A question for Baheyya

I have a question for our favorite judicial expert and impassioned blogger Baheyya, who warns in her latest post not to turn judges into heroes and “saddle them with the hopes of a nation.” Fair enough, the judges are not about to stage a coup as the political scientist Hassan Nafaa recently seemed to suggest in a recent Al Arabi column when he compared the Judges’ Club in 2006 to the Officers’ Club in 1952. But when she says:

It goes without saying that this is a protracted battle that has been ongoing for decades and will continue for several more. But the battle is not forwarded by treating judges as infallible Olympian beings who will rid the country of all that ails it. It does no good to sensationalise their plight and trip over ourselves coining terms such as “rebel judges” and a “judicial intifada” and all the other breathless assertions. As a citizen, I instinctively love the now-famous slogan “Judges, judges, deliver us from the tyrants!” that is a staple at every solidarity demonstration. But as a professional and an analyst, I cannot succumb to the fantasy that judges are the deus ex machina that will realise democracy, restore justice, and make life wonderful. Judges are already grappling with tremendous stresses. It’s highly unfair to saddle them with the hopes of a nation.

I don’t see the problem with the term “rebel judges.” The judges are not unanimous in protesting their situation, just as they were not unanimous in condemning the fraud in the elections. There are clearly judges who are more willing to contest the authorities than others. The “rebels” might make the majority of the Judges’ Club if we are to go with the election results that brought Zakariya Abdel Aziz to power, or a lot less than that if we go with the current estimates (guesses?) that between 1,500 and 2,500 are supporting the Club’s campaign for Bastawissi and Mekki and the wider one for new judicial independence legislation. Are there not, in fact, pro-regime judges and “rebel” ones, in the sense that they are rebelling against a system? They may have been disgruntled for a long time and raised this issue before, but it seems that the current “rebellion” takes their complaints to a whole new level. The same judges that worked within the system for a long time are now opportunistically (I don’t mean that in a bad way) taking advantage of changed political conditions to make their demands. So “rebel” is not that inappropriate.

I didn’t attend the meeting of the Club that immediately followed the verdict on B&M, but a friend who did told me that they seemed intent of continuing their demands from what they said. (He also spoke of an Islamist tinge to senior judges’ speeches, but that may have been a way to thank the remarkable support Muslim Brotherhood MPs gave the Club. The MPs stayed a few minutes to congratulate the judges and then left, wisely, as there are enough accusations in the state press that the MB are behind the Judges’ crisis as it is — Al Ahram editor Osama Saraya said as much last week, also blaming the MB for sectarian violence and other ills.) But the speculation in the press and among activists that the Judges may now stand down their activism (end the sit-in, negotiate a judicial independence bill with the NDP, etc.) is perfectly legitimate. And as Baheyya herself points out, it is unreasonable to expect the Judges to assume the leadership of Kifaya or the wider anti-Mubarak, pro-democracy, whatever-you-want-to-call-it movement. They’re campaigning for judicial independence, not regime change. Their “rebellion” ends when they get what they want, or possibly even a compromise. In other words, are the Judges’ playing an all-or-nothing game? Will they insist on every single one of their demands? These are legitimate questions for the press and analysts to have. Not putting judges on a pedestal also means recognizing that they might be mostly fighting for their corporate interests.

Message from Kifaya leader George Ishak to activists abroad

This was sent to activist Ahmed Zahran, who shared it with others helping set up the demos:

Greetings from Cairo;

On behalf of “The Egyptian Movement for Change” (Kifaya), its General Coordinating Committee, I wish to send greetings to you , your colleagues and all who are sharing in your campaign supporting judges and the release of the detainees.

Your actions and demonstrations in London and throughout the world are inspiring us here in Egypt. We in Kifaya strongly believe that with the collective efforts of all the Egyptians inside Egypt in the Diaspora we can build a new modern Egypt.

Best regards
George Ishak

More 25 May demos in Beirut and the Hague

I’m just amazed how this is spreading:


Cairo – London – Paris – Athens – Seol – New York – Chicago – Toronto – Montreal

and now…..

Beirut
The Hague
Washington DC

Hands off our Judges!
Release our Detainees!!
Democracy & Justice Now!!!

Washington
In front of the Egyptian Embassy, 3521 International Court, NW, Washington DC 20008. (Metro: Van Ness/UDC)
for more info. Sumita at sumita_pahwa@hotmail.com

Beirut
Egyptian Embassy … Mohamed El Berzy Street next to Engineers Syndicate
For more info.: Mourad Ali at mouradallawi@yahoo.com

The Hague
no available info yet.

We’ll demonstrate on the Moon if we have to!!!

Revisiting the Beni Suef fire

Remember the Beni Suef fire scandal last September? Well a verdict has come out on who’s responsible:

CAIRO, May 22 (Reuters) – An Egyptian court sentenced eight government employees, including the head of a cultural body, to 10 years in jail each on Monday for negligence over a theatre fire last year that killed 46 people, a judicial official said.
The official said that Mostafa Elwy, head of the authority for cultural centres who was among those convicted, was also a member of the ruling National Democratic Party’s policies committee. The rest also worked for the Culture Ministry.
The official said the men were responsible for the running of the overall administration of state-run theatres throughout the country.

A lot of people were calling for Mostafa Elwy’s head back then. It was given to them instead of Minister of Culture Farouq Hosni’s. My question: what new fire safety procedures have been implemented?

See you at the next disaster.

US military aid to Egypt and Congress

For several years now, there has been a gathering storm in Congress over aid to Egypt. This used to be about the effectiveness of the aid and the supposed lack of gratefulness from Egypt, or its refusal to publicly back the US over certain goals like the Iraq war or Bush’s democratization agenda. Every year, this congressional initiative — led by both Republicans and Democrats close to the Israel lobby (but also including others) such as Tom Lantos, a veteran Egypt-basher — was defeated in Congress. The White House and State Dept. have always stood up to those Congressmen who wanted to change the aid program to Egypt, and the conventional wisdom has remained that while the Mubarak regime is no great shakes, it is overall useful and worth propping up.

Continue reading US military aid to Egypt and Congress