On twitter
Syrians inspired by both tunisia and Egypt are planning a collective protest against their corrupt Government on #Feb5
Calls for anti-regime protests in #Algeria on 12 February http://bit.ly/fUx1SZ (in Arabic)
The Syrian and Sudanese have set their revolution dates already?! Four down, eighteen more to go! #ArabRevolutions
Spanish TV TVE just reported troops in #Morocco were mobilised from Sahara to #Rabat & #Casablanca.
The first of these protests will be in the Sudan
KHARTOUM, SUDAN —
A group of young Sudanese activists proclaim January 30, 2011 to be the beginning of peaceful demonstrations to bring down the military regime in Sudan. This campaign is calling on all sectors of Sudanese to get out January 30th and demonstrate in the streets of Sudan's most populated cities. The largest assembly and demonstration will take place on Palace Street, which is located a few meters from the presidential palace of Sudanese President Omar Hassan Ahmad al-Bashir. The invitation for the demonstration excludes the leaders of the traditional opposition parties who are not willing to confront the Islamic military regime, which has been ruling Sudan since 1989.
The call for this action came one day after the leader of the Umma Party, Mr. Alsadiq Al-mahdi, announced that he would continue peaceful dialogue with the current government. His speech is widely regarded by most young Sudanese, including members of the Umma party, as disappointing and lacking insight into the systematic destruction of the country by Al-Bashir`s government. His political views show that he continues to disengage himself from the issues vital to Sudanese activists. This call for demonstrations coincides with the 116th anniversary of the liberation of Khartoum by Imam Mohammed Ahmed al-Mahdi on January 26, 1885, great grandfather of Mr. Alsadiq Al-Mahdi. Their intent is to peacefully express anger at the decades of corruption, violence, and human right violations, which led to the separation of the South and which could lead to the potential separation of the West.
It is no secret that the young people who have called for the demonstration have seen what has happened in Tunisia and Egypt, where young generations have loudly spoken against unemployment and political marginalization.
We would like to be clear that this is a call for removal of this government.
In a statement, on its Facebook page, the Liberal Democratic Party, represented by Mr. Adel Abd Atti and Ms. Noor Tour, invite all members to participate in the demonstration, planned for January 30th.
It is time to change the face of Sudan and to end decades of injustice, marginalization, and corruption.
Yesterday there was a demo in Mauritania in support of the uprising in Egypt.
Plusieurs centaines de Mauritaniens ont manifesté vendredi soir à Nouakchott pour exprimer leur soutien aux manifestants égyptiens, a constaté un correspondant de Xinhua.
Deux marches piétonne et motorisée ont parcouru l’avenue Nasser, principal artère de la capitale mauritanienne, scandant des slogans hostiles au président égyptien Hosni Moubarak.
Les manifestants ont également appelé le président Moubarak à "quitter le pouvoir et à laisser au peuple égyptien la liberté de choisir ses dirigeants". Les marcheurs qui se sont rassemblés devant l’ambassade d’Egypte à Nouakchott ont condamné la répression policière, dont ont été victimes les manifestants égyptiens avec lesquels ils ont exprimé toute leur solidarité.
Ces marches, qui se sont déroulées dans la discipline, étaient suivies par les forces de l’ordre.
Jadaliyya: Preliminary
Jadaliyya: Preliminary historical observations on the Arab revolutions of 2011
Egyptian Chronicles: The
Egyptian Chronicles: The Syrian revolution, day four
[youtube]isVuusJFlLU[/youtube]
[youtube]z97rm5YCPLk[/youtube]
London...
London...
