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Hier einmal die Gegenseite:

The Most Worrying Thing About Egypt's Coup: the Police

After a return of Mubarak-era elements and strong-arm tactics, revolutionaries have yet to articulate a clear vision of a functional, pluralistic government.
THANASSIS CAMBANIS JUL 8 2013, 7:00 AM ET



egypt-military-banner.jpg
Reuters
CAIRO - History doesn't operate in perfect analogies, but I couldn't help comparing the celebration that marked President Morsi's overthrow to the more exuberant outbreak when Hosni Mubarak fell.
Last week as I pushed past families, men blowing vuvuzelas, and candy peddlers, a policeman swaggered past in his white uniform, his belly and chin thrust forward, smiling ever so slightly. A man leapt toward him and brushed his forearm. "Congratulations, ya basha," he said, in an almost feudal show of respect. The cop nodded in acknowledgement without breaking stride. He walked like a man with authority.
Two and a half years ago, one of the signal triumphs of the revolution was the expulsion not only of Mubarak, but of the detested police. They had strutted all over the rights and dignity of Egyptians. They had tortured with impunity, beaten the innocent and the guilty, detained at a whim, demanded bribes, colluded with common criminals. At the beginning of the uprising, the public had enshrined a magnanimous principle of people power; they won a street war and then declined to lynch the defeated policemen, instead in one instance releasing them to skulk home in their underwear.
On the night Mubarak fled the presidential palace, a 20-year-old engineering student named Mohammed Ayman murmured with awe and pleasure: "The policemen now speak more softly in the streets. People are waking up. We know our rights."
This week, the policemen weren't speaking softly at all. They were basking in the adoration of the latest, complicated wave of the Egyptian revolution. They joined the anti-Morsi protests, and stood by while Muslim Brotherhood facilities were attacked. In keeping with their motley history, rule of law still wasn't on the police agenda. President Morsi was swept from power by vast reserves of popular anger at an inept and dictatorial Muslim Brotherhood government. But the June 30 uprising was by no means a purely organic revolt, like January 25; crucially, it was buttressed by the machinery of the old regime and the reactionaries who loved and missed it.
A few years hence, we'll know for sure whether the July 2 military intervention represented a salutatory alliance between revolutionaries, the military, and the bureaucracy, or whether it marked the dawn of a full restoration of the old order, of Mubarak's state without Mubarak. But revolutionaries and reformists obsessed today with convincing their fellow citizens and the world that Egypt just experienced a second revolution rather than a coup could more wisely concentrate on the omnipresent danger signs, which in the slim best-case scenario might not prove fatal..
If revolutionaries want to build a new better state, they now must quickly articulate their vision of a pluralistic society of rights and accountable government, free from the tyrannies they have overthrown in short order: those of Mubarak, the military junta that replaced him, and the elected Islamists who ruled as if their slim electoral majority entitled them to absolute, unchecked power. And they must be just as willing to challenge military rulers as they were to toss out Morsi and the Brotherhood.
* * *​
Egypt's revolution is in danger, as it has been at many turns since it burst forth in January 2011. Its best asset is people power and the creative, resilient activists who have gone to the streets over and over, and against three different kinds of regime so far. Its greatest vulnerabilities are the institutions of Mubarak's authoritarian police state, which have bided their time and are still pushing for a restoration, and the profound strain of reactionary thought that courses through certain powerful sectors of Egyptian society.
There are vibrant forces in Egypt that want to chart an indigenous, authentic course toward Egypt's own version of pluralistic, transparent, accountable governance. They aren't interested in Western timetables or Western ideas about elections as the path to enlightened rule. It is crucial, if these forces are to succeed, that they see and describe clearly the terrible impasse that led to June 30 and the highly flawed, imperfect military intervention that broke it.
With a clear-eyed, unsentimental assessment, Egyptian progressives might yet bend the country to their will. A positive long-term outcome requires honesty about the Brotherhood's errors as well as the unseemly alliance struggling to tame Egypt now -- in short, the whole halting attempt at revolution so far.

