Anti-Danish demo at Al-Azhar

Hunderds demonstrated today, at Al-Azhar Mosque, against the new Danish cartoons that insult Prophet Mohammed.

Photographer and friend Amr Abdallah was there…

Al-Azhar Anti-Danish Demo slideshow

Al-Masry Al-Youm reported yesterday that the Ministry of Religious Endowements, Mubarak’s arm in the religious establishment, has drafted a proposal for a new law banning demos and “gatherings” in mosques. The proposed penalties for “breaking the law” would be either three months in jail, a minimum LE500 fine, or both.

Related link: MB spearheads Danish boycott campaign

Oops

People in my Arabic class yesterday were talking about this New York Times story about an Arab-American army recruiter. A photo that ran with the story shows a T-shirt that reads “If you can read this” (in Arabic) and then below, “The National Guard needs you” (in English). But the grammar of the first line seems incorrect. Normally, after the conditional particle, the verb should be in the past, not the present. (I’d like native Arabic speakers to confirm this.) This would hardly be the first or most egregious mistake the US armed forces have made trying to communicate with Arabs..

“Hi, This is State Security”

There is reportedly a bureau at State Security police called the “CounterCommunism and Civil Society Organizations Bureau.” Its officers are assigned with monitoring and cracking down on Marxists and left-wing rights activists. Some of them have been involved in several torture cases of leftist activists, the most recent of which has been Mohamed el-Sharqawi.
There’s hardly a civil society activist that hasn’t received at least a “phone call” from them. Sometimes it’s an “invitation for coffee,” other times it’s direct threats… Whether it’s this or that, the aim obviously is intimidation.
I met today my friend Emad Mubarak, director of the recently launched Association for Freedom of Thought and Expression, and the brother of the late legendary left wing lawyer Hisham Mubarak.
Emad was one of the main figures in the Egyptian leftist students scene in the 1990s, and was subject to several incidents of police brutality and detentions. Since his graduation from Ain Shams University’s Faculty of Law, he’s been working as a rights lawyer. Emad has been involved in defending Leftist and Muslim Brothers student activists, labor struggles, and campaigns for rights of detainees from all political tendencies.
Emad met me with a big smile, “I finally received the phone call.”
What do you mean? I asked.
“State Security called me yesterday,” he said.
“What did they want?” I asked.
“They wanted to say Mabrouk (Congrats)!” he said.
“What do you mean?! Are you joking?”
“No no, I swear.”

Leftist human rights lawyer Emad Mubarak (Photo by Hossam el-Hamalawy)

(Photo above: Emad Mubarak, Director of Association for Freedom of Thought & Expression)

Emad went on narrating the conversation he had with the State Security officer.
SS: “Who is on the phone?”
Emad: “Are you kidding? You are the one who called. Who is it?”
SS: “This is Ahmad S… from State Security.”
Emad: “How Can I help you?”
SS: “We found your number on the internet, and it was mentioned as a contact number for the Association for the Freedom of Thought and Expression. We wanted to know who this number belonged to.”
Emad: “You mean you have my number, but you can’t get my name from the telephone directory?! Anyways, my name is Emad Mubarak.”
SS: “Oooooh! Emad Mubarak? The brother of Hisham Mubarak? May God bless his soul. He was very respectable.”
Emad: “Hisham was indeed respected by everybody, especially you!” (Hisham had lost one of his ears’ hearing capability, due to brutal torture by SS in 1989.) “Anyways, what do you want?”
SS: “Nothing we just called in to say mabrouk for launching your association.”
Emad: “Thanks, anything else?”
SS: “No, No. We just wanted to say mabrouk.”
Emad: “So do you work at Lazoughli (State Security’s HQ in Downtown Cairo) or Gaber Ibn Hayan (SS HQ in Giza)?”
SS: “Gaber Ibn Hayyan”
(Emad knew the officer was lying, as the number that appeared on his mobile started with a 76…., which meant the caller was making the call from downtown.
Emad: “So you must be ….’s student? (Emad dropped in the name of one of the notorious officers there.)
SS: “Oh, Ah, Yeah, I know him.”
Emad: “Ok, anything else?”
SS: “No, we just wanted to say mabrouk!”
Emad: “ok, Bye!”

