I’ve written a critique of online activism in Egypt, which you can read in Arabic here.
Tag: critique
Notes on the 6th of April, MBs…
I asked the labor leaders present in the meeting yesterday whether anything was planned in their workplaces on the 6th of April. The answer was no… In other words, no strikes planned in Ghazl el-Mahalla, nothing in the Steel Mills, no plans for the Railways, and I can go on…
Some of the labor leaders will take part in the noon protest planned on that day in front the state-backed General Federation of Trade Unions building, and some of them will bring “symbolic” delegations from their factories.
Meaning, there is no general strike…
Re: The Muslim Brotherhood’s “endorsement” of the strike:
The group’s brief statement was even vaguer and weaker than the ones they issued last year on the 6th of April and 4th of May. At least three MB sources I spoke with confirmed the group is NOT taking to the streets–something that comes as no surprise for any observer of the group’s continuous retreat vis a vis the regime since the start of the 2006 crackdown.
Yet, the group’s leadership is coming under strong pressure from their youth “to do something.” Last week a young MB media activist visited me in my home coz he wanted some help with some Web2.0 stuff. Our meeting was interrupted by a phone call he received from a journalist who wanted to interview him. While I couldn’t hear what the questions were, I sat there for at least 15 minutes listening to the young MB hammering on the phone the group’s Guidance Bureau with severe criticism, demanding they state clearly a position vis a vis Mubarak, to mobilize “more strongly” against the regime, to campaign more militantly about this or that, to engage the current strike wave and, and, and, and… This criticism is not limited to my young friend, and the divisions are public and have been the subject of sensationalist coverage by the local press and blogs.
In all cases, and contrary to what some might think, I believe the group has never been in that shaky position with its internal rifts and security crackdowns since the mid 1990s, if not the mid 1960s. And the cliche about the MBs being an iron-fist, highly disciplined organization with its Supreme Guide assuming a quasi-holy status is very much untrue..
Faced with the 6th of April “strike call”, the MB leadership has decided to play it safe again. They issued a vague “endorsement” statement to appease their base cadres, will allow their students to demonstrate on the campuses, while refraining from any agitation in the streets or the workplaces…
I forgot to mention also that Adel el-Badri’s Free Union of Egypt’s Workers has endorsed the “general strike”… The Union will be mobilizing that day with its full force, i.e.: Adel el-Badri and his fax machine.
So to sum up… Let’s not get driven by virtual reality again, and remain on the ground… The 6th of April will NOT be a general strike… It will be a day of protests, a day of rage.. There will be protests in Cairo, Helwan and other universities, downtown Cairo and events organized by the political parties in the provinces… Let’s try to make it a successful day…
Again: I do NOT endorse the 6 April ‘general strike’
Here we again.. The 6th of April Youth are renewing their Facebook call for a “general strike” amid sensational media coverage both locally and internationally. While I respect the sincere intentions of those who are calling for this “general strike” I will NOT endorse it. Why? My reasons for not endorsing the April 2008 call (and the ensuing ones, how many were they? three or four “Facebook general strikes”? I lost count!) remain unchanged in April 2009.