The fifth anniversary of the revolution which toppled Hosni Mubarak is being remembered in Egypt. However, with the government cracking down on street protes...
Egypt's Tahrir Square Revolution began on January 25, 2011. Five years after Hosni Mubarak was toppled, families of detained activists say there is even less freedom than before
Helmy Shehata was an activist during the events and involved in organizing social protest. He is Vice Chairman, Programs Director, of the Sadat Association for ...
The euphoric, Bakhtinian, carnivalesque and dramaturgical moment of January 2011, which caught the attention of numerous observers and which lasted for almost four years, seems to have withered away. ...
The authors of Bread, Freedom and Social Justice discuss the lessons of the past few years for the labour movement and political activism in Egypt, so that we can move forward.
On Saturday, November 30, 2014, an Egyptian judge dropped all charges against former Egyptian strongman Hosni Mubarak. Mubarak, with US government military and political support, had presided over nearly three decades of martial law and repression.
Moreover, the economic and social situation deteriorated. All these factors contributed to growing opposition to their rule and paved the way for the June 30 Revolution.
It's been three years of tumultuous activity and protests and demonstrations in Egypt. Recently it has resulted in an election. Yet, if you were looking at the mainstream media and how it's covered the elections, you will see that they have described it as a success story.
SUEZ, Egypt — Strikes staged by thousands of Egyptian workers for higher wages and better working conditions in recent months are setting the stage for a possible confrontation between the impoverished laborers and a new president after elections this spring.
Egypt, with its vast demographic, cultural, as well as military weight, plays a pivotal role in the future of the Arab World. The direction that the Egyptian revolution takes will not only affect Egypt, but will have a wider impact regionally on the dynamics of the Middle East.
From Egypt to Ukraine, Social Media Now Allows You to Share Revolution Institutional Investor (subscription) (Just as, in a different context, the groundbreaking 2008 Obama campaign drummed up support from young voters through shiny, cost-effective...
LEGAL DISCLAIMER: Regarding Copyright Law Any video from our channel may or may not at any time contain in full or in part, a series or multiple series of de... (Noam Chomsky Obama Supported Mubarak Till The End!
Egypt’s top public prosecutor has announced charges against ousted President Mohamed Morsi for conspiring with foreign groups to commit terrorist acts and destabilize the country. The charges carry the death penalty.
As you read this article, a series of people-power explosions of different magnitudes are taking on regimes that claim to be democratic or working towards democracy. While Thailand and Ukraine have been witnessing huge demonstrations for the past few weeks with protesters accusing their governments of betraying their trust, in Egypt public protests in Cairo and several universities continue in defiance of the harsh measures taken by the military-backed interim regime which seeks legitimacy on the pretext that it is working to bring democracy.
How and why did the Egyptian revolution evolve from a struggle of the youth and the people to an elitist concern? What must we do to restore the role of the youth and people together? It may be best to try to find out where the youth succeeded prior to the January 25th Revolution and why; and where they failed.
Foreign Policy (blog) Transitions: Egypt's Got 99 Problems, But US Aid Ain't One Foreign Policy (blog) If the United States is serious about pushing the Egyptian government toward a more participatory mode of rule, and if aid must be the weapon of...
The West prefers Egypt under military rule to control by a democratically elected candidate from the Muslim Brotherhood, linguist and political scholar Noam Chomsky told a full audience hosted by the MIT Egyptian Student Association on October 4th
He acknowledged that a large crowd took to the streets on June 30th to protest against the Muslim Brotherhood, but what happened thereafter was definitely a military coup. He told the audience that he feels that the people of Egypt have been divided by the belief that the military leadership is committed to defending them against the Brotherhood. The Muslim Brotherhood's political decisions could be criticised, said Chomsky, but one cannot ignore the movement because "it is part of the people". That's yet another reason, he added, for the coup leaders not to claim that they are acting on behalf of "the people" of Egypt. - See more at: http://www.middleeastmonitor.com/news/americas/7834-chomsky-no-one-can-alienate-the-muslim-brotherhood#sthash.AWlknuVU.dpuf
The Egyptian Student Association at MIT presents: Q&A on Egypt with Noam Chomsky. Egypt has undergone many cycles of change in the past couple of years, and ...
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