The Brotherhood abused Egypt and its electoral prerogative. Most insulting was the constitution that was rammed through in a single overnight session, with only Islamist participation, in an obscene savagery of the political process. There was also the state-sanctioned torture and vigilantism against the anti-Morsi protesters outside the presidential palace in December 2012, committed by Muslim Brotherhood members with the knowledge of presidential advisers. In less dramatic fashion, the Brotherhood scoffed in lawmaking at the idea of consensus or negotiation, insisting again and again that the fact they'd been elected justified any and all actions, including the president's abortive attempt to dissolve judicial oversight, the last remaining check on executive authority after the parliament had been sent packing by the courts.
"We want a military man to rule us!"​
The Brotherhood's failures exhausted their warrant to govern in the eyes of many Egyptians, prompting the June 30 Tamarod, or "Rebel" revolt, which brought more people to the streets from more strains of the public than any previous Egyptian protest. But while the Muslim Brotherhood's behavior might justify its eviction from power, it doesn't excuse the misbehavior of the opposition, which is now the adjunct to the second interim military authority to set rules for Egypt's political transition after Mubarak. The opposition has yet to settle on a constructive vision. It opposed Islamists, but as a body it hasn't stood in favor of an alternate idea for Egypt. Some reconciliation is necessary with the felool, the remnants of the old regime. But accommodation is one thing; a full embrace another. Worse still, many of the Tamarod supporters actively called for a coup, declaring that military rule would be preferable to that of electoral Islamists. In fact, both have proved corrosive to Egyptian well-being, and will prove so again in the period to come. The latest machinations over the next government, along with the continuing violence between "rebels" and Brothers, underscore the precarious state of Egypt today, a mess out of which only the military is guaranteed to emerge stronger.
"We are starting from square zero," said Basem Kamel, an activist who helped organize the January 25 uprising, and who joined the organizers of June 30. He conditionally supported this week's military intervention, along with the Egyptian Social Democratic Party, for whom he served as a member of parliament in 2012. But he also condemned the arrest of Muslim Brotherhood leaders this week and the closure of their media. He doesn't want anybody's authoritarianism.
"This time," he said, "we must get it right."
Perhaps people power is a good enough argument for those who supported this people's putsch. And the violence of Muslim Brotherhood followers only buttresses the argument that old regime remnants, the felool, might be illiberal fascists, but the Islamists hold a greater danger still. The Tamarod/June 30/Revolution-not-a-coup school seems to believe that their role is simply to expel any leader who doesn't serve Egypt. Their argument appears to be that the people don't need to write the blueprint, but will stand in reserve to veto any regime that misrules. Somebody else needs to come up with an idea for how to extricate Egypt from the practical morass into which it has sunk. Meanwhile, the people will overthrow executive after executive until one does a good job.
Yet, many ideals that imbued the original January 25 uprising have yet to gain a wider purchase. Revolutionaries rightly mistrusted authority, including that of the military. They rejected state propaganda that held divisions between secular and religious, Christian and Muslim, made Egypt ungovernable except by a heavy hand. They trusted the public, the amorphous "people," to choose its own rules and write its own constitution, so long as everyone had a seat at the table and the strong couldn't silence the weak. They espoused rights and due process for all, including accused criminals and thugs, even for those who had tortured and repressed them. They forswore the paranoia and xenophobia with which the old regime had tarred as foreign agents Egypt's admirable community of human rights defenders, election monitors, and community organizers.
And now, at a moment of both pride and shame, when the people rose up against an authoritarian if elected Muslim Brotherhood governance and unseated a callous, incompetent president with the help of the military, the revolutionary ideas are drowning in a torrent of reactionary sentiment. "We want a military man to rule us," a middle-aged woman with a bouffant hairdo exulted to me outside the presidential palace.
Yes, revolutionaries and common folk and apolitical Egyptians took to the streets on June 30, and again later in the week to celebrate Morsi's imprisonment by the military. But they were joined, and perhaps overwhelmed in numbers, by thefelool, the reactionaries. Families of soldiers and policemen strolled among the protesters. Christians and proud members of the "sofa party," who had sat out every previous demonstration of the last two and a half years, trumpeted their support for Mubarak, for his preferred successor, presidential runner up and retired General Ahmed Shafiq, and now, for military rule. Whether the original revolutionaries wanted it or not, their latest revolution has the support of some of their worst, most persistent enemies: the military and the police.
At the airport on Friday evening, a half-dozen uniformed police officers stood watching the Muslim Brotherhood Supreme Guide's speech, televised on a set mounted at the Coffeeshop Company. The Supreme Guide called for supporters of Morsi to "bring him back bearing him on our necks, sacrifice our souls for him." Within hours, that cry would result in thousands marching to Tahrir Square and engaging in a bloody, deadly and avoidable clash with opponents of the Brotherhood.
As the Brotherhood leader spoke, the policemen laughed, while others looked on anxiously, mirroring the divisions within Egyptian society. Not everyone hates the Islamists, and not everyone loves the police.
On TV, the camera panned over the shouting Brotherhood supporters a few miles away, mourning a protester just shot dead. At the airport, an officer with three bars on his shoulder laughed. "Morsi's finished," he said, bringing his heel down and slowly savoring the crushing motion. "In two more days, the Brotherhood will be finished too."
Beside him a stone-faced man winced.

