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.
From Raw Story, based on
From Raw Story, based on AFP:
Report on the EA
Report on the EA liveblog
http://twitter.com/simsimt
http://sudan30january.blogspot.com/ (in Arabic)
Facebook for Syria protests
Facebook for Syria protests (in Arabic)
http://www.facebook.com/pages/ywm-alghdb-alswry/147151028676674?v=wall
Breaking news: The
Breaking news: The facebook-organized protests have begun in Khartoum. Stay tuned for continuous updates
Edited to add:
Sudan police clash with
Sudan police clash with protesters (Al Jazeera)
The Syrians are watching (Al
The Syrians are watching (Al Jazeera)
Mark. wrote: That chant
Mark.
That chant sounds suspiciously like "No ifs, no buts, no education cuts". Someone with better (i.e. at all) video skills than me should make a compilation video.
Mark. did you change your username recently? If so would you pm me your old one?
Mike - I've sent you a pm.
Mike - I've sent you a pm.
Sudan student dies in clashes (Al Jazeera)
Thousands of Syrians vow a
Thousands of Syrians vow a protest against al-Assad
Algeria: confirmation of
Algeria: confirmation of march In Algiers, 12 February. Call out by "National Coordination for Change and Democracy, which groups the autonomous unions, opposition movements and civil society organisations".
La marcha del 12 de febrero en Argel, una apuesta por un cambio social en Argelia
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2010–2011_Arab_world_protests
Oman protestors call for
Oman protestors call for fight against corruption
Sudan follow-up: more
Sudan follow-up: more protests on Monday, big march called for Thursday
re Algeria le Parisien: Début
re Algeria
le Parisien: Début d'une série de grèves en Algérie
Sudan update Quote: Sudanese
Sudan update
Syrian revolution on facebook
Syrian revolution on facebook
Senegal government seeks to
Senegal government seeks to avoid the Tunisian scenario
Mid-East contagion fears for
Mid-East contagion fears for Saudi oil fields
Libya: calls for protest on
Libya: calls for protest on 17 February
Facebook page for revolution
Facebook page for revolution in Morocco
(No subject)
[youtube]ijG0CXxlSrk[/youtube]
The Syrian revolution يوم
The Syrian revolution يوم الغضب السوري
is there anything significant
is there anything significant happening in saudi??
Nothing I've heard of as yet
Nothing I've heard of as yet though I haven't really looked for information. There has been unrest from the Shia minority in the past and I've seen the suggestion somewhere that the Iranian government's position of support for the uprisings in Tunisia and Egypt is linked to an attempt to destabilise Saudi. I don't know enough to say whether there's any truth in this.
thanks mark
thanks mark :)
therer were some protests by
therer were some protests by unemployed teachers in early January:
http://blogs.ft.com/beyond-brics/2011/02/03/saudi-arabia-riddle-of-the-regime/ & http://af.reuters.com/article/worldNews/idAFTRE7081FW20110109
Quote: 3 February - Algerians
Quote: The groups' main
It has already been lifted according to al-arabiya breaking news i posted in the egypt thread and it has just been confirmed in al-jazeera live stream too.
It keeps being confirmed in
It keeps being confirmed in al-arabiya stream by all contributors
random opinion from Saudi The
random opinion from Saudi
The Arab Revolution’s effect on Saudis
Morocco? http://www.spsrasd.i
Morocco?
http://www.spsrasd.info/en/detail.php?id=16315
According to the ICC's French
According to the ICC's French website a strike by hundreds of phosphate workers in Algeria started yesterday over pay and conditions. The day before saw strikes of paramedics and education workers followed by between 80 and 100% of the workers involved from the country to the cities.
Thousands of students have taken to the streets denouncing the "assassins" of the government and shouting slogans against corruption.
Djibouti protest
Djibouti protest
Not sure if it was on here
Not sure if it was on here yet, but Senegal implemented price adjustment measures, didn't see any sign it was in response to protests in Senegal, looked more like a 'just in case' measure, but that's the first I've heard from sub-saharan Africa in terms of responses.
Light relief, nice animation but the voice over is lacking:
http://www.markfiore.com/political-cartoons/watch-egypt-middle-east-revolution-mubarak-yemen-saudi-arabia-animated-video-mark-fiore-animation
Sudan protest yesterday
Sudan protest yesterday
Quote: The Syrian Revolution
http://globalvoicesonline.org
http://globalvoicesonline.org/2011/02/04/gabon-the-invisible-revolt/
Demonstrations in Iraq,
Demonstrations in Iraq, police opened fire, injured 3
Contagion effect: will
Contagion effect: will regional protests reach Bahrain?
It looks like the answer is yes, going off this video posted up today.
I think the Angry Arab had
I think the Angry Arab had something on Bahrain as well. Can't find it now though... I should've posted it when I read it. Seems like the Bahraini govt. is trying to preempt protests by increasing food subsidies...
Angry Arab correspondent on
Angry Arab correspondent on Bahrain
Bahrain Online on facebook
February 14 statement
Day of rage in Syria Protests
Day of rage in Syria
Protests in Syria?
Demonstrations in Jordan but little in Syria on day of rage
Calls for weekend protests in Syria
Algeria opposition bent on
Algeria opposition bent on protest despite government move
Palestine snapshot: will
Palestine snapshot: will Egypt and Tunisia examples bring change?
Hamas worried upheaval in Arab world will spill into Gaza
(No subject)
[youtube]5eqyOSWfZ0k[/youtube]
Police beat and tear gassed
Police beat and tear gassed students protesting in Sudan's Sennar state
Saudi women demonstrate to
Saudi women demonstrate to demand release of longtime prisoners
(No subject)
[youtube]GJgW5aJFFds[/youtube]
EA liveblog Quote: 1523 GMT:
EA liveblog
Bahrain blocks facebook
Bahrain blocks facebook group
The Moor Next Door:
The Moor Next Door: Incomplete thoughts on the Algerian Situation
Not sure how useful these
Not sure how useful these links to various liberal commentators are, but here's one about the failure of the facebook-incited protests in Syria: http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2011/feb/07/syria-uprising-egypt-tunisia-days-of-rage#start-of-comments. I know nothing about Syria, so I have no way of judging how accurate it is.
Algerian paramedics are
Algerian paramedics are threatening an unlimited strike beginning tomorrow. (in French).
National teachers strike
National teachers strike beginning in Algeria on 16th February. (in French again)
Jordan next? Quote: JORDAN:
Jordan next?
http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/babylonbeyond/2011/02/jordan-tribesman-slam-queen-rania-warn-revolt.html
Togo Quote: "Nous sommes tous
Togo
Iran Quote: Mehdi Karroubi,
Iran
Sudan: call for more
Sudan: call for more demonstrations in Khartoum
Al Ahram: Israel aims to head
Al Ahram: Israel aims to head off strike over soaring prices
Gaza students hold Egypt
Gaza students hold Egypt solidarity rally
China police stop spread of
China police stop spread of Egypt news
From SignalFire Quote: afrol
From SignalFire
Two decent summary
Two decent summary articles:
Egypt-Inspired Protests Across Middle East Meet Violent Clampdown
Gulf Leaders Hear Rumblings of Dissent
Some background on the
Some background on the impending Histadrut strike in Israel: just a few weeks ago, the head of the Labor Party, Ehud Barak, headed off a developing attempt to oust him by splitting off from Labor to form a new faction called "Independence", taking five other Labor Members of the Knesset with him. The rest of Labor is now running around like a headless chicken waiting for someone to take up leadership. Ofer Eini is considered a prime candidate, either to become head of the party or to further his position as Labor kingmaker. A set-piece strike showing off his leadership might be just what he needs.
