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Egyptian riot police move forward to push back protesters, during clashes in downtown Cairo in the early hours of Wednesday, Jan. 26, 2011.
Having witnessed - and experienced - firsthand the brutality of the Egyptian and Tunisian police and their undercover stooges, I can tell you that the uprisings of the masses took real courage.
Over the years, dictator Hosni Mubarak has traded on their fear using some of the foulest methods of intimidation imaginable.
But like their counterparts in Tunisia, the Egyptian people are losing their fear and tearing away the chains of oppression.
The Pharoah's police state is now teetering as a second day of protests begin.
Whatever the outcome over the next few weeks, I think it is clear that America and Britain can no longer manipulate and control the politics - or lack of it - in the Middle East.
Washington's silence over the weeks of civil unrest on the streets of Tunisia was almost deafening, so when Barack Obama chose to congratulate the uprising only once Zine El Abidine Ben Ali s plane was in the air, his message of support rang hollow. Today he urged the Egyptian authorities to show restraint.
The world's most powerful man's weasel words tripped from his lips as blood was shed on the streets of Cairo, Assiut, Alexandria, Mansura, Tanta and Aswan as the people faced down 2.5 million uniformed and plain clothes thugs using water cannon and teargas.
The truth is the scenes of civil unrest from Tunis to Cairo speak volumes about US and Western interference as much as the actions of the tyrants they have bankrolled and supported.
All of them have seriously underestimated ordinary Arabs. The brutality of tyrants has been allowed to go on for countless decades and the silence of the Western superpowers today exposes their own deep-seated racism and double standards towards the people.
Is the blood of an Arab worth less than that of an American? It's a rhetorical question and we all know the shameful answer.
With the exception of Iraq (and let's not go down the road of who created and supported Saddam), all of the governments in the Middle East are identified by their Western-installed family dynasties, sham democracies, rigged elections punctuated by extreme reaction to any signs of dissenting voices.
While these leaders have lived a life of luxury bordering on obscene, they've carried out their orders from Washington, London, Paris and beyond without question - and this goes for the corrupt Abu Mazen and his Palestinian Authority. If ever there was a dictator-in-the-making it's this odious pygmy of a man.
As Robert Fisk pointed out a few days back, the emergence of The Palestine Papers are as damning as the Balfour Declaration. The right of return for millions of Palestinians, for instance, was traded and eroded beyond measure.
From the West Bank to Gaza and the refugee camps beyond, Abu Mazen sold his people down the river. And the fact that Hillary Clinton's predecessor, Condoleezza Rice saw no problem in moving the Palestinians half way across the world to settle in South America, exposes the real contempt US Administrations have for the Arab people, not to mention those living in Latin America.
And for why? For Israel, a festering pustule not the size of a South African game park, squatting in the Middle East. The creation of this nuclear-powered Frankenstein State and the determination to force it on Arabs will turn out to be America and Britain's biggest ever mistake.
But it's not just the US to blame, Britain under Tony Blair has been a prime mover in overseeing the brutalization of the Arab world.
The UK's intelligence service, MI6, drew up plans to help the Palestinian Authority crush the Islamic political movement Hamas and armed groups in the West Bank.
Documents - part of nearly 1700 transcripts and emails leaked to Arab TV channel Al-Jazeera documenting more than a decade of Israeli-Palestinian talks - shed light on a little-known role played by British security services in shoring up the corrupt PA's security apparatus. It was all done on Blair's watch.
The West has bribed, bullied and cajoled Arab leaders in to accepting the vile Zionist State to the detriment of their own people and this is now coming back to haunt them.
The movement of the masses isn't just about oppression under tyrants, it is also about the creation and maintaining of Israel and the unconditional support it is given by the West and the West's puppet leaders in the region.
Well the sleeping giant has finally woken up and when the people start to lead their leaders will and are becoming irrelevant.
Israel's biggest ally Mubarak must now be planning an exit strategy, wondering to where he can flee - or even if he can rely any more on his Western puppet masters. They all turned their back on Ben Ali, didn't they?
In Lebanon, America's friends are folding as a prime minister is appointed who will support Israel's archenemy Hezbollah, and from the West Bank to Gaza, Hamas is being seen as the peoples' choice. The Muslim Brotherhood is being re-energized in Egypt where it has been robbed over the years of election victories. They would be the ruling party if free and fair elections had ever been allowed.
And in the coalition unity government of Tunisia, alliances may well be made with returning and previously banned Islamic political parties.
It's only a matter of time before the rest of the tyrants come tumbling down like a pack of cards.
The game is up. It is over.
The Arab world is going to start and choose its own leaders. We in the West might not like the choices of the people but we should respect their wishes.
Western leaders have a great deal to think about in the coming weeks as the Arab people decide how to shape their future in the Arab world.
But the first thing to do is send Air Force One around the region to collect all the dictators, tyrants and despots on the US payroll and take them back to Washington.
Like pet scat in New York's Central Park, you have to take responsibility for the mess your dogs make.
* British journalist Yvonne Ridley is also the European President of the International Muslim Women's Union
http://www.presstv.ir/detail/162084.html
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President Obama, say the 'D-Word'
Giant protest to kick off in Egypt
I had a day off, so I had the whole day on Aljazeera Live and watch the Tahrir Square ... the energy coming from theses people is amazing ... it reminds me of the time of Gandhi ... All were united, men women Muslim youth christians no matter ... they want Mubarak out of the government for pertinent...
And the rumor was that this Revolution was started at facebook ... the issues of the economy, the openness of a government, etc and then the gov. shut off the digital highway. They then decided to go out, that happened when a rumor arose that the Internet would be closed... they placed the last message... and everyone stood up for freedom.
Namasté People of Egypt
by Judith Orr in Cairo
It seemed like the whole of Egypt was on the streets.
Over a million people marched in Cairo on Tuesday. The city was one unstoppable mass of humanity.
You could hardly move. Everyone was smiling and greeting each other. It is a day no one will ever forget.
And it wasn’t just Cairo. In Suez more than 500,000 marched. There was another 500,000 in Alexandria, 250,000 in Mansoura, Arish and Mahalla.
Protesters were in the streets in every single city and town in Egypt. Some say four million were out all over the country.
What started with the public suicide of a young, desperate man in Tunisia has become a mass revolution in the Arab world’s most populous nation.
Who says change is not possible? Who says ordinary people can’t take control of their own lives?
Nothing has been able to stop this movement. Hundreds have died. Many of their family and friends were there, holding pictures of the dead.
But there is no going back.
In Cairo the shops are running low on food. But among the tens of thousands in Tahrir Square, no one has gone hungry.
Moving through the crush, you are constantly offered food. “Welcome to Egypt,” people say. “Welcome to the Egyptian revolution.”
Words can hardly describe their joy, energy and determination.
This whole great city of 20 million people has turned every street corner into a base of resistance.
Even more than bringing down Mubarak is possible. On the streets of Cairo the people making their own revolution are not only changing the world but themselves.
I meet Amer, who tells me, “Our issue is not money, poverty or security. Our issue is freedom. Our issue is the system.”
The revolt has the potential to challenge the very basis of that system.
All the world is looking to Egypt. This is what a revolution looks like. It is a glorious sight.
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