The Most Worrying Thing About Egypt's Coup: the Police - Thanassis Cambanis - The Atlantic


@Charlie: Ich antworte später.
 
Hier einmal die Gegenseite:

The Most Worrying Thing About Egypt's Coup: the Police

After a return of Mubarak-era elements and strong-arm tactics, revolutionaries have yet to articulate a clear vision of a functional, pluralistic government.
THANASSIS CAMBANIS JUL 8 2013, 7:00 AM ET



egypt-military-banner.jpg
Reuters
CAIRO - History doesn't operate in perfect analogies, but I couldn't help comparing the celebration that marked President Morsi's overthrow to the more exuberant outbreak when Hosni Mubarak fell.
Last week as I pushed past families, men blowing vuvuzelas, and candy peddlers, a policeman swaggered past in his white uniform, his belly and chin thrust forward, smiling ever so slightly. A man leapt toward him and brushed his forearm. "Congratulations, ya basha," he said, in an almost feudal show of respect. The cop nodded in acknowledgement without breaking stride. He walked like a man with authority.
Two and a half years ago, one of the signal triumphs of the revolution was the expulsion not only of Mubarak, but of the detested police. They had strutted all over the rights and dignity of Egyptians. They had tortured with impunity, beaten the innocent and the guilty, detained at a whim, demanded bribes, colluded with common criminals. At the beginning of the uprising, the public had enshrined a magnanimous principle of people power; they won a street war and then declined to lynch the defeated policemen, instead in one instance releasing them to skulk home in their underwear.
On the night Mubarak fled the presidential palace, a 20-year-old engineering student named Mohammed Ayman murmured with awe and pleasure: "The policemen now speak more softly in the streets. People are waking up. We know our rights."
This week, the policemen weren't speaking softly at all. They were basking in the adoration of the latest, complicated wave of the Egyptian revolution. They joined the anti-Morsi protests, and stood by while Muslim Brotherhood facilities were attacked. In keeping with their motley history, rule of law still wasn't on the police agenda. President Morsi was swept from power by vast reserves of popular anger at an inept and dictatorial Muslim Brotherhood government. But the June 30 uprising was by no means a purely organic revolt, like January 25; crucially, it was buttressed by the machinery of the old regime and the reactionaries who loved and missed it.
A few years hence, we'll know for sure whether the July 2 military intervention represented a salutatory alliance between revolutionaries, the military, and the bureaucracy, or whether it marked the dawn of a full restoration of the old order, of Mubarak's state without Mubarak. But revolutionaries and reformists obsessed today with convincing their fellow citizens and the world that Egypt just experienced a second revolution rather than a coup could more wisely concentrate on the omnipresent danger signs, which in the slim best-case scenario might not prove fatal..
If revolutionaries want to build a new better state, they now must quickly articulate their vision of a pluralistic society of rights and accountable government, free from the tyrannies they have overthrown in short order: those of Mubarak, the military junta that replaced him, and the elected Islamists who ruled as if their slim electoral majority entitled them to absolute, unchecked power. And they must be just as willing to challenge military rulers as they were to toss out Morsi and the Brotherhood.
* * *​
Egypt's revolution is in danger, as it has been at many turns since it burst forth in January 2011. Its best asset is people power and the creative, resilient activists who have gone to the streets over and over, and against three different kinds of regime so far. Its greatest vulnerabilities are the institutions of Mubarak's authoritarian police state, which have bided their time and are still pushing for a restoration, and the profound strain of reactionary thought that courses through certain powerful sectors of Egyptian society.
There are vibrant forces in Egypt that want to chart an indigenous, authentic course toward Egypt's own version of pluralistic, transparent, accountable governance. They aren't interested in Western timetables or Western ideas about elections as the path to enlightened rule. It is crucial, if these forces are to succeed, that they see and describe clearly the terrible impasse that led to June 30 and the highly flawed, imperfect military intervention that broke it.
With a clear-eyed, unsentimental assessment, Egyptian progressives might yet bend the country to their will. A positive long-term outcome requires honesty about the Brotherhood's errors as well as the unseemly alliance struggling to tame Egypt now -- in short, the whole halting attempt at revolution so far.