Tojiah wrote: A set-piece
Tojiah
So do you discount this:
?
Or do you think that there is a bit of both? I.e. both genuine will to struggle against declining purchasing power, and the machinations from above?
Mark.
Mark.
This sounds really interesting. The regime in Tehran may have made a big mistake by trying to portray the events in Egypt as an "Islamic Revolution". Hopefully opponents of the regime have been inspired by events in Cairo, Tunis, etc. Looking forward to what happens Monday.
I confess, the inclusion of
I confess, the inclusion of the Histadrut story in a "Tunisia effect..." thread without any commentary was perhaps a little mischievious. But as a fan of overdetermination and suspicious of over-simplistic frames (e.g. "Arabs revolt against dictatorship"), I liked the article for it's expressed link between the two things around the economic link. I don't want to fall into the trap of economic determinism, but I think the pressure of rising commodity* prices, both soft (food) and hard (fuel) is one of the contributory drivers. Where I differ from the more conventional interpretation, is I don't see rising wheat and fuel prices as "external factors" (e.g. environmental and weather shocks to supply and increased demand in emergent economies), but immanent to the whole ongoing global political-economic systemic crisis. That is, that rising wheat prices are equally both symptom and cause of the decline of US hegemony as the revolts themselves. Anyway, blah, blah, blah..., I intend to write something properly on this in the next few days.
Also I can't help but feel the idea of a Histadrut strike being part of the Sidi Bouzid wave just basically offends all the right people...
* in the capitalist sense, rather than the marxist
8th Feb: Algeria: beginning
8th Feb:
Algeria: beginning of the paramedics strike mentioned before.
In the Naciria area, 45 kms. from Boumerdès, young unemployed block the RN12 (main road). Cops intervene, violent confrontations develop, bringing in, bit by bit, other local areas. In the village of El Harrouch, 30km to the south of Skikda, demonstrators block the RN3 (another main road) to express their grivances. Cops intervene: 13 gendarmes and 3 demonstrators hurt before the road is unblocked. About 100 unemployed block the 2 main access routes to Chaïba close to the Sider HQ and that of the new estate AADL, in the Sidi Amar commune. Other unemployed block traffic at Borj
Menaiel and workers at a dairy in Tazmalt protest against redundancies.
9th Feb, Algeria:
At Naciria the unemployed youths renew their blockade of the RN12 demanding training and work.
In Oran, the HQ of the recently inaugurated Public Records Office, was wrecked by angry demonstrators before the cops evacuated it (don't know the reason for this action).
9th Feb, Morocco:
Public sector strike against the higher cost of living and the suppression of work. A sit-in in front of the HQ of the Ministry for the modernisation of public services.
Taken from:
http://www.kalimadz.com/fr/
http://juralibertaire.over-blog.com/
__________
waslax wrote: Tojiah
waslax
Oh, I'm not trying to discount it entirely. It's a little of both. After all, the reason he thinks this is a good tour de force is that it responds to real issues; nevertheless I've just seen these union operas come and go, and they don't leave a more powerful working-class (or any actual change in living standards for most workers).
I'm not sure how much the Israeli working class would be informed by the Sidi Bouzid wave directly (they seem to take the government narrative of "unstable Arab world bad" to heart). I have not heard of wildcat strikes and popular uprisings in Israel lately. That's the context in which you should put Eini et al.
ocelot
I think you are discounting the success of the Zionist ruling class in inculcating the Jewish-Israeli working class with a complete disconnect from their fellow proletarians. I also don't think that posturing by a union federation leader is the same kind of animal as widespread wildcats and riots.
ocelot
It just doesn't seem to be a well-founded connection, is all. It seems like the Sidi Bouzid wave, in the sense of military dictatorships being overthrown by popular struggles resulting from the global deterioration in living standards and rising food costs is not relevant to the situation in Israel, which is closer to a bourgeois democracy, and yet has somehow not gone through the massive protests and strikes we've seen in Western European democracies in the past few months. I am not sure how to explain that, to be honest, but I don't see the Jewish-Israeli working class taking lessons from those it has been so successfully been trained to think of as dangerous enemies out to destroy him. If anything this will feed into the process of marginalization and criminalization of Palestinian-Israelis, as well as further attacks against Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza.
I think that the situation of
I think that the situation of "where next", with all due qualifications of specifities is absolutely relevant to Israel over the medium and long term - just as it's absolutely relevant to Britain, France, Italy, the USA and so on.
I generally agree with Ocelot's position and the more we distance ourselves, denounce even, the leftist position of the "Arab revolution" the better.
Concretely expressed, in the revolt around Egypt, we've seen the unity of interests of Hamas, Fatah, the military dictatorship of Egypt and the democratic governments of Israel, the United States and others in the face of revolt and the growing involvement of the working class.
Thanks for those comments
Thanks for those comments Tojiah.
baboon wrote: I think that
baboon
Absolutely. I was just arguing about the short term vis-à-vis posturing by Eini. Perhaps ocelot and I aren't quite in disagreement. Workers throughout the world, specifically throughout the Mediterranean are feeling the same underlying pressures: decreasing public wages through social support, decreasing private wages through cuts and inflation, rising food costs, etc. It's just that with different social organizations in each country, the popular and proletarian responses are different. Therefore, I think looking at it as coming from Tunisia towards Israel ignores certain very real nationalist boundaries that exist and inform the conceptions of Jewish-Israeli workers.
Those most likely to receive a specific push from this string of uprisings are the Palestinian workers, who do not have this Jewish-Arab barrier. And indeed we see public protests, or at least attempts thereof, in the West Bank and Gaza, and even support protests inside of Israel, predominantly by Israeli Palestinians. But the immediate segregation in Israeli society, made stronger by the two Intifadas which caused there to be less and less personal and proletarian interaction between Israelis and Palestinians, both inside and outside the Green Line, will make it difficult for this to leak into the Israeli working-class. If anything you would think that they would be more informed by what is going on in Europe, although, again, it seems like that hasn't manifested yet, and I can't quite explain why.
baboon
I think most correspondents to this forum have done so quite well so far.
baboon
So we have. But the Israeli working-class doesn't see this, as far as I know. Or at least hasn't made any concrete steps to express such an understanding.
Khawaga
Sure. Whatever I can do to try and help make sense of things.
From the EA
From the EA Liveblog:
Yes, thanks for those
Yes, thanks for those comments T. I generally agree with the qualifications you make about the present situation
Guardian live
Guardian live updates
After lull, job protests
After lull, job protests resume in Morocco capital
Algeria tomorrow Algeria
Algeria tomorrow
Algeria prepares for day of protests
The Guardian
Algeria moves to stave off unrest
Al Jazeera
Le siège du RCD à Alger assiégé par la police
TSA
Reports on strikes in Morocco
Reports on strikes in Morocco from CGT North Africa.
Movilizaciones de trabajadores en Marruecos- Huelga general en la función pública
machine translation
.
Victoria de los trabajadores de Smesi tras 19 meses de lucha
machine translation
From the Moor Next Door More
From the Moor Next Door
More incomplete thoughts on the Algerian situation
The fall of Egypt’s long time dictator Husni Mubarak may have an impact on the demonstrations planned for 12 February in Algeria. Most assessments appraising the likelihood of a popular revolution in Algeria have been grim: Algeria’s civil society is too weak, its political parties too divided and unpopular to inspire or direct an Egyptian or Tunisian-style mass movement. Protests and uprisings are often localized and spontaneous rather than organized as previous Egypt’s 6 April and Kifaya movements were. Its urban geography, some wrote, is more restrictive than Cairo’s or Tunis’s, lacking large public squares where demonstrators might camp out or confront security forces. These are all valid points and reflect keen observations of Algeria’s political scene. One would be surprised if Said Sadi could turn out large masses of Algerians beyond Algiers and Kabylia. The other factions making up the Coordination nationale pour le changement et la démocratie (CNCD) are small, though each has its own constituency. The Algerian security services have been preparing to swallow up the 12 February protests over the last week (if not more), particularly since the state denied the organizers’ application for a permit to assemble. Because the protests have been associated with the RCD, many doubted the legitimacy of the protests and their intentions; in particular the FFS, the RCD socialist rival in Kabylia, refused to participate as well as have other opposition parties. Some have speculated as to the motivations behind the protests given Said’s links to the DRS. That the demonstration permit was denied lends the demonstrations additional credibility. (the CNCD also includes groups like SOS disparus (an advocacy group for the families of people disappeared during the Civil War), Tharwa Fatma N’Soumer (a group opposed to the 1984 Family Code and especially interested in women’s empowerment) and several independent labor unions.) If 12 February is a success in the sense of turn out it will not be due strictly to the work of the CNCD: it will owe to a whole climate of dissatisfaction and frustration. And the regime’s efforts to smother the protests may have the opposite of their intended effect.
The fall of Husni Mubarak might inspire some politically minded Algerians to go out and join the march in Algiers or elsewhere; but to draw the comparison between the Egyptian movement which focused on Mubarak and “his regime” and Algerian political problem is somewhat difficult. The Algerian regime is more effective at managing popular protests and riots than either Tunisia or Egypt, having done so for the last twelve years. The slow official response to the January demonstrations (as compared to the relatively fast and repetitious public statements from the former leaders of Tunisia and Egypt) helped the regime deprive demonstrators of public targets in the form of the the President or the Prime Minster. This was like partly a learned feature (the aggressive and callus statements from former Interior Minister Yazid Zerhouni during the April 2001 events had a radicalizing effect not unlike Mubarak’s, though very different in tone) and the result of Algerian decision-making processes which ordinarily takes a great amount of time.
The regime already faced a significant popular protest movement in 1988. The response to that crisis is often remembered in terms of the 1992 elections, called after a period of impressive liberalization and aborted when Islamists looked likely to win. The years of suffering that followed are well known to most. The motivation for the transition has been revealed (and debated) in the commentary and memoirs of contemporaries having been the survival of the old regime by writing the electoral law to favor mass-based parties like the FLN so that the former single party could run younger, more religious candidates and co-opt voters’ religious preference while allowing the ancien regime to maintain its hard grip on the country with a popular mandate. The FIS, modeling itself on the FLN benefited from the new electoral law, though. Chadli failed and Army generals visited him in the Presidential Palace and talked him into resigning and giving them control of the country. The regime that came after, a junta, used Chadli’s strategy: it advanced Liamine Zeroual in the 1995 presidential election. The genealogy of Bouteflika’s leadership comes out of that process; internal competition between factions within the regime reflects the same institutional rot that afflicts other long-standing Arab regimes rather than ideological distention. Because Algeria’s core elite is divided between elements of the military and the president’s loyalists there is a possibility that the deep state may attempt to use 12 February as an opportunity to expand their role own power; encouraging or allowing violence to occur would give the security forces a louder voice in government. It might also give them a means of getting concessions out of the civilian leadership in economic policy and on certain political questions. But the regime as a whole understands how dangerous excessive force could be in the current regional climate. That one or the other elite faction might try to exploit the demonstrations for internal leverage is perhaps the greatest risk for both demonstrators, officials and their allies. Practically all key players understand the importance of avoiding the steps that led to the “national tragedy” though those in power see this as meaning maintaining power for themselves more shrewdly than Mubarak or Ben Ali did. In their view this requires a willingness to do just about anything, violent or otherwise.
Keep in mind that the Algerian regime has something neither Tunisia nor Egypt has: piles and piles of gas money ready to be dumped on the right opposition and social players as needed. The government can buy off political figures and their bases; it can attempt to pacify religious and tribal leaders by dumping money and infrastructure on them. Algeria’s leaders may benefit from the country’s status as a major energy exporter to Europe and America in the event of serious street struggle.
The RCD’s headquarters in Algiers was has already been surrounded by police after three hundred people reportedly congregated there to demonstrate their satisfaction with the fall of Mubarak. What kind of affect early obstruction might have will depend on how many people turn out in force to begin with: the masses of police on the streets may have a serious psychological impact on smaller demonstrators and if the demonstrations are as easily dispersed as on 22 January its unlikely that much else will follow. And while many Algerians are thoroughly dissatisfied with Bouteflika, most understand the real political challenge is the whole system, the politicized military leadership, the economic oligarchs, the not mere personalities. Many Algerians have been impressed by the fall of Mubarak, though. Buses of people are heading to Algiers from the surrounding cities and provinces, blocked by the police. By cutting out those seeking to protest peacefully (and with a limited popular appeal) the regime is increasing the likelihood of spontaneous, violent demonstrations which may indeed be to the government’s advantage. While the opposition is weak and without strong popular credentials (not wholly committed to the 12 February movement) there is more potential for something much bigger than previously anticipated as a result of recent events and the anxiety they may cause in the security services and the government at large. Mubarak’s fall has raised the stakes for Algeria’s 12 February march. But his fall does not necessarily make Bouteflika’s imminent. More to come.
From Al Jazeera Quote: 1:54am
From Al Jazeera
http://juralibertaire.over-bl
http://juralibertaire.over-blog.com/article-marche-contre-le-regime-en-algerie-12-fevrier-66997589.html
Under Algerian and Tunisian
Under Algerian and Tunisian government pressure, transmission of Radio Kalima - a non-State Algerian radio station - has been blocked.
Someone on twitter just
Someone on twitter just flashed up that both twitter and facebook are blocked in Algeria at the moment. No link because it literally popped up in alerts and I didn't catch the username.
New thread on Algeria
New thread on Algeria protests
http://libcom.org/forums/news/unrest-spreads-algeria-12022011
This, from today's Guardian
This, from today's Guardian :
Could Bahrain be
Could Bahrain be next?
Uganda Rosebell Kagumire
Uganda
Rosebell Kagumire
Museveni must go! And all the rest!
Ssebo
Iran Quote: Both sides are
Iran
Algiers Quote: In the
Algiers
There was a demonstration yesterday, here in Paris too, supporting the protesters in Algiers.
