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QUNFUZ: A crucial moment in Egypt

Robin Yassin-Kassab
By Robin Yassin-Kassab
January 28th, 2011

Today is crucial and could go very badly. The Egyptian gangster regime and its backers have clearly decided to use maximum force to end the popular challenge. At 12.34 this morning, Egypt’s entire internet service was closed down – the largest shutdown in history. Mobile phone services have also been suspended, and al-Jazeera has been taken off the Egyptian air. An al-Jazeera journalist has been beaten up by regime thugs. There are reports that French and British journalists have also been beaten or detained. A CNN crew have had their cameras smashed. Obviously, news is harder to come by today.

 

Last night senior members of the Muslim Brotherhood were arrested (see Jonathan Wright’s reflection on the Brotherhood role). Now it seems Muhammad al-Baradei has been arrested after leading a protest in Giza. Protests have erupted in Cairo, in Sinai’s al-Arish, in Minya and Assiut in upper Egypt, in Ismailiya, in Alexandria. Roads leading to Suez, where regime forces have lost control, have been closed.

In the circumstances, protestors are remarkably well-organised. And a few reports are coming through of soldiers (in Suez and Alexandria) refusing to attack the people.

War criminal Tony Blair has called on both sides to end violence, equating unarmed protestors for democracy with the US-armed, staggeringly violent goons of a dictatorship. A contemptuous Joe Biden reassures us that Mubarak is not actually a dictator, that it isn’t time for him to leave, as the Egyptian masses demand, but “to begin to move in the direction that – to be more responsive to some… of the needs of the people out there.”

If the Egyptian people are successful in the coming few days, Mubarak may well choose to hand power to the military. If revolutionary momentum proves unstoppable, as it has done in Tunisia, then a more democratic outcome can be expected. Egypt is perhaps the key Arab state. America has invested billions in Mubarak’s regime. Israel’s security – and Palestine’s subjugation – is dependent on Mubarak’s gangster state. The stakes could not be higher.

Demonstrations will be held outside Egyptian embassies in Western capitals tomorrow (Saturday). If you want to further support the Egyptians, demonstrate at US embassies too, to demand America stops providing Mubarak with bullets, tear gas, money and political support (or call your representatives and make a noise). Egypt doesn’t want Mubarak’s reforms. They want an end to Mubarak’s regime.

Robin Yassin-Kassab is a UK-based journalist and blogger. This column originally appeared on his blog, Qunfuz. Reprinted with his kind permission.

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