The Brotherhood abused Egypt and its electoral prerogative. Most insulting was the constitution that was rammed through in a single overnight session, with only Islamist participation, in an obscene savagery of the political process. There was also the state-sanctioned torture and vigilantism against the anti-Morsi protesters outside the presidential palace in December 2012, committed by Muslim Brotherhood members with the knowledge of presidential advisers. In less dramatic fashion, the Brotherhood scoffed in lawmaking at the idea of consensus or negotiation, insisting again and again that the fact they'd been elected justified any and all actions, including the president's abortive attempt to dissolve judicial oversight, the last remaining check on executive authority after the parliament had been sent packing by the courts.
"We want a military man to rule us!"​
The Brotherhood's failures exhausted their warrant to govern in the eyes of many Egyptians, prompting the June 30 Tamarod, or "Rebel" revolt, which brought more people to the streets from more strains of the public than any previous Egyptian protest. But while the Muslim Brotherhood's behavior might justify its eviction from power, it doesn't excuse the misbehavior of the opposition, which is now the adjunct to the second interim military authority to set rules for Egypt's political transition after Mubarak. The opposition has yet to settle on a constructive vision. It opposed Islamists, but as a body it hasn't stood in favor of an alternate idea for Egypt. Some reconciliation is necessary with the felool, the remnants of the old regime. But accommodation is one thing; a full embrace another. Worse still, many of the Tamarod supporters actively called for a coup, declaring that military rule would be preferable to that of electoral Islamists. In fact, both have proved corrosive to Egyptian well-being, and will prove so again in the period to come. The latest machinations over the next government, along with the continuing violence between "rebels" and Brothers, underscore the precarious state of Egypt today, a mess out of which only the military is guaranteed to emerge stronger.
"We are starting from square zero," said Basem Kamel, an activist who helped organize the January 25 uprising, and who joined the organizers of June 30. He conditionally supported this week's military intervention, along with the Egyptian Social Democratic Party, for whom he served as a member of parliament in 2012. But he also condemned the arrest of Muslim Brotherhood leaders this week and the closure of their media. He doesn't want anybody's authoritarianism.
"This time," he said, "we must get it right."
Perhaps people power is a good enough argument for those who supported this people's putsch. And the violence of Muslim Brotherhood followers only buttresses the argument that old regime remnants, the felool, might be illiberal fascists, but the Islamists hold a greater danger still. The Tamarod/June 30/Revolution-not-a-coup school seems to believe that their role is simply to expel any leader who doesn't serve Egypt. Their argument appears to be that the people don't need to write the blueprint, but will stand in reserve to veto any regime that misrules. Somebody else needs to come up with an idea for how to extricate Egypt from the practical morass into which it has sunk. Meanwhile, the people will overthrow executive after executive until one does a good job.
Yet, many ideals that imbued the original January 25 uprising have yet to gain a wider purchase. Revolutionaries rightly mistrusted authority, including that of the military. They rejected state propaganda that held divisions between secular and religious, Christian and Muslim, made Egypt ungovernable except by a heavy hand. They trusted the public, the amorphous "people," to choose its own rules and write its own constitution, so long as everyone had a seat at the table and the strong couldn't silence the weak. They espoused rights and due process for all, including accused criminals and thugs, even for those who had tortured and repressed them. They forswore the paranoia and xenophobia with which the old regime had tarred as foreign agents Egypt's admirable community of human rights defenders, election monitors, and community organizers.
And now, at a moment of both pride and shame, when the people rose up against an authoritarian if elected Muslim Brotherhood governance and unseated a callous, incompetent president with the help of the military, the revolutionary ideas are drowning in a torrent of reactionary sentiment. "We want a military man to rule us," a middle-aged woman with a bouffant hairdo exulted to me outside the presidential palace.
Yes, revolutionaries and common folk and apolitical Egyptians took to the streets on June 30, and again later in the week to celebrate Morsi's imprisonment by the military. But they were joined, and perhaps overwhelmed in numbers, by thefelool, the reactionaries. Families of soldiers and policemen strolled among the protesters. Christians and proud members of the "sofa party," who had sat out every previous demonstration of the last two and a half years, trumpeted their support for Mubarak, for his preferred successor, presidential runner up and retired General Ahmed Shafiq, and now, for military rule. Whether the original revolutionaries wanted it or not, their latest revolution has the support of some of their worst, most persistent enemies: the military and the police.
At the airport on Friday evening, a half-dozen uniformed police officers stood watching the Muslim Brotherhood Supreme Guide's speech, televised on a set mounted at the Coffeeshop Company. The Supreme Guide called for supporters of Morsi to "bring him back bearing him on our necks, sacrifice our souls for him." Within hours, that cry would result in thousands marching to Tahrir Square and engaging in a bloody, deadly and avoidable clash with opponents of the Brotherhood.
As the Brotherhood leader spoke, the policemen laughed, while others looked on anxiously, mirroring the divisions within Egyptian society. Not everyone hates the Islamists, and not everyone loves the police.
On TV, the camera panned over the shouting Brotherhood supporters a few miles away, mourning a protester just shot dead. At the airport, an officer with three bars on his shoulder laughed. "Morsi's finished," he said, bringing his heel down and slowly savoring the crushing motion. "In two more days, the Brotherhood will be finished too."
Beside him a stone-faced man winced.

The Most Worrying Thing About Egypt's Coup: the Police - Thanassis Cambanis - The Atlantic



Auch sehr guter Artikel. Am wichtigsten ist dieser Teil hier, denke ich:

A few years hence, we'll know for sure whether the July 2 military intervention represented a salutatory alliance between revolutionaries, the military, and the bureaucracy, or whether it marked the dawn of a full restoration of the old order, of Mubarak's state without Mubarak. But revolutionaries and reformists obsessed today with convincing their fellow citizens and the world that Egypt just experienced a second revolution rather than a coup could more wisely concentrate on the omnipresent danger signs, which in the slim best-case scenario might not prove fatal..
If revolutionaries want to build a new better state, they now must quickly articulate their vision of a pluralistic society of rights and accountable government, free from the tyrannies they have overthrown in short order: those of Mubarak, the military junta that replaced him, and the elected Islamists who ruled as if their slim electoral majority entitled them to absolute, unchecked power. And they must be just as willing to challenge military rulers as they were to toss out Morsi and the Brotherhood.
* * *
Egypt's revolution is in danger, as it has been at many turns since it burst forth in January 2011. Its best asset is people power and the creative, resilient activists who have gone to the streets over and over, and against three different kinds of regime so far. Its greatest vulnerabilities are the institutions of Mubarak's authoritarian police state, which have bided their time and are still pushing for a restoration, and the profound strain of reactionary thought that courses through certain powerful sectors of Egyptian society.
There are vibrant forces in Egypt that want to chart an indigenous, authentic course toward Egypt's own version of pluralistic, transparent, accountable governance. They aren't interested in Western timetables or Western ideas about elections as the path to enlightened rule. It is crucial, if these forces are to succeed, that they see and describe clearly the terrible impasse that led to June 30 and the highly flawed, imperfect military intervention that broke it.
With a clear-eyed, unsentimental assessment, Egyptian progressives might yet bend the country to their will. A positive long-term outcome requires honesty about the Brotherhood's errors as well as the unseemly alliance struggling to tame Egypt now -- in short, the whole halting attempt at revolution so far.
 
9. Juli 2013 23:48

Nach Mursi-Sturz

Al-Beblawi will Muslimbruderschaft an Regierung beteiligen



image.jpg

Hazem al-Beblawi führt bis zu den Neuwahlen die Übergangsregierung in Ägypten.


Es gab mehrere Kandidaten, lange Gespräche und Widerstand von den Salafisten - doch nun hat Ägypten einen neuen Ministerpräsidenten: Al-Beblawi, Ex-Finanzminister, führt künftig die Übergangsregierung - auch den entmachteten Muslimbrüdern will er Kabinettsposten anbieten.

Ägypten: Al-Beblawi wird Regierungschef - Politik - Süddeutsche.de
 
Ägyptens Armee verliert ihr Ansehen

Die Schüsse auf Muslimbrüder haben das Vertrauen in Ägyptens Armee erschüttert. Niemand weiß, wie es weitergeht, die Angst vor noch mehr Gewalt wächst.

Vor der Moschee warten sie schon. Hunderte Männer, viele in bodenlange Gewänder gehüllt, haben sich zu Gruppen formiert. Einige rücken ihre Schutzhelme zurecht, andere legen sich grüne Stirnbänder um den Kopf, auf denen ein Schriftzug Allah huldigt. Hier, vor der Rabia-al-Adawija-Moschee im Kairoer Stadtteil Nasr City, rüsten sich die Muslimbrüder. "Sie wollen Rache", sagt Mohammed Elwan. