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Hossam el-Hamalawy

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Hossam el-Hamalawy

Tag: bush

Bush knew about Abu Ghraib

Posted on 19/06/200720/01/2021 By 3arabawy

From Al-Jazeera:

The White House has denied assertions by a former leading military investigator of the Abu Ghraib scandal that the president and leading military officials knew about the abuse at the prison in Iraq before it became public.
A spokesman said George Bush first learnt about the abuse from media reports.
“The president said over three years ago that he first saw the pictures of the abuse on television,” White House spokesman Scott Stanzel said in Crawford, Texas, where Bush is spending the weekend at his ranch.
Stanzel was responding to questions about a New Yorker magazine report quoting retired Major-General Antonio Taguba, as saying “the president had to be aware” of the abuse of prisoners by US military guards.

Abu Ghraib, Painting, by Fernando Botero

Mubarak says he is too old for change

Posted on 15/06/200712/01/2021 By 3arabawy

From Reuters:

Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak has told U.S. President George W. Bush he considers himself too old to carry out political reforms, an Egyptian dissident who met Bush said in an interview published on Wednesday.
“President Bush told me that President Mubarak claims that age has caught up with him and he is incapable of change, so let’s leave this to the next generation,” sociologist Saadeddin Ibrahim told the independent newspaper al-Dustour.
Ibrahim met Bush in Prague on June 5 as part of a group of dissidents from around the world. He was abroad on Wednesday and could not be contacted immediately, but his office confirmed he had given the interview to al-Dustour.

يسقط مبارك جلاد مصر

NYT: Denial and Democracy in Egypt

Posted on 06/05/200728/03/2015 By 3arabawy

I never read or hear about this Francis J. Ricciardone, the US ambassador in Cairo, except when he’s inaugurating some “cultural project” somewhere, or mingling with the Sufis in Tanta.. and the story has to include always some comment he makes where he praises Mubarak’s “wisdom.”

I’m glad to see The New York Times is telling him to shut up…

In recent weeks, Egypt’s government has further trampled the rights of its citizens, closing several branches of the Center for Trade Union and Workers’ Services, which provides much needed legal assistance to workers. This comes at a time when a growing number of government critics have been thrown in jail and on the heels of constitutional amendments that restrict rights and weaken standards for arrest and detention.
All of this somehow has escaped the Bush administration’s ambassador to Egypt who, in a recent television interview in Cairo, painted a chillingly sunny picture of President Hosni Mubarak’s government. While he acknowledged there were “some infringements and violations” of human rights, he declared himself “optimistic” about democratic progress in Egypt, adding that the judiciary and the government’s “commitment to the opinion of the common Egyptian citizen” would carry the day.
That not only contradicts reality — freedom of expression and assembly is actually diminishing — it contradicts the State Department’s latest human rights report, which says that Egypt’s rights record remains poor. Egypt’s jailed bloggers and beaten protesters can certainly attest to that.
After crackdowns weakened or destroyed so many of Egypt’s independent political organizations, democratic activists are hoping the burgeoning trade union movement will pick up the fight for democratic change. Which is why Mr. Mubarak has ordered the shuttering of the trade union centers.
With so many other things to worry about in the Middle East, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and President Bush also seem to have lost their earlier fervor for Egyptian democracy. Washington must warn Mr. Mubarak clearly about the costs — for Egypt’s long-term stability and its relationship with the United States — of such anti-democratic moves. Happy talk and denial just damage America’s credibility and enable more repression.

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