Emad then hung up.

“What a waste of my time and their time,” he told me when I met him today. “They have nothing better else to do. I wonder when they’ll invite me for coffee. I bet soon.”

nec plus ultra

soldier lecture.jpg

Maybe you’ve graduated from Fox gun-camera footage to those yee-ha Iraq smackdown vids on Youtube.com (checked out that guard tower footage of Brit soldiers dragging the kids into their compound and beating the crap out of them?).

If so, then this little vacation package might just be for you. It’s put on by a noble Israeli organization that seeks to do nothing but good in this world through … well, let’s let their web-blurb speak (a little polyvalently) for itself:

we are dedicated to providing legal representation and resources for the numerous courtroom struggles, which are being waged in the Israeli, American and European courts on behalf of the Jewish State.

The tour, billed as the “Ultimate Mission,” is priced at around USD2,000 for an “intensive eight day exploration of Israel’s struggle for survival.â€� This includes “Live exhabition [sic] of penetration raids in Arab territoryâ€� and “Inside tour of … secret intelligence bases,â€� not to mention full (kosher) board, a knowledgeable guide and “Luxury bus transportation.”

While the website doesn’t say whether you actually get to place an Arab in a “stress position� or waterboard a Palestinian, you do get to meet “senior Cabinet Ministers� and stay at the Sheraton Plaza in Jerusalem.

Quite how this dovetails with their noble mission of providing the put-upon state of Israel with legal assistance is unclear, but who cares? It’s yee-ha time!

Nuking Iran?

With recent news of possible major ship deployments in the Persian Gulf and talk a pre- midterm election possible strike against Iran around October 21 (or around the end of Ramadan / beginning of the Eid holidays), it’s rather unnerving to see a major conservative commentator (a former Reagan administration official and WSJ editorial board member) say this:

The neoconservative Bush administration will attack Iran with tactical nuclear weapons, because it is the only way the neocons believe they can rescue their goal of US (and Israeli) hegemony in the Middle East.

There is already talk of retaliation by Iranian attacks on US warships and troops across the Persian Gulf and major Iranian interference with Shia communities in Iraq and Bahrain if this happens — not to mention the possibility of an attack (probably terrorist) on US soil. At least this is what is being talked about in Iran specialist circles.

The recent North Korean nuclear test must have changed the approach to Iran considerably — clearly if you are against Iran developing nuclear weapons (which most estimates say won’t happen for five years to a decade) you would think that the earlier you strike the better. North Korea shows that if I you can develop nuclear weapon, you should and that there’s little that can be done about it — especially if your neighbor/patron is China.

The article has some small factual mistakes and exaggerations — “Our Egyptian puppet sits atop 100 million [sic] Muslims who do not think that Egypt should be a lackey of US hegemony” — but gets the general regional situation quite right. I remain skeptical on whether a tactical nuke would be used, even though the Bush administration’s military doctrine has emphasized the use of tactical nukes for five years now, but I do find something convincing in the argument that the Bush administration, by its own internal (and electoral) logic, has nothing left to do but escalate. It either stands down or muddles along with a recognized failure in Iraq, or ups the ante. Rien ne va plus.

Have you served in Iraq?

If you haven’t, go see the film “The Ground Truth,” which interviews some who did. Last night NYU hosted a showing of the film and a presentation from three members of Iraq Veterans Against the War (IVAW).

The film is mostly a series of interviews with former soldiers in Iraq, all of whom became opposed to the war at some point (many of them after witnessing or participating in the killing of civilians). The film has them recount their experience, from entering the army to being deployed in Iraq, to returning home (several of them injured for life and suffering from really acute PTSD). While the film has a clear agenda, it isn’t strident, and the interviews–the personalities and stories of the soldiers–are so interesting that they carry the whole thing easily. One thing that becomes very clear is that from basic training on (where the soldiers chant songs about “Hajjes” and shoot at “Bin Ladens”) a willful conflation is created between terrorists and Iraqis, or Afghanis, or whoever the army will fight–and that that conflation only gets worse in Iraq and leads almost inevitably to the indiscriminate killing of civilians.