Parisian Demostration
Algeria opposition to hold
Algeria opposition to hold weekly rallies
Twitter feeds for the Bahrain
Twitter feeds for the Bahrain protests tomorrow
http://twitter.com/angryarabiya
http://twitter.com/search?q=%23Feb14
Bahrain protests to add to pressure on government
Libya Quote: In the wake of
Libya
Sudan Quote: A group of women
Sudan
Bahrain opposition in protest
Bahrain opposition in protest call
Guardian on
Guardian on Bahrain
EA liveblog on
EA liveblog on Iran
Bahrain http://twitter.com/an
Bahrain
http://twitter.com/angryarabiya
Crowdvoice: Human rights crackdown in Bahrain
Guardian on
Guardian on Iran
More reports on the protests in Iran:
http://crowdvoice.org/opposition-protests-in-iran
another liveblog on Iran:
another liveblog on Iran: http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/tehranbureau/2011/02/iran-live-blog-25-bahman-14-february.html
(No subject)
[youtube]6hXXn2r-72I[/youtube]
Guardian on
Guardian on Iran
Guardian on
Guardian on Bahrain
some strikes and workers'
some strikes and workers' protests in Iran during the last days: http://iranenlutte.wordpress.com/2011/02/13/protestation-quotidienne-pour-le-paiement-des-salaires/
Bahrain http://twitter.com/an
Bahrain
http://twitter.com/angryarabiya
Bahrain - the shooting starts
Bahrain - the shooting starts
[youtube]R3LazFJ0wa4[/youtube]
Iran
Iran
[youtube]3Pm6wbnaLOA[/youtube]
one demonstrator killed in
one demonstrator killed in Tehran according to http://iranenlutte.wordpress.com/2011/02/14/un-mort-et-250-arrestations-a-teheran/ ... more reports on demonstrations in Iran here: http://www.astreetjournalist.com/2011/02/14/minute-by-minute-reports-of-february-14-25-bahman-%da%af%d8%b2%d8%a7%d8%b1%d8%b4-%d9%84%d8%ad%d8%b8%d9%87-%d8%a8%d9%87-%d9%84%d8%ad%d8%b8%d9%87-%d8%a7%d8%b2-%d8%b1%d8%a7%d9%87%d9%be%db%8c%d9%85/
Also one demonstrator killed
Also one demonstrator killed In Bahrain
http://twitter.com/angryarabiya
From the
From the Guardian
The Guardian on
The Guardian on Iran
EA liveblog on
EA liveblog on Iran
Iraq Quote: Iraqis have been
Iraq
Mourner killed in clashes at
Mourner killed in clashes at Bahrain protester funeral
http://twitter.com/angryarabiya
Guardian
Global Voices: Bahrain: a second man killed as police attack first victim's funeral
Photos
Q&A: Student activist in
Q&A: Student activist in Tehran
February 14th, 2011
Ali is a student activist at Amir Kabir University in Tehran. He organized a student demonstration on campus on Monday and participated in other rallies in a few locations in the capital. He spoke to Arash Aramesh of InsideIRAN.org about the clashes in Tehran.
Q: Please describe what is happening right now in Tehran?
A: Lots of people were on the streets; maybe a few hundred thousand. We started at Amir Kabir University, but security forces shut all the gates at the university. My friends and I wanted to march together so we would be in a group to reduce the risk of getting caught. Around campus, security forces split us up in two groups. There was a pro-government professor yelling and chanting against us. Some people were arrested on campus. We moved near Vali Asr Square, but police locked down the entire area. We tried to walk to Azadi Square. You could not see a single open store. It is a good hour or so walk from Vali Asr to Azadi but you did not see a single open business.
Security forces implemented their old, and well- practiced techniques. Their forces were everywhere and very well organized. I just left my friends. We are trying to get a head count and see what happened to my friends.
Q: Were there a lot of arrests?
A: They filled vans with people. They rushed us and took people away. There is a language school near Danshjoo Park. Police occupied that building and the one next to it and turned it into a temporary detention facility. Four or five officers would attack students and kidnap them and then keep them in the building.
At noon, we told everyone that we had a permit to reduce the fear and anxiety of people. Phones did not work in that area, but we still managed to get many people out. This was a very successful event. Many people showed up and not many got hurt.
Q: How did the police treat the demonstrators?
A: Some police forces were surprisingly nice, especially around Azadi Square. But other forces in other areas used brute force. I saw a man whose face was struck with something. I couldn’t tell what it was, but there was blood all over him and he fell down. The government is really worried about people with cameras and this man had a camera. He was taking pictures. The government doesn’t want any media coverage.
There was such little information about what to do and where to go. We got all our information from the internet. And there is no information about what to do next. But I am very happy about today’s turnout.
Q: What groups of people were there today?
A: We saw people from all walks of life. Many students but lots of older people. We saw people with Islamic covers and beards in our ranks. There were people who looked poor. We didn’t expect them to come. But I think they came because of economic pressure. Things have gotten worse since the subsidies reform.
Q: What is going to happen next?
A: We don’t know. Moussavi was supposed to talk to BBC, but he is under house arrest. So is Karroubi. People need information but no one is adequately covering the events in Iran. Lots of people have good internet access at work and more people have basic internet at home. But there is not any information for them as what to do.
I think people are waiting for another call to protest. People want to take advantage of internal rifts in government. The Majlis and the government cannot work together. They always insult each other. And people are fed up with this situation that nothing gets done and there is so much infighting. Everything is getting more expensive because of Ahmadinejad’s subsidy cuts. Metro tickets in Tehran are going to quadruple in price. People, especially the urban poor, cannot live like this. The same people who voted for him because of handouts are now getting tired of his policies
Q: What do you expect from Egyptian and Tunisian groups and pro-democracy forces?
A: We want them to issue statements in support of our movement. Imagine what an impact it would have if the Muslim Brotherhood released a statement in our support. Or if Egyptian youth support us, there would be great moral boost.
People don’t realize how tense the situation is in Tehran. It is very tense. It is a powder keg and only needs a trigger. People no longer consider themselves supporters of Moussavi or Karroubi. Instead, they say they are part of a movement. The Green Movement that does not belong to Moussavi but to the people.
Iran feature: Facebook and a
Iran feature: Facebook and a resurgent opposition? (Habibinia)
Iran analysis: guess who's back? back again?
30 mars 2012, la Révolution
30 mars 2012, la Révolution Marocaine...
Bahrain - protesters have
Bahrain - protesters have occupied a roundabout, the Bahraini version of Tahrir Square?
http://twitter.com/angryarabiya
Guardian
The Angry Arab blog says that
The Angry Arab blog says that the US is freaking out over Bahrain
Libya - protests were
Libya - protests were supposed to start on Thursday but have kicked off 2 days early
[youtube]QOqZ391dzfg[/youtube]
http://twitter.com/search?q=%23libya
http://twitter.com/search?q=%23Feb17
Bahrain protests prompt
Bahrain protests prompt global concerns
The BBC
"We don't recognise leaders"
"We don't recognise leaders"
"We don't recognise leaders" that's ace! Even more considering the long authoritarian tradition in the area. I expect to listen to it more often. These upheavals are being already amazing.