Algeria again. (housing
Algeria again. (housing riots)
Syria - the situation in
Syria - the situation in Deraa
Egyptian Chronicles
Syria Comment
Al-bab.com
Guardian
I think it would be wise to
I think it would be wise to open a new forum thread for Syria. Tomorrow appears to become a big day, after the at least 25, but may be more than 100, demonstrators killed yesterday, and the 20.000 mourners/ demonstrators today, on the streets of Daraa, one fifth of the population of this city with 100.000 inhabitants. This is not a copycat protest, or a small beginning, to be dropped in a list together with Armenia and Swaziland and so on. This is, in my impression, becoming the sixth big one, after Tunesia, Egypt, Bahrein, Yemen and Libya.
I've started a thread for
I've started a thread for Syria here
Jordan
Jordan
@Mark: thanks, seen it: -)
@Mark: thanks, seen it: -)
Iraqi Kurdistan -
Iraqi Kurdistan - Sulaimaniyah. This seems like a significant attack on the Kurdish parties: for example, 2 peshmergas, operating nowadays as official security forces, have been killed. For a critique of the Kurdish parties up to 1991 see this.
Iraq Quote: On March 22nd, 5
Iraq
Morocco Quote: Thousands of
Morocco
Video from Saturday's demo - warning: graphic footage
Report from CGT North Africa (in Spanish)
Just found this about Malawi
Just found this about Malawi (which students in Europe could study and learn a thing or two about), from 2 weeks ago:
(my emphases)
Jordanian ruling class moan
Jordanian ruling class moan about the effects on investments of demonstrations and sit-ins.
Ahwazi people in Iransave 3
Ahwazi people in Iransave 3 political oponents from being hanged.
Burkina Faso: Quote: Soldiers
Burkina Faso:
from here
bootsy wrote: Ahwazi people
bootsy
More from Ahwaz yesterday
Also here and here
Swaziland uprising
Swaziland uprising
Not sure if this goes here or
Not sure if this goes here or not, but:
- from here: Military Occupation in Suleimaniya Iraq. Should say that the characterisation of this movement as just "non-violent" by this site ("Common Dreams") is an ideological distortion of the facts: a few weeks ago 2 peshmergas (now acting as cops for the Kurdish nationalist State) were killed. Don't know much about it, but it could be that what seems to be the more non-violent development of the movement has given the State the green light for military occupation.
The following, however, claims that recent rock-throwing is mostly State-provoked, but then liberal/Left critics of State brutality tend to always say that and it's always hard to sort the truth from the ideology:
- from National Catholic Worker.
Quote: The following is a
http://www.anarkismo.net/article/19377
More on the movement in Iraqi
More on the movement in Iraqi Kurdistan (there seem to be a few errors in the English, but it's mostly very clear):
Oman.: Quote: Demonstrations
Oman.:
Spain
Spain
[youtube]BzC-PkacKGs[/youtube]
[youtube]Xg8MZA1nel4[/youtube]
Libertarian and autonomous
Libertarian and autonomous bloc, Madrid, 15 May
Spanish ----- machine translation
Edited to add:
alasbarricadas thread ----- machine translation
Interesting to see the reactions of anarchists to an internet call out that sounds similar to the ones in North Africa and Portugal.
Molly's Blog on the arab
Molly's Blog on the arab revolutions
Any thoughts on this?
From The Free
From The Free Association
which has a link to this article
Again any thoughts?
_________________________________________
Edit: To pick up on a passage from the article above:
This sounds accurate and I haven't heard of any attempts or calls for workers to take over their workplaces, in Egypt, Tunisia or elsewhere. To me this is one of the things that calls out for explanation. Why were workplaces taken over in Portugal in 1974, for example, but not in North Africa in 2011?
Sorry - don't have any
Sorry - don't have any answers to your interesting questions, Mark - partly because I'm too tired, but there's this news from Uganda:
More on the situation in
More on the situation in Uganda on Rosebell's Blog
The Moor Next Door: Vague
The Moor Next Door: Vague thoughts on Arab uprisings (II)
Demonstrations and police
Demonstrations and police repression in Morocco
More on
More on Morocco:
Reuters Quote: In Fes, three
Reuters
Togo: Quote: Togo's
Togo:
Yemen again (though this
Yemen again (though this might be called the "Mossos Effect").
