A short summary from Per Bjorklund's blog. Not surprising that it's happening now. Political activity typically goes down during Ramadan, but start up right after. Protesters taking to the streets in Cairo again, attacking the Israeli embassy today.
Per Bjorklund
By the end of Ramadan was not only appropriate, Gaddafi in Libya and escalating protests against the regime in Syria, but also a renewed wave of strikes in Egypt. The past week of strikes or demonstrations carried out by postal workers across the country (who has recently formed a new union) workers in the Cairo metro, medics in Luxor, cleaners in Assiut, and a number of other groups. This Saturday is expected to Egyptian doctors once again go on strike, as thousands of textile workers in Mahalla, and in many other sectors have similar actions promised for next week - according to journalist and blogger Hossam el-Hamalawy, up to a quarter of a million workers and shut down work of any strike enforced. The requirements vary, but usually revolves around both the wages of employment conditions - not least the fact that both the state and the private sector later in the growing reliance on temporary contracts to discipline the workforce.
It's a bit - Dutch though.
It's a bit - Dutch though. Can you give us a summary?
Attacking the Israeli embassy sounds very bad news, unless they are expressing their solidarity with the protests in Israel....Anti-zionism has been used in the past in Egypt to divert workers' struggles towards imperialist war.
Alf wrote: Attacking the
Alf
After the Eilat attacks, followed by the Israelis killing Egyptian border guards, it looked more like the protesters encouraging war while the military seemed keen to avoid any escalation.
I don't see much risk of them showing solidarity with the Israeli protests.
I agree, it was the bad news
I agree, it was the bad news aspect I was stressing. In any Arab country, It would be a big step for open expressions of solidarity to take place towards the movement in Israel. But the latter can still be having a positive impact on the more reflective minorities produced by the 'Arab spring'.
I hope there is a positive
I hope there is a positive impact but the only expressions of solidarity I've heard of so far have been from some Palestinians. Pro-Palestinian campaigners elsewhere seem to be making a big deal of opposing the Israel protests, which doesn't make much sense to me but it seems like the automatic reaction.
It doesn't surprise me that
It doesn't surprise me that "pro-Palestinian" nationalists and leftists oppose the movement in Israel. Their whole ideology is based on seeing all Israelis as a part of a single privileged colonialist block. And in effect they do the same with the Palestinians, denying all class differences among them.
By the way Khawaga, apologies
By the way Khawaga, apologies for my stupid request above - I clicked on the link and made my post without actually reading the bit you had translated.
disappointing to read that
disappointing to read that certain "anarcho"syndicalists celebrate the nationalist degeneration of this current protests:
http://she2i2.blogspot.com/2011/09/photos-protests-clashes-outside-zionist.html
subprole wrote: disappointing
subprole
Where does it "celebrate"? Looks like a reasonably neutral photo report to me.
Egypt on alert after Israel
[youtube]plH9s_fyMMQ[/youtube]
Egypt on alert after Israel embassy stormed in Cairo (BBC)
Israeli diplomats evacuated after Egyptians storm embassy in Cairo (Haaretz)
well, ranting against the
well, ranting against the "Zionist embassy" and depicting this kind of nationalist protest as heroic resistance doesn't seem very "neutral" to me.
Al Masry Al Youm
Al Masry Al Youm yesterday
From the Arabist blog
subprole wrote: well, ranting
subprole
You have moved the goalpost - I asked where the celebration was. Can you point out where you see the words "heroic resistance" in the report?
I assume that the deviation from the language used by mainstream UK/US media is probably due to the writer not being a native English speaker or growing up in an Anglo-Saxon country . For all I know Zionist (embassy) and Israeli (embassy) may be synonyms in Arabic.
no1 wrote: For all I know
no1
this is a good point...not sure though...
Quote: You have moved the
I don't want to reply to this kind of this stupid questions because everyone who read Charbel's article knows that the author didn't explicitly describe the attack as "heroic resistance" etc., but it is quite obvious that this "anarcho"syndicalist journalist supports it.
Apart from that it is clear that the Egyptian state has an interest in such events where working class resistance is "channeled" into nationalism. Don't you have to say something about that?
Doesn't make really sense if you take a closer look at Charbel's post.
subprole wrote: Apart from
subprole
This is the obvious assumption to make but the evidence in this particular case doesn't look that clear to me. I doubt that the Egyptian government wants to be pushed towards a military confrontation with Israel any more than it wants working class resistance.
The breaking news in Haaretz suggests that the events at the Israeli embassy are leading to a political crisis in Egypt but I haven't seen anything that gives more details and I've no idea how accurate this is.
Edit: From Haaretz:
From the Arabist:
On the Israeli embassy incident
Bibi is in trouble
[youtube]5hK4OglFpcA[/youtube]
AJE liveblog
subprole wrote: Quote: You
subprole
I admire your ability to deduce people's political positions from things they haven't said! Can you tell the rest of us how you have acquired such advanced analytical skill? /sarcasm
Actually, to tell you the truth, I find it quite tiresome how some libertarian communists categorise on the basis of a few criteria such as nationalism, and then pretend that this can substitute for proper analysis of historic events. As world views go, that's worse than religion IMHO.
Alf wrote: By the way
Alf
It was in Swedish, and I just made a machine translation (just checked if it was readable).
