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Hossam el-Hamalawy

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Hossam el-Hamalawy

Tag: anti-imperialism

SF activists use Twitter, pirate radio to manage anti-war protesters

Posted on 29/04/200810/02/2021 By 3arabawy

Here’s an article on the San Francisco activist community’s use of Twitter in the antiwar protests last March. Interesting to read when you have the time…

San Francisco anti-war protesters marking the fifth anniversary of the invasion of Iraq are using the micro-blogging service Twitter to coordinate their movements throughout the day.

The group, called Direct Action to Stop the War, has planned protests and staged events at strategic locations around the city, such as AT&T’s facilities on Folsom, where whistle blower and retired AT&T technician Mark Klein says the company has installed equipment to snoop on Americans’ internet communications. They’re using Twitter to text people’s cellphones to get them to come to support the protest and to lend it critical mass at opportune times.
David Taylor, a DASW volunteer and veteran political protest organizer, says that Twitter has been a useful and cost-effective way to keep participants updated at strategic moments on their cellphones.

“What’s new in the last four years is the addition of the text messaging,” says Taylor. “In the past, (street protest organizers) have had walkie-talkies out there and a bullhorn, but the people with the radios would always get arrested by the police.”

So, once again, I hope as many of you would get on twitter. I’m curious by the way: Does anyone how popular (if at all) Twitter is in the rest of the Arab World and in Iran? Is it only popular among the Egyptian dissidents or do activists elsewhere in the region use it too?

A People’s History of American Empire

Posted on 17/04/200809/01/2021 By 3arabawy

Howard Zinn:

Revolt spreads across Iraq

Posted on 28/03/200805/02/2021 By 3arabawy

Simon Assaf reports:

A mass revolt has broken out across Iraq against attempts by the US and its allies to crush the Shia Muslim resistance to the occupation.
This began when Iraqi troops backed by US forces laid siege to Basra earlier this week. British troops were driven out of Basra late last year.
The Iraqi government claims that the current violence is a fight between different Shia Muslim factions, and an attempt by the government to cleanse Basra of “criminal elements”.
It is nothing of the sort. The occupation is attempting to provoke Shia Muslim areas into a “showdown” that has been a central aim of the US troop “surge”.
The aim of the siege is to crush the nationalist movement headed by rebel Shia cleric Muqtada al-Sadr.
Sadr’s Mehdi Army is a key element in the popular resistance to the occupation.
The Mehdi Army fought alongside Sunni Muslim insurgents during the first uprising against the occupation in 2004.
Sadr recently launched the Reform and Reconciliation Project with sections of the Sunni resistance.
According to reports, Iraqi troops stormed Basra’s main market on Tuesday – the first day of the assault. Soldiers set fire to the stores of food, cut electricity and water supplies. They are attempting to drive out the 2.5 million civilians trapped inside the city. There are reports that US troops have now taken over from Iraqi soldiers after they failed to capture the city.
In a message relayed to Socialist Worker from Hassan Jumaa, the leader of Iraq’s main oil workers’ union, said that Basra rose in revolt.
“The assault began with intense shelling and fire from all sorts of weapons,” the message states.
“The army that is laying siege to Basra is so large that it stretches from the Dhi Qar province all the way to the city.
“The heroic neighborhood of Hayania is preventing the puppet Iraqi army from entering the city. There is great popular discontent. Non stop phone contacts since Tuesday shows this very clearly.”
Hayania is one of the poorest area of Basra and a stronghold of the Mehdi Army.
Jumaa said, “The [poor] neighborhoods of Khamsa Meel and Qiblas are steadfast. Fighting is going on where I live.”
The attack on Basra has sparked a mass revolt across the Shia majority areas of Iraq.

UPDATE: A good posting by Lenin.

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