Seems like there's a civil
Seems like there's a civil war brewing in Yemen between some of the tribes and the government.
Apparently the president was injured on an attack at his compound today. It's being blamed on the tribes.
There were also apparently huge demonstrations today after friday prayers.
Yemen seems to be something of a mess right now.
OK, this news about the
OK, this news about the rescheduling of the Bahrain Formula 1 race is significant. It's an opportunity to anarchists in the UK to make a symbolic, but meaningful intervention of solidarity into this process.
Bahrain is the other pole to Libya. Libya represents Western imperialism's attempt (clumsy and so far bungled) attempt to regain the initiative in this wave of revolt, through "hard power" intervention, in defence of material interests on one level (oil) and at another political (attempt to regain the appearance of dominance in the era of their decline). Bahrain was the blood price paid to the Saudis for the support of the Arab League for the intervention. A quid pro quo. The Saudis got to crush the Bahraini movement for the right of 90% of its population to throw off subjugation with the blessing (through silence) of the US and its Western allies.
This is common coin in today's Arab media. The traditional trope of the duplicity of the West is given new witness through the spectacle of the Libya - Bahrain double standard that is plain to all (at least in North Africa and the Middle East).
In this context, even token solidarity actions in support of the Bahrain struggle, have the potential to make a political difference.
Formula 1 is one of the most disgusting sports on the planet, the price for tickets for spectators is in the thousands, not the hundreds. It has the highest organic composition of capital of any sport, the manufacturers even get trophies, in recognition. Formula 1 is also, beneath it's carefully constructed guise of international or world sport, almost entirely a UK production. It is the private cash-cow of one UK "non-resident", and virtually all of the teams have their engineering in the UK.
This rescheduling of the Bahrain F1 race is a perfect storm. It represents everything that is sick and degenerate about both Bahrain and the UK. It also represents, thanks to their stupidity, a gift-horse in terms of international solidarity - a chance to defy/expose not only US-EU compliance with the Saudi line, but also to challenge the populist image in the bourgeois Arab media of western proles as gormless puppets of their state's media, and finally to intervene on the disruptive side of the sectarian composition of the Arabian peninsular and the Gulf region - that is on the minoritarian, Shi'ite side - in the Bahraini case, a minority distinct from the dominant Shia sect of Iran as well (contrary to ignorant or opportunistic Israeli/US propaganda).
Bahrain may not appear to be a big issue by the metrics of armchair generals who measure everything by weight of population and media coverage, but political judgement is based on awareness of the totality of interrelations and current processes. In that light I propose that this is a fault line worth attacking.
Here's a report of brutal
Here's a report of brutal repression in Yemen. Warning, horrible pictures there: http://janenovak.wordpress.com/yemen-protesters-burnt-alive-buried-in-mass-graves/
Obama administration "condemned" Yemen repression. They say "several" people have been killed, while it's been hundreds, including children who were burned alive!
ocelot: Not quite sure what
ocelot: Not quite sure what you're proposing here. Everyone go off to Bahrain and build burning barricades out of racing cars across the track ? I realise you can't be too specific, but I seriously can't see how those outside Bahrain can make a "meaningful intervention of solidarity ".
From here
Samotnaf wrote: ocelot: Not
Samotnaf
No I wasn't suggesting anyone travel to Bahrain. I was pointing out that appropriate foci were available a few tube stops away for Londoners, for e.g.
from here
from the same page:
The parent company of FOM, FOWC is also registered at 6 Princes Gate:
from here
So the immediate companies are handily located in central(ish) London. Above that level we get into a Jersey tax haven:
from WP
And Bernie "Hitler got bad press" Ecclestone is also London based, but of course he'll be in Bahrain at the time of the race.
Bahrain Grand Prix cancelled.
Bahrain Grand Prix cancelled.
Hungary, Clown revolution...
Hungary, Clown revolution...