From the Angry Arab
From the Angry Arab blog
Bahrain today
Al Jazeera liveblog -
Al Jazeera liveblog - Bahrain
Violent protests break out in
Violent protests break out in Libya
Al Jazeera
http://twitter.com/search?q=%
http://twitter.com/search?q=%23Feb17
http://twitter.com/search?q=%23libya
More live updates, Bahrain,
More live updates, Bahrain, Libya and elsewhere
EA liveblog
Guardian
a call for revolution by a
a call for revolution by a tribal Libyan opposition group: http://www.europe-solidaire.org/spip.php?article20274
Tremours must be occuring
Tremours must be occuring within the offices of US imperialism over Bahrain. As Mark says above there's a massive extension of the 5th Fleet facilities going on that is due to take years, firstly to reinforce US presence overall and secondly to encircle Iran. Much has been made of the split between the Shia majority and the minority Sunni Bahraini regime with its mercenary special forces but for one Iran is not involved in stirring things up - it has too much on its plate (its called a demonstration to support the state on Friday) and secondly, this appears to be a wider based movement. Bahrain has no oil and is reliant on US/Saudi support. There are large numbers of construction workers here both local and immigrant labour and the regime has announced a payment of $2700 for every family - with strings of course.
Britain also has a naval base here that it tends not to talk about.
It's not just the 5th fleet.
It's not just the 5th fleet. There's a potential Saudi dimension to the Bahrain struggle as well. Despite their violently intolerant Wahhabi brand of Sunni islam, Saudi actually has a 15% Shia majority, most of whom are concentrated in the Eastern province in the areas of the old Al-Bahrayn province which includes Al-Hasa, Qatif, etc (and historically stretched from Basra in the North to Oman, being the home in 10th CE of one of the more fun Shia lunatic sects, the Qarmatians). The Eastern Provice of Saudi Arabia also happens to contain most of the big oil-fields and oil infrastructure. You can be sure the prospect of a Sunni herediatary ruler being overthrown by the hated Shia, right in the middle of their main oil region, will drive the al Saud regime absolutely hysterical, and not in a funny-ha-ha way.
. http://twitter.com/search?
[youtube]q9Bw45P2zGs[/youtube]
.
[youtube]XK6h8LBRwz0[/youtube]
http://twitter.com/search?q=%23libya
http://twitter.com/search?q=%23Feb17
EA liveblog
Guardian
More updates on Libya at http://www.libyafeb17.com/
EA liveblog on
EA liveblog on Iraq
Washington Post on
Washington Post on Bahrain
Edit: Reading through this article I've got doubts about how accurate it is.
http://twitter.com/search?q=%
http://twitter.com/search?q=%23Feb17
http://twitter.com/search?q=%23libya
Edited to add this comment
[youtube]S0f6FSB7gxQ[/youtube]
Edited to add this comment from the Arabist
Libya - it looks like
Libya - it looks like protests are being met with more open force than they were in Tunisia and Egypt. Live firing and a lot of people killed.
http://www.libyafeb17.com/
http://twitter.com/search?q=%23Feb17
http://twitter.com/search?q=%23libya
Map of the protests
http://www.libyafeb17.com/ D
http://www.libyafeb17.com/
[youtube]WV07MH8XbH0[/youtube]
Disappointment with the media increases
Riot cops waded into Pearl
Riot cops waded into Pearl roundabout in Bahrain at 3am local time (midnight GMT). Reports of 2 to 3 dead, hundreds injured.
So far absolute deafening silence from US and EU.
AJ Bahrain liveblog
Guardian live updates
Reuters
edit: confirm, 3 dead.
BBC live
BBC live updates
Some background on
Some background on Bahrain
From the comments:
Angry Arab blog Quote: A
Angry Arab blog
Libya http://twitter.com/sear
Libya
http://twitter.com/search?q=%23Feb17
http://twitter.com/search?q=%23libya
Bahrain http://twitter.com/an
Bahrain
http://twitter.com/angryarabiya
Guardian Quote: 10.54am –
Guardian
EA liveblog Quote: 1035 GMT:
EA liveblog
...which raises the question of possible Saudi involvement in the repression.
Bahrain - I'm not sure if
Bahrain - I'm not sure if these are recent reports or from earlier today
http://twitter.com/angryarabiya
Comment from an Arsenal fan
Comment from an Arsenal fan working in a university at Bahrain, who finished his account thusly:
quite.
12 hours later, the UK
12 hours later, the UK finally makes a public statement.
Despicable. Still not a word from the US.
G Quote: 12.44pm – Bahrain:
G
AJ
ocelot wrote: 12 hours later,
ocelot
The talk of both sides needing restraint always reminds me of this.
That US response in full.
That US response in full.
Grin http://iwpr.net/report-n
Grin
http://iwpr.net/report-news/azerbaijan%E2%80%99s-opposition-warns-egyptian-scenario
Warning: graphic footage
Warning: graphic footage
[youtube]B6RCBOC-MAM[/youtube]
Arms sales to
Arms sales to Bahrain
So what is he expecting arms to be used for then?
Bahrain
Bristol against the arms trade
Meanwhile in Abu Dhabi...
List of exhibitors at IDEX
Bahrain uses UK-supplied
Bahrain uses UK-supplied weapons in protest crackdown
The Guardian
Al Jazeera Quote: 2:08pm
Al Jazeera
More live updates EA
More live updates
EA liveblog
Guardian
BBC
Hague says he has "no
Hague says he has "no evidence" of British arms being used to murder. He hasn't wanted to look at any of course and this makes his statement factually correct.
Reference Mark above, the British have finally stated that they have a naval base in Bahrain and Hague's visit last week showed him visiting a British army garrision. Where there's soldiers, there's special forces and these latter, along with MI6, have likely been "advising" the regime. The British ruling class once again accomplices to murder.
spain sells a lot of light
spain sells a lot of light weapons to israel. In libya's case spanish' stablishment must be hysterical, cos lybia is the most lucrative bizness for repsol-ypf: http://www.webislam.com/?idn=6124
More Bahrain killings this
More Bahrain killings this evening near Pearl roundabout.
Guardian
BBC
AJE
Iran:
Iran: http://antifateheran.blogsport.de/2011/02/18/iran-news-diese-woche-2/
Re Bahrain
Re Bahrain shootings
G
Meanwhile, news from
Meanwhile, news from elsewhere via le Parisien
Couldn't say as to reliability of that source re the Syrian story. In the words of the acerbic comment reputedly passed on by Orwell from his war days in the Ministry of Propaganda - "good if true".
BBC - Kuwait Quote: 1703:
BBC - Kuwait
AJE - Basra
Basra, Kuwait, Bahrain, Oman... That's the length of the historic Al-Bahrayn region. The Saudis must be going spare.
Not to mention Yemen and Jordan. With the exception of the UAE and Qatar, there's not a country bordering Saudi that isn't in some kind of instability.
BBC eight o'clock tonight
BBC eight o'clock tonight reports that anti-aircraft cannon (Britain supplied similar ordnance) was fired from military trucks over the heads of protesters in Bahrain. 300 doctors walked out of the hospital (and went back to work I should imagine); 60 protesters still missing (Channel 4 reports helicopters firing on demonstrations).
In Yemen the crowd were kettled by the police who then opened up and let the thugs in, directing operations.
There's reports on the former of demonstrations occuring in Tripoli, the home base of the regime. And there is another (one above I think) of soldiers joining the protest. All Libyan youth have to do some form of national service and it's certainly not a mercenary force like Bahrain. These, as much as anywhere in the region, will be mainly the sons, brothers, cousins, uncles, etc., of protesters. Unemployment here is at least as great as anywhere in the region.