The three veterans, who spoke after the film, were also very compelling. They were all pretty young, two men and a woman, and as far as I remember, two were from the National Guard and one from the Navy.

Several of them talked about how the army had been an economic opportunity for them and also about how the culture of the army had made it very difficult for them to be critical of the war, to speak out, and to ask for conscientious objector status–they said it was seen as a betrayal and a criticism of friends and colleagues.

They also spent some time talking about veteran’s benefits. As Matthew pointed out recently, the number of wounded US soldiers spiked recently. One thing to keep in mind is that “wounded” in Iraq often means losing one or more limbs (basically, losing the part of the body that aren’t protected by body armour). These soldiers come back and face months of red tape to get medical benefits. Also, apparently there is a push to categorize people with PTSD (and one imagines there are many, given the length and strain of current tours of duty) as having “personality disorders” or being “bipolar,” so they won’t get benefits. The government has also cut funding and discouraged doctors from diagnosing TBI (Traumatic Brain Injury)–something that can happen when you are exposed to a lot of explosions.

At one point, a man stood up in the (smallish) audience and said he was a member of the Navy who had served in Iraq and he thought the film was biased. He talked at some length and seemed to me, to be honest, a little strange (although maybe he was just worked up). He said “9/11 was only five years ago, have you forgotten already?” and complained that the film showed the US military in a bad light but didn’t show all the terrible things that “they” (the terrorists) did. He said “Have I seen a lot of action? Definitely. I got more medals than Patton. But I don’t like to talk about it.” He also said, “It was some hardcore shit. We defended American freedom. We were men. We used to hunt those guys down.”

What really impressed me was the reaction of the Veterans Against the War. While the room of NYU students sat in shocked silence and indignation, the veterans responded perfectly: they thanked the man for speaking, thanked him for his service, reiterated the fact that 9/11 was not in fact carried out by Iraqis, reiterated the fact that the insurgency in Iraq is a reaction to US presence there and asked him to come out for a beer after and talk about it all some more. It was a humbling lesson in how to be an effective advocate. If you want to change people’s minds, you have to know how to talk to people you completely disagree with.

Cui bono?

Nice to see that the Daily Star Egypt, which has struggled to find its voice as a source of news on Egypt, has an extended, locally written, piece today on Talaat Sadat‘s bid to become the next opposition figure to be crushed and thrown into jail for opening up his mouth and saying things that the big boys find discomforting.

Sadat has spoken out now on a number of occasions about the October 6 1981 assassination of his uncle Anwar, requesting a parliamentary investigation into the killing and on one occasion apparently telling a press agency that the whole thing was a coup by then vice-president, now president, Hosni Mubarak and the minister of defense. He has also said that Sadat’s bodyguard made no attempt to shield him, were never investigated and have since done well in business.

Now, many who have watched the video of the event have noted a certain, well, emphasis in the reaction of the security forces supposed to be guarding the president and his deputy (personally I can’t see anything but screaming confusion, but maybe there’s more footage?), and many others have drawn conclusions from Mubarak’s reluctance to appoint a VP himself, but let’s have a quick reality check.

Considering the record of the Mubarak regime, can we really say that these are the sort of men who would kill each other just to wrap their fingers around a little more power?

New police abuse video

A new video of police agent abusing a citizen is circulating the Egyptian cyberspace. Torture In Egypt, an excellent website run by a group of dedicated anti-torture activists, has posted a video, taken by a cellular digital camera, of what they said was an Egyptian youth being slapped on the neck by a police agent in Al-Montaza police station in Alexandria.

You can watch the video here.

I guess this video is one we will add to the growing collection…