Quote: DAKAR, Senegal —
- http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/africa/thousands-launch-demonstrations-across-senegals-capital-protesting-increased-power-cuts/2011/06/28/AGVpZroH_story.html
Quote: Malaysia Protests:
- here.
Quote: Iraq drafts harsh
http://ww4report.com/node/10124
The working class in Senegal
The working class in Senegal has a long and noble history in the class struggle, including self-organisation and extension in extremely difficult circumstances and as a part of the global revolutionary wave following World War One, including here joint struggles with European workers and mutinies.
Quote: Chile student riots
http://www.kuwaittimes.net/read_news.php?newsid=OTAyMTMyMTAzNQ==
http://labourstart-fr.postero
http://labourstart-fr.posterous.com/algeria-assassination-attempt-on-snapap-leade
Don't know if it is
Don't know if it is appropriate to use this as a catch-all for political protests that turn into more social forms of contestation, but didn't think it was worth putting this up as a separate news item (same with a lot of my previous posts on this thread):
http://english.people.com.cn/90001/90777/90855/7447045.html
And more:
http://www.globalpost.com/dispatch/news/regions/africa/110720/africa-malawi-anti-government-riots-lilongwe-protests-aid
For more information on
For more information on Malawi, and a lot of moralising and nauseating liberal crap, see this Amnesty International report.
More on Malawi (doesn't say
More on Malawi (doesn't say much except that rioting and looting continued yesterday):
http://english.people.com.cn/90001/90777/90855/7448154.html
Israel Quote: Israeli
[youtube]IiGne-k4ROQ[/youtube]
Israel
More on the Israeli housing
More on the Israeli housing protests
Does anyone who knows more about Israel than me have any thoughts on this? Tojiah?
More about this in Ha'aretz,
More about this in Ha'aretz, Wed, 20 Jul 2011
The Malawi Communications
The Malawi Communications Regulatory Authority (MACRA) has issued a ban stopping all private radio stations from broadcasting live the demonstrations taking place in the country.
Not sure if this is
Not sure if this is appropriate here but.........
I have nothing more to add
I have nothing more to add about that, really. What I know through my friends is more or less what is up there. There are complaints that it's not political enough, praise that it's grass-roots, etc.
Another thing that I'm not sure if you're aware of is that the medical interns went on hunger strike, as well as checking in to emergency rooms complaining of exhaustion, thus crowding them and bringing many hospitals to a standstill over wages and conditions. Tunisia effect? I don't know. Sure does seem to be acting up over there, though.
After huge rally, social
After huge rally, social justice protesters block central streets Tel Aviv
Interesting development,
Interesting development, despite the obvious contradictions. Worth looking at Mark's link - leads to things like:
(my favourites)
and to this informative article:
http://972mag.com/understanding-the-tent-protest/
Photos Quote: Out of 43
Photos
http://972mag.com/43-arrests-in-tel-aviv-protest-all-banned-from-protest-site/
The attitude of the cops here
The attitude of the cops here seems strangely contradictory: though these anarchists were held in custody longer, they've only been banned from the tent cities for 7 days, as opposed to 30 days for the others. Anybody have any idea why?
Samotnaf wrote: The attitude
Samotnaf
I speculate that it's basically the results of haggling. Those who caved in earlier found themselves under worse restrictions than those who were willing to spend the night in jail and see what kind of demand would hold up in front of a judge. Since these were AAW members, the police could still find a way of convincing a judge to put some restriction on them, but not as much as they initially demanded from the rest.
Well, that clarifies it.
Well, that clarifies it. Thanks.
Tojiah wrote: Tunisia effect?
Tojiah
Puerta del Ha’bima: The Spanish revolution reaches Israel
The coverage in the Spanish press is also playing up the comparison between the Israeli protests and the plaza occupations in Spain (try googling Israel + indignados)
------
200 housing protesters block road opposite Netanyahu's residence in Jerusalem
Sorry I don't really post
Sorry I don't really post much up here. You cover what I would have been uploading, and the rest is in Hebrew and doesn't seem to add much.
