Dr. Essam to be released

Finally Dr. Essam el-Erian is to be released, after he was detained during the pro-democracy demos last May.

Dr. Essam is someone I and many other secularists have so much appreciation for. He is a respectable citizen and a principled politician who should not have been taken away from his family and work, for demonstrating in support of Egypt’s judiciary, and thrown to the Tora dungeons.

Dr. Essam is one of the main forces in the Muslim Brotherhood that has been pushing the group towards moderation and endorsing democracy as the means to governance. The regular crackdowns the govt conducts against him and his colleagues only serves the cause of extremism and strengthens salafi factions in the group. I’m glad he is getting out.

Mabrouk ya doctor!

David, Girgis and Hussein… A Horror Film

I received this ad in my inbox about a play to be performed next week.

Horror is the word. Every person has his or her horror, and in our performance we speak out ours: Sectarian violence in Egypt. What if? The one-way street, where you meet nothing but the word…HORROR.

We invite you all to share us the horror by watching our performance, presented within the Independent Theatre Festival.

David, Girgis and Hussein…A Horror Film
Written by: Yasser Allam
Directed by: Sobhy el-Haggar
Maqha 87 Troupe

Sunday, 20th of August
On the Town House stage
At 09:00 pm

NB: To whom it may concern: this performance in the festival will not be the last; we wish to perform the play anywhere and everywhere, with or without money, lest anyone should not share the horror.

Call or email us:
+2 010-286-5169, yasseryallam -at- yahoo -dot- com

Bombed again

According to a reader familiar with New Yorker magazine, Seymour Hersh and his nameless friends are at it again this month.

If what Hersh reports being told by “a Middle East expert with knowledge� is correct, we have further evidence (like we needed it) of the crowded confusion that occupies Bush Jr.’s oval cuckoo’s nest. According to this expert, the invasion of Lebanon was a plan cooked up collaboratively with the White House, and one of the goals was to make the Lebanese government stronger.

The best laugh, however, comes from a “U.S. consultant with close ties to Israel� who says “The Israelis told us it would be a cheap war with many benefits … It would be a demo for [an American strike on] Iran.�

Back in April Hersh wheeled the same anonymous cast on stage to assert that Cheney et al are forging ahead with plans bomb Iran back to the stone age, with nukes if at all possible. Hard to know what any of it’s worth when you don’t know who’s saying it, but a pleasant bit of echo-chamber reading for the pessimistic.

Ahmadinejad blogging!!!

Unbelievable!

Iranian president talks about his childhood and the Iranian revolution in his new blog
By ALI AKBAR DAREINI
Associated Press Writer
08-13-2006 19:35

TEHRAN, Iran (AP) _ Iran’s hardline president has started blogging, recounting childhood memories, the country’s Islamic Revolution and Tehran’s war with Iraq in his first entry.
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s Web log also requests that readers participate in an online poll asking if they think the United States and Israel are “pulling the trigger for another world war.”
State-run television announced the blog’s launch Sunday, urging the public to send written messages to the president through the blog’s Web site www.ahmadinejad.ir.
The blog is an unusual move by the conservative president, whose government has censored Internet sites it deems inappropriate and cracked down on bloggers who have posted anti-government messages since he was elected a year ago. Many of the clerics who support Ahmadinejad also have shunned the use of advance technology, though other hard-liners have sent cell phone campaign messages to the public in the past.
But Keivan Mehrgan, a Tehran-based blogger, said Ahmadinejad’s blog _ which is translated into English, French and Arabic _ is nothing more than a publicity stunt.
“It’s nothing but for publicity. Why Ahmadinejad used to have nothing to do with Internet and even talked against journalists and bloggers before he became president,” Mehrgan said.
In his blog, the president writes that he grew up in a poor family in a village 90 kilometers (56 miles) east of Tehran. But his father, a “hard-bitten” and “pious” blacksmith, moved the family to Tehran when Ahmadinejad was 1 years old to try to make a better life for his family, he wrote.
Ahmadinejad said the Islamic Revolution patriarch Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini began to appeal to him when the ayatollah was in exile in the 1960s and 70s.
“The more I became familiar with his thought and philosophy, the more affection I had for that divine leader and his separation and absence was intolerable for me,” he wrote, as translated into English.
Because his father’s “sledgehammer and anvil” could not cover the family’s expenses, Ahmadinejad said he started working as a high school student in a shop that made cooling system parts. He continued with his studies even when “certain activities against the illegitimate regime of the monarch in Iran,” kept him busy, he wrote.
Ahmadinejad also used his blog entry to bash the United States and give his musings about the 1979 Islamic Revolution and the 1980-88 war with Iraq, when he served in the elite Revolutionary Guards.
“The global arrogance had determine to defeat the Islamic Revolution of the Iran at all costs,” he wrote. “The reason was that they were afraid that this revolution will become a model and ideal path for other nations in the region and in the world.”
He called former Iraqi President Saddam Hussein the “aggressor” in the war and wrote that international organizations tried to “distort and hide the facts that Saddam was the aggressor and that the arrogant powers had fully supported him.”
At the end of the blog, which is dated Friday and is more than 2,000 words in English, Ahmadinejad promised to keep it shorter in his next entry.
“From now onwards, I will try to make it shorter and simpler,” he wrote.

Targeted vituperation

Thanks to the often amusing Angry Arab for the link to a little light summertime reading, to whit to Norm Finkelstein’s latest rhetorical head butt to Alan Dershowitz.

Under the guise of taking apart Dershowitz’s political-legal analyses Finkelstein gets off some nice shots: his victim is a “notorious serial prevaricator� and “moral pervert� who “mounts his case from multiple angles, sometimes implicitly, sometimes explicitly, but always falsely.�

Aaah, the sweet art of the ad hominem academic slapdown.

Overall the piece is a lot of fun, and provides some nice ammo for after-dinner arguments. Finkelstein’s comments on civilian culpability and casualties, and the implications of blurring civilian/military distinctions are one high point. Another comes at the very end where, well, he answers the question raised in the title.

In the same vein (readable, consumer level stuff on international law) Philippe Sands’s Lawless World provides a good clear primer on the political/judicial terrain over which Finkelstein and Dershowitz are punching each other’s lights out.