leaders? Inspiration (sick, twisted inspiration to be sure) is all these old fogeys can provide. A new generation of wars is generating its own jihadists.
Olmert was sitting in his office wondering how to invade Lebanon when his telephone rang.
“Hallo, Mr. Olmert!” a heavily accented voice said. “This is Abul Abed,down at the tea house in Beirut! I am callin` to tell ya dat we are officially declaring war on you, yes you!”
“Well” Olmert replied, “This is indeed important news! How big is your army?”
“Right now,” said Abul Abed, after a moments calculation “there is myself, my cousin Mustafa, me next-door-neighbor Abou khaled, and the whole team from the tea house. That makes eight!”