NPR interviewed me and other activists re freedom of expression in Egypt:
Tag: dictatorship
NYT Op-Ed: Our allies are not in the White House
The New York Times asked me to write an Op-Ed regarding Obama’s visit:
THE bridge I take to work in central Cairo was painted overnight. On the roads, colored concrete blocks were installed in turns where car accidents happen daily. Main streets in the neighboring city of Giza are suddenly blossoming with flowers. Street lamps are polished, and they are actually working. This could mean only one thing: our country is receiving an “important” foreign visitor.
President Obama should not have decided to come to Egypt. The visit is a clear endorsement of President Hosni Mubarak, the ailing 81-year-old dictator who has ruled with martial law, secret police and torture chambers. No words that Mr. Obama will say can change this perception that Americans are supporting a dictator with their more than $1 billion in annual aid.
The Western press is clearly excited about Mr. Obama’s “significant” choice of Egypt, and his destination, Cairo University, which the news media seem to consider a symbol of enlightenment, secularism and freedom.
The truth is that for years, Cairo University students have been demonstrating against the rising cost of education, demanding the university subsidize expensive text books, only to be rebuked by the authorities, who claim no funds are available. Yet the university somehow managed to find the money to polish up the building dome that will shine above Mr. Obama’s head when he delivers his address.
As for the other host of the president’s visit, Al Azhar University, one of its students, Kareem Amer, is languishing in prison after university officials reported his “infidel, un-Islamic” views to the government, earning him a four-year sentence in 2007. In advance of the visit, Egyptian security forces have rounded up hundreds of foreign students at Al Azhar.
We do want allies in the West, but not from inside the White House. Our real allies are the human rights groups and unions that will pressure the Obama administration to sever all ties to the Mubarak dictatorship. Their visits to Egypt are more meaningful, even if unlike Mr. Obama, they do not get a lavish reception.
Mubarak is a force for stability and good, says Obama
Obama has once again exposed himself for the hypocrite he is. Interviewed by the BBC yesterday, Obama showered Mubarak with praise:
…while acknowledging that there are “obviously” issues of human rights in the Middle East, the President avoided specifics that many Egyptians may have been looking for.
He said President Hosni Mubarak was a force for stability, without commenting on the President’s domestic policies. “He has been a stalwart ally, in many respects, to the United States. He has sustained peace with Israel, which is a very difficult thing to do in that region.”
The counterparts will meet in private for the first time during Obama’s visit to Cairo.
When Webb asked whether he considered Mubarak to be “authoritarian,” Obama deferred. “I tend not to use labels for folks,” he said.
Hossam El-Hamalawy, activist and blogger at arabawy.org, said he felt that Obama was not going far enough. He said that Obama’s silence regarding Mubarak was a “clear endorsement of his regime.”
“The pro-democracy movement here has allies in the west, but they are not in the Whitehouse,” El-Hamalawy said. Despite Obama’s differences from the past, El-Hamalawy was not confident that he will be fundamentally different from his predecessor.
AUC Political Science Professor Walid Kazziha said Obama’s reluctance to emphasize a purely pro-democracy policy was understandable. “He’s not going to raise that issue against any Arab regime that he considers to be moderate,” said Kazziha. “They’re opting for stability rather than democracy.”
In all cases, it seems the old man isn’t attending the speech after all!
Mubarak is not going to attend the speech in CU #Cairospeech
— Zeinobia 🎙️📷📓 (@Zeinobia) June 2, 2009