Reports of protests in
Reports of protests in Djibouti
Al Arabiya
Businessweek reports a claim that police opened fire on demonstrators but this seems to be unconfirmed
Edit: BBC live updates, this is sounding more serious
Video of bahrain army
Video of bahrain army shooting protesters
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fwnUQcKXmMM&feature=youtu.be
From CGT North
From CGT North Africa
Morocco, 20 February (in Spanish)
machine translation
Kuwait Al Jazeera wrote: At
Kuwait
Al Jazeera
Comment on the Guardian live updates
The view from Saudi
The view from Saudi
Although these updates are
Although these updates are confined to movements in the North African region, wouldn't you say that in fact, the movements have had a rippling effect globally - in Wisconsin and Ohio, for instance? And - who knows? - France had an effect on Millbank which had an effect on .... ?
Also, and more importantly, given that we're along the path to a new epoch of global revolts, it now seems essential to develop nuanced critiques of leftist parties/organisations and trade unions (independent or otherwise), given their very different histories in different countries, if we're not to end up very brutally (and brutalisingly) defeated yet again - and defeated in a way that doesn't learn new mistakes and successes.
But perhaps this is not the thread to be doing that in.
Confirmation of the Saudi
Confirmation of the Saudi protest
Bahrain trade union calls
Bahrain trade union calls strike from Monday
Samotnaf wrote: Although
Samotnaf
The other day I caught a local TV news report about the closure of swimming baths in Levenshulme due to cuts. One of the women interviewed, definitely just a local resident not a lefty, said they should be doing what the Egyptians were doing. So yes, the ripples are global, everyone is watching events, there aren't really any boundaries.
Samotnaf
There's definitely a need for more discussion. A new thread would be a good idea.
Bahrain EA
Bahrain
EA liveblog
Found through the EA
Found through the EA Liveblog: Bahrein trade union calls for strike on Monday
Will the House of Saud adapt
Will the House of Saud adapt enough to survive ... again?
Rage, rap and revolution: inside the Arab youth quake
Sudan: protesters' stories
Bahrain Al
Bahrain
Al Jazeera
China. I wouldn't hold my
China. I wouldn't hold my breath - yet. Still...
A call for 'Jasmine Revolution' in China...
Al Jazeera on
Al Jazeera on Bahrain
Iraq http://twitter.com/mtawf
Iraq
http://twitter.com/mtawfeeqCNN
Tomorrow, D-Day in
Tomorrow, D-Day in Morocco #fev20
The Arabist
Bahrain: from the comments
Bahrain: from the comments for the Guardian live updates
gooneriman
Moroccans riot ahead of
Moroccans riot ahead of protests
Al Jazeera
Al Jazeera: Taking back
Al Jazeera: Taking back Bahrain's 'Tahrir'
I don't know if it was
I don't know if it was already mentioned, but AJE has just said that there is a strike in Bahrain tomorrow involving 65 different unions.
Samotnaf wrote: Although
Samotnaf
From another thread...
Hieronymous
Guardian live
Guardian live updates
Protests have started in Morocco
Photos and videos
liveblog in French
http://mariamsrevolution.blogspot.com/
http://twitter.com/search?q=%23Morocco
Claim on Twitter for numbers on demos. I've no idea if these figures are accurate. Some of the figures quoted on the liveblog are lower.
Edit: figures according to the liveblog
Also from the
Also from the Guardian
rooieravotr wrote: China. I
rooieravotr
EA liveblog: China
Iran:
Iran: http://iranenlutte.wordpress.com/2011/02/20/la-raffinerie-dabadan-bloquee/
the refiney in Abadan is one of the largest in the world, when the oil workers in Chuzistan start moving, the regime will be in serious trouble
http://iranenlutte.wordpress.com/2011/02/20/premieres-informations-des-protestations-du-20-fevrier/
http://iranenlutte.wordpress.com/2011/02/20/premieres-nouvelles-des-protestations-en-province/
http://iranenlutte.wordpress.com/2011/02/20/un-manifestant-tue-a-teheran/
Iranian
Iranian Kurdistan:
http://iranenlutte.wordpress.com/2011/02/20/breves-des-protestations-du-20-fevrier/
More about Iran in French
More about Iran in French here.
Though Mahabad seems to be the centre of the most significant confrontation, there are also confrontations in Teheran in at least 10 differtent parts of town, with "Death to Khamenei" being shouted. Also confrontations in Marivan (in the West), demonstrations in Ispahan ("Death to the dictator" shouted), Racht (in the North) and Kerman.
More on Iran EA
More on Iran
EA liveblog
Videos
Report on protests in Morocco
Report on protests in Morocco
From the Guardian
From the Guardian liveblog:
Again from the
Again from the Guardian:
Channel 4 News tonight
Channel 4 News tonight reports that teachers have gone on strike in the Yemini capital.
Teachers on strike in Bahrain
Teachers on strike in Bahrain yesterday
Don't forget to keep checking
Don't forget to keep checking the news for Qatif. If anything starts in Saudi, it's most likely to start there. (although the current tack in Bahrain's zig-zag fishtailing reduces the pressure temporarily).
from Sunday
Reuters: Three Saudi Shi'ites released after rare protest
Aside from Qatif, the other name to keep an eye out for would be Hofuf - although it's unlikely, anything there would be prelude to armageddon.
Ocelot: Quote: Aside from
Ocelot:
What makes Hotuf such a sensitive location? Trying to follow all this, and would like to know more.
Then again, I would think that the Saudi rulers would unleash Armageddon as soon as anything big occurs in that country, no matter where exactly. Like the Bahreini rulers, and even a bit like Khadaffi, they don't have anywhere to go, and there is not much room for compromise. An institution that at least 'looks' neutral (like the army in Egypt), that can dump the dictator while retaining the regime's structure, is not really there, is there? Just wondering.
The Moor Next Door on
The Moor Next Door on Mauritania
rooieravotr
rooieravotr
Hofuf (or anywhere in the al-Hasa area) would be dynamite because it sits on the Ghawar oil field. That's the largest oil field in the world, by far. And historically the al-Hasa oasis area was part of the old Al-Bahrayn kingdom, although the Saudis have, afaics, made a special effort to bring in Sunni/Wahabi population to outweigh the Baharna population, which is why it is unlikely.
Just on the Wahabi thing, I find it bizarre that certain commentators seem to worry about the possibility of Saudi becoming an Islamic fundamentalist country. Hello?
Ahaa, I see. Thanks! And
Ahaa, I see. Thanks! And yes... the Saudi monarchy is fundamentalist enough , one would think... they subsidized the Taliban coming to power in the nineties, members of the ruling class subsidize all kind of fundamentalist outfits. The current revolts not only put fear intu o Western capitals, but in these kind of outfits as well, by the way. Their funding is threatened, and there message seems more irrelevant as ever. Who needs Al Qaeda when one can make a revolution oneself?
here are all the reports i've
here are all the reports i've come across on the china 'jasmine' protests:
The Secret Politburo Meeting Behind China’s New Democracy Crackdown http://bit.ly/i7ReyI
China acts to stamp out call for 'Jasmine Revolution' likely inspired by Egyptian protests http://bit.ly/gefOtX
China cracks down after calls for protests http://bit.ly/fILKOd
Mideast Protests a Concern for Party, not Police http://on.wsj.com/fxyZjO
China state-run media play down protest calls http://bit.ly/h0Uua7
China Crushes Internal Dissent http://bit.ly/h0pvU4
Pro-Democracy Protest Repressed in China http://bit.ly/fa2fH9
Authorities in China stage swift response to crush mysterious calls for 'Jasmine Revolution' http://nydn.us/fZUwV8
Chinese police snuff out planned Arab-inspired protests http://reut.rs/hYjkgn
Analysis: Discontent, but no revolt in China _ yet http://wapo.st/fA3Xm9
China police show up en masse at hint of protest http://lat.ms/f1Mgt3
Activists Detained as China Web Users Call for ‘Jasmine Revolution’ http://bit.ly/gYFBf0
China's 'Jasmine Revolution' draws small crowds http://bit.ly/dI8tSd
Clampdown on "Jasmine Revolution" http://bit.ly/htfM4n
so yeah, so far not much in terms of a comparable movement arising, although this month there have been a couple of the usual village uprisings over land disputes and a bus drivers strike. apparently media controls have been tightened recently though, so it's possible even fewer reports of events like this are getting out than before. there's also been this:
China Deletes Egypt Song http://t.co/YHQ6NcY
china is rather different from the middle eastern countries though - the state is far more sophisticated in it's response to dissent, and those at the top have certainly read marx (albeit through the distorting prism of maoism) and listen less to the us and europe for advice on maintaining stability, which seems to have worked for them so far. the economy there has also been doing pretty well so far, and so holds out enough of a mythical carrot of self-improvement through hardwork still. also, if things did kick of in a big way there, my understanding is that since 1989 the army has undergone major reforms, making it even more politically tied to the party than it was, and no longer based on conscription, which could be a problem.
on the other hand, prices are rising, the number of unemployed workers is rising, complaints tend to be dealt with heavily despite the rhetoric from the top, corruption is rife, despite tight controls there is an ever-growing section of the population that uses the internet to spread news and critical views, the cities will soon have a greater share of the population than the country (if that isn't already the case) and thanks to the ccp, there is no credible or effective opposition party or union that could coopt any outburst in an effective way.
btw, thanks to everyone contributing to this and other middle east threads, they've been really helpful
zimbabwe? Arrests in Zimbabwe
zimbabwe?
Arrests in Zimbabwe for Seeing Videos http://nyti.ms/ewFEcw
Zimbabwe police arrest 46 attending lecture session on uprisings in Egypt and Tunisia http://bit.ly/hn4V9u
re: the global spread of
re: the global spread of struggles, i've been thinking for a while since seeing this site that it would be good to have something similar for the whole world, both to visualise the geographical and chronological developments of the proletarian response to the crisis and to emphasis that they are not isolated.
so today i set one up: http://workerstruggles.crowdmap.com/
at the moment it's just a very rough draft version to see how it would work and whether it would be useful - hence the rather arbitrary categories. if others think it's a good idea, i'm happy to add them as admins and maybe start a thread somewhere else on stuff like categories and how to decide a report is reliable etc.
Al Jazeera article on the
Al Jazeera article on the prospects for uprisings in sub-saharan Africa
In search of an African revolution
Mark. wrote: Al Jazeera
Mark.
I'm not sure how trustworthy the global voices site is... I referenced their report on Gabon earlier in the month, the same report the al jazeera article references, but afterwards a friend who just got back from zimbabwe told me they were heavily partisan and not to be trusted. My friend is smart and trustworthy, so I would naturally pay attention to what she says, but it might be this global voices site is simply not to be trusted about zimbabwe. I'm not sure, but thought I'd drop that caveat
This looks a bit different
This looks a bit different from what we're seeing elsewhere - if the protests are indeed pro not-in-office-elected government as opposed to more generall anti in-office-un-elected government. But you never know what might happen:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/feb/21/ivory-coast-protesters-laurent-gbago
Ivory Coast protesters killed calling for Laurent Gbagbo to step down
From Paul Mason's
From Paul Mason's blog
Revolutions: the democracy thing is becoming an economic thing
A Suez-type moment?
Twenty reasons why it's kicking off everywhere
Let’s turn Syntagma into
Let’s turn Syntagma into Tahrir Square
“See you at the airport?” As Gaddafi counts his last hours in power, could Papandreou be next?
Live updates
Reuters reports a
Reuters reports a demonstration of 100,000 workers through Delhi protesting against rising prices and corruption. While the demonstration is linked to the trade unions and established political parties, I think that this development belongs in a "where next?" thread.
construction workers strike
construction workers strike in Mekka/Saudi Arabia: http://translate.google.de/translate?u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.rf-news.de%2F2011%2Fkw08%2F22.02.11-in-mekka-streiken-600-bauarbeiter-seit-2-tagen&sl=de&tl=en&hl=de&ie=UTF-8 (dodgy machine translation of a dodgy German maoist page)
http://www.memrieconomicblog.
http://www.memrieconomicblog.org/bin/content.cgi?news=4282
and
http://arabnews.com/saudiarabia/article268888.ece
EDIT: and http://arabnews.com/saudiarabia/article277886.ece, I think the basis for the MEMRI story (I checked MEMRI site and I find it a very dodgy site)
EA Liveblog: Quote: 0933 GMT:
EA Liveblog:
From
From SignalFire
and
Iraq EA liveblog Quote: 0907
Iraq
EA liveblog
CNN
Al Jazeera
Edit: 'Seven killed' in Iraqi 'day of rage' (AFP)
EA liveblog 1440 GMT: EA has
EA liveblog
1440 GMT: EA has learned that in Saudi Arabia on Thursday, approximately 1000 people protested in Qatif demanding the release of all Shia prisoners. Qatif is on east coast of the peninsula and has the greatest concentration of Shia in the country.
Socialist Worker (UK) on
Socialist Worker (UK) on strikes in Saudi-Arabia
Mauritania Guardian Quote: 8.
Mauritania
Guardian
The Moor Next Door: Some Mauritanian responses to the Libyan crisis
Edited to add
Global Voices: Pro-democracy protests break out in Nouakchott
Reuters
BBC: African
BBC: African revolt?
Economist: The spectre of Sudan's popular uprisings
New Republic: Egypt's revolts could unravel Sudan
Morocco, from CGT North
Morocco, from CGT North Africa
Proceso abierto en Marruecos. A pesar de la represión, nueva convocatoria de movilizaciones el 26 y el 27 de febrero
machine translation
Cameroon Cameroon plans
Cameroon
Cameroon plans “Egypt-like” protests
Protest bubbles in Cameroon
Brutalization of protesters in Cameroon
Facebook page
Reports on Twitter that
Reports on Twitter that protests are planned in Qatar on 16 March. It will be interesting to see what Al Jazeera makes of them.
Edit: Facebook page calls for Qatar emir's ouster
Saudi Shi'ites stage another
Saudi Shi'ites stage another protest in oil province
Saudi Arabia: First signs of
Saudi Arabia: First signs of uprising in world’s top oil exporter
Oman Quote: A raft of minor
Oman
Protest fever reaches Vietnam
Protest fever reaches Vietnam
EA Liveblog: Quote: 1620
EA Liveblog:
Trouble in Oman
Trouble in Oman (al-bab.com)
http://angryarab.blogspot.com/
Omani protesters block road to port after 6 die
Syria clamps down on dissent
Syria clamps down on dissent with beatings and arrests
'Facebook Generation'
'Facebook Generation' continues Mauritania protests
Thoughts re: Mauritania’s protests (The Moor Next Door)
Opinion piece in the
Opinion piece in the Jerusalem Post
Lebanon Quote: About 500
Lebanon
Why I can't say Saudi Arabia
Why I can't say Saudi Arabia is a haven of peace
Saudi Quote: Democracy
Saudi
Oman Quote: Protesters have
Oman
Al Jazeera
Protests in Salalah: What do we want?