Tojiah - that's fair
Tojiah - that's fair enough
------
A new thread has been started on the Israeli protests here
I tend to use this thread as
I tend to use this thread as a catch-all for interesting events that are not really worth starting a new thread over:
http://www.iol.co.za/news/africa/niger-police-intervene-after-demonstrations-1.1109948
http://www.leftcom.org/en/art
http://www.leftcom.org/en/articles/2011-08-10/the-unfinished-business-of-the-arab-spring
Bahrain: Quote: Police
Bahrain:
http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/police-injured-during-demonstrations-in-manama-127577738.html
(doesn't even attempt to say what the demo was about)
#Kuwait: Occupy
[youtube]6ML9eQqjarE[/youtube]
#Kuwait: Occupy Parliament
Kuwait: Protesters storm the National Assembly
Kuwait security crackdown after crowd storms parliament
http://twitter.com/#!/search/%23Kuwait?q=%23Kuwait
Quote: Morocco: A January of
http://www.anarkismo.net/article/21982
Thousands gather for Morocco
Thousands gather for Morocco anniversary protests
Videos from Morocco
[youtube]aXQRUjiGWXs[/youtube]
Videos from Morocco
Sudan
Sudan protests
http://www.urban75.net/forums/threads/revolution-in-sudan-starts.295218/
http://globalvoicesonline.org/2012/06/22/sudanrevolts-in-wake-of-austerity-anger/
http://globalvoicesonline.org/2012/06/22/sudan-netizens-verify-internet-blackout-rumours/
http://globalvoicesonline.org/2012/06/23/sudan-police-denies-use-of-bullets-all-injuries-are-imaginary/
http://crowdvoice.org/sudan-protests
http://www.aljazeera.com/news/africa/2012/06/2012622222342156.html
AJE
AJE Inside Story on the protests, though tbh the talking heads discussion part of this doesn't help much in understanding what's going on and features a hopeless regime apologist:
[youtube]MbKeFLUVuHA[/youtube]
(No subject)
[youtube]1E0dmXRvTyI[/youtube]
[youtube]-pNKrCl7g7A[/youtube]
I'm not sure of its political
I'm not sure of its political stance but Sahel Blog has some coverage of the Sudan protests - mostly links to other media but I've found it interesting.
Global Voices: Unshackling
Global Voices: Unshackling the Sudanese revolution
The Girifna blog has more reports: http://www.girifna.com/blog-girifna/
Reuters: Sudan says no
Reuters: Sudan says no retreat on cuts despite protests
Girifna: Sudan revolts - a
Girifna: Sudan revolts - a situation analysis
Yousif Mubarak and Sarah Al Hassan
AFP: Sudan protesters hope
AFP: Sudan protesters hope for 'revolution'
AJE: #SudanRevolts - Will Sudan experience its own spring?
http://twitter.com/#!/search/%23SudanRevolts
AFP: 1,000 held, hundreds
AFP: 1,000 held, hundreds hurt in Sudan demos
Reuters: Sudan police teargas anti-government protesters
Arabist: Arrests, demonstrations in Sudan coincide with coup anniversary
[youtube]WSKvC0WtdhI[/youtube]
Egypt: Protest at Sudan
Egypt: Protest at Sudan Embassy against Bashir regime
http://sahelblog.wordpress.co
http://sahelblog.wordpress.com/2012/08/03/anti-government-protests-in-darfur/
the revolt is back in Tunisia
the revolt is back in Tunisia after a well-known left-wing and secularist MP was killed:
- http://juralib.noblogs.org/category/la-liberte-est-le-crime-qui-contient-tous-les-crimes/linsurrection-tunisienne-et-ses-suites/
- http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2013/feb/07/tunisia-general-strike-assassination-crisis
- http://www.internationalviewpoint.org/spip.php?article2885