And the embassy thing... well I think it's for sure a distraction. The regime doesn't even have to point the finger towards Israel anymore; it's so ingrained in the Arab consciousness that Israel is really the bad guy that it's not even questioned whether other more productive things could be done to support the Palestinians (such as toppling SCAF). Even during the Tahrir occupations before Ramadan huge crowds would go to the embassy to protest there rather than providing the numbers needed in Tahrir to stave off potential attacks from the police (at least on this there were disagreements). If I were SCAF I would just channel all my propaganda towards Israel...
Mark. wrote: subprole
Mark.
The military regime, as before Mubarak was displaced, wants to be seen as "holding back" from military confrontation with Israel. That way mass activity can be directed to convincing them to stop holding back, rather than abolishing them altogether. It helps them domestically by channeling anti-regime protests towards anti-Zionism ("those damned Zionists, if we could only remove their influence from our government, things would be better"), and internationally, because it gives them leverage when setting policy with regards to Israel and when dealing with their US backers ("we would love to be more helpful, but we have this popular anti-Israel sentiment we need to deal with").
Khawaga, Tojiah - that makes
Khawaga, Tojiah - that makes sense.
This was posted in the comments for the Arabist article:
subprole wrote: disappointing
subprole
How come German poseurs like you only get worked up about nationalism when it's directed against Israel?
Berlin-Brussels has its jackboot on the neck of the entire European periphery from Spain to Greece, but x like you get your panties bunched up when people vandalize the embassy of an atomic power.
admin: no flaming
Interesting recent paper
Interesting recent paper suggests that shutting down the internet actually helps revolution, cites Egypt as example.
Dictatorship 101: killing the internet plays into the hands of revolutionaries
Quote: How come German
1. Listen, Angelus Novus: I don't care at all if embassies or other state buildings get trashed, but it cannot be wrong to criticize it if there are obviously nationalist motives behind it.
2. I've posted a lot about the situation in Greece and I'm observing the class struggles there very, very closely while people like you are translating useless academic rubbish from Ingo Elbe for your university or whatever. But of course you can also continue posting your bollocks, stupid American citizen!
Yeah, Australians making fun
Yeah, Australians making fun of Americans for being stupid. Quite.
Could you possibly take this grudge match some other thread, thanks?
Quote: Could you possibly
Well, I wouldn't have anything to object if "Angelus Novus" brainless comment which contains nothing except speculations about national identities gets deleted (-also my response).
Then don't respond to his
Then don't respond to his trolling. I was talking to both of you. None of this has to do with what's going on in Egypt, which is what I assume people want to read about when they open a thread about worker unrest in Egypt.
This was
This was interesting:
"However, do you really think the army couldn't have taken any steps to avoid this? Are we to believe that if an angry, determined crowd targets a different embassy tomorrow, they will also be allowed to breach it? I think the army could have prevented people from approaching the area (as they did when protesters tried to reach the Ministry of Defense). Or they could have stood on their tanks and tried to talk the crowd down (once the wall was knocked down). They very clearly from the beginning had decided to stand aside. I wasn't there, I was watching on TV, but for hours and hours the crowd was allowed to operate with complete freedom. I'm not sure what the logic was -- let the kids run wild, it will make them look bad, seems to be one theory -- but I think there was a logic".
As others have said, there are good 'social' reasons (ie, diverting potential social unrest) for the government allowing this to happen. There is also an imperialist dimension. The attack takes place at a time when Turkey is also using anti-Israel rhetoric to bid for a leading role in the Middle East, and Erdogan is due to visit Cairo:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/sep/10/egypt-israeli-embassy-broken-into?INTCMP=ILCNETTXT3487.
Today's Guardian article talks about the possibility of a new Egypt-Turkey alliance based on anti-Israel posturing. But there would also be rivalries between the two powers, attempts to outbid each other as the real anti-Zionists....
Quote: As others have said,
Agree with that. As we can see it is also an opportunity for the state to extend the emergency laws:
- http://english.ahram.org.eg/~/NewsContent/1/64/20868/Egypt/Politics-/Egypts-minister-of-information-Emergency-law-reviv.aspx
- http://www.haaretz.com/print-edition/news/egypt-reinstates-emergency-laws-after-embassy-attack-1.383691
On embassy attacks; crowds
On embassy attacks; crowds also "menaced" the Saudi Arabian embassy. Now that's an attack that makes more sense considering that Saudi Arabia has done more to fuck up the Arab revolutions than Israel ever has.
Khawaga wrote: On embassy
Khawaga
Do you have any more info on this "menacing" of the Saudi Arabian embassy? I'm intrigued but don't really know what you mean.
Unfortunately I don't have
Unfortunately I don't have much on it. I just read it in a New York Times article.
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/09/11/world/middleeast/11egypt.html?ref=middleeast&pagewanted=all
When AUC students are
When AUC students are striking you know something is up. These are the kids of the upper class (self-identified). Mostly spoilt brats that think of university more as a social fashion show than anything else (at least that was the impression I got from a semester there). Great that the workers joined in as well since that will likely have more of an impact. Let's see if faculty also joins.
Al Ahram
http://english.ahram.org.eg/NewsContent/1/64/20922/Egypt/Politics-/Students-and-workers-on-strike-at-American-Univers.aspx
More from the arabist
More from the arabist blog:
More on Ultras, the Embassy, and the Friday of Not-Exactly-Putting-the-Revolution-Back-on-Track
Rally at the Egyptian embassy
Rally at the Egyptian embassy in Tel Aviv yesterday - photos
[youtube]k_fDXuRNTYg[/youtube]
[youtube]mosbkxtMohI[/youtube]