Morocco Quote: Almost 1,000
Morocco
Continuing in
Continuing in Oman...
An updated map of these
An updated map of these disturbances would be good.
Guardian, Whitaker: Saudi
Guardian, Whitaker: Saudi Arabia's subtle protests are serious
Protests in Qatif on Friday
Protests in Qatif on Friday
[youtube]5NduS6ea-DE[/youtube]
[youtube]jOoK0PuaOK4[/youtube]
Videos from Paul Mason The
Videos from Paul Mason
The dynamics of a modern revolution
What role has social media played in the Middle East revolutions?
Iraq Sami Ramadani wrote: As
Iraq
Sami Ramadani
Updates on Syria:
Updates on Syria: http://syriaintransition.com/about/
http://www.spsrasd.info/en/de
http://www.spsrasd.info/en/detail.php?id=16742
Saudi Facebook activist
Saudi Facebook activist planning protest shot dead (unconfirmed report?)
Reuters
EA liveblog
Report on Morocco from CGT
Report on Morocco from CGT North Africa
Oleada represiva en Marruecos
machine translation
Angola, 7 March Angola: calls
Angola, 7 March
Angola: calls for a revolution
Iran Labour protests in
Iran
Labour protests in Tabriz and Tehran
Facebook action call in
Facebook action call in Portugal...
This newish development
This newish development reported on March 1st, about Tanzania, is possibly the beginning of something new there (though I know nothing about the situation in Tanzania, so maybe someone reading this could elaborate a bit):
- from here.
Swaziland... Quote: "This is
Swaziland...
Angola - around 20 people
Angola - around 20 people arrested in the early hours of the morning ahead of today's protest in Luanda, including journalists from Novo Jornal and rapper Brigadeiro Mata Frakus
AFP: Angola on standby for protests
Edit: protests fail to materialise after arrests
Edit: from the Guardian
Remember protests in
Remember protests in Sulemanyeh, Iraqi Kurdistan for a few weeks ago? well the people have been gathering in The "maydany Azadi" évery single day since then.
Sulemanyeh
http://themovingsilent.wordpress.com/
Kuwait Quote: 1.09pm -
Kuwait
I’m Syrian and I’m
I’m Syrian and I’m jealous
Syrian support for Gaddafi?
Morocco
Morocco
[youtube]fxR7dkocjec[/youtube]
Iraq Quote: URGENT. Call for
Iraq
Possible food riots predicted
Possible food riots predicted in the USA:
UK?: Quote: LONDON (AP) - A
UK?:
http://www.dibussi.com/2011/0
http://www.dibussi.com/2011/03/cameroon-bans-twitter-via-sms.html
Burkina Faso:
Burkina Faso: http://juralibertaire.over-blog.com/article-burkina-faso-les-eleves-sur-les-sentiers-de-la-liberte-68989412.html
Report here on Burkina Faso
Report here on Burkina Faso in English:
Reforms promised in Morocco
Reforms promised in Morocco
AJE on Iraqi Kurdistan
AJE on Iraqi Kurdistan
Why Syria is not next ... so
Why Syria is not next ... so far
Kuwait Guardian/Reuters Quote
Kuwait
Guardian/Reuters
Azerbaijan Quote: Several
Azerbaijan
Is Azerbaijan ready for its own revolution?
Armenia
Armenia
(No subject)
[youtube]IZdyiK-Z5Do[/youtube]
This doesn't sound good. I
This doesn't sound good. I wonder what the international response will be.
Bahrain
According to Al-Jazeera,
According to Al-Jazeera, 1,000 Saudi troops have already been sent to Bahrain.
According to Channel 4 News
According to Channel 4 News the US administration is OK with it.
Yemen: Quote: Governor of
Yemen:
Samotnaf wrote: Regarding
Samotnaf
[/quote]
That's a bit crazy, ain't it? What does it mean that "the us government might shut down"? does it mean a welfare program or what?
I didn't write that, I was
I didn't write that, I was quoting it from zero hedge.I suspect it's slightly over the top, but the prediction of food riots has a ring of truth to it.
They're also stating that the
They're also stating that the stock markets are on "red alert" and there could be yet another financial crash.
Apologies if this is a
Apologies if this is a derailment, but I should add that all these stock market/currency predictions are pretty much gobbledeegook to me; for all I know the site is trying to manipulate things for its own financial reasons...
Oman (not at all sure what
Oman (not at all sure what this is about):
Maybe a continuation from the beginning of the month.
Syria:
Syria: http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/blogpost/post/syria-revolution-revolt-against-bashar-al--assads-regime/2011/03/15/ABrwNEX_blog.html
rooieravotr wrote: Facebook
rooieravotr
Protesto da Geração À Rasca
200,000 out in Lisbon on Saturday
[youtube]rRhGlMZajWE[/youtube]
Martial law in
Martial law in Bahrain
Links to videos, photos and reports from the Angry Arab blog
Oman Quote: Believe it or
Oman
General Strike in
General Strike in Bahrain:
AJE: Bahrain forces attack
AJE: Bahrain forces attack protesters
current reaction from US & EU - not a whisper.
Detail from Al Jazeera
Detail from Al Jazeera English liveblog of Bahrain crackdown
Committee meeting in
Committee meeting in Tennessee disrupted.
Swasiland:
Swasiland: http://www.times.co.sz/News/26811.html
Syria
Syria
Swaziland, almost 7000
Swaziland, almost 7000 protesters, in a land of one million inhabitants.
Syria again. It looks likes
Syria again. It looks likes serious protests have finally started.
The claws are coming out in
The claws are coming out in Yemen. Al Jazeera:
That last part would seem to suggest that the protesters were fired on by snipers, meaning the Yemeni authorities intentionally planned on killing large number of protesters rather than just dispersing them with random gunfire as appeared to be what happened in Bahrain. In any case it seems that Gone-daffy has set a precedent, skip the recuperation and move straight on to ruthless repression.
Syria Al Jazeera
Syria
Al Jazeera
Three to five killed in Deraa demonstration, unrest spreads
Egyptian Chronicles: Syria - the start of revolution
more on the protests in Syria
more on the protests in Syria on http://supportkurds.org/ (Syrian Kurdish solidarity page)
Worst police truck ever from
Worst police truck ever from Yemen.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hK5wLGQkuV4
Quote: Worst police truck
In fact, the cops could have run over the protesters - but it looks like they chose to just get away in the end. So "best police truck" ever ...
Syria Al Jazeera
Syria
Al Jazeera
Morocco.
Morocco.
re Bahrain: NYT: Crackdown
re Bahrain:
NYT: Crackdown Was Only Option, Bahrain Sunnis Say
...those dirty Shias, they had it coming! Another truly disgusting piece from the NYT, never failing to pimp the Israeli foreign policy line. But yet more evidence that the deal done at the end of last week for the Arab league to greenlight air attacks on Libya, was on the basis of a quid pro quo allowing them to crush Shia dissent in Bahrain and on the East coast of the Arabian peninsula (Operation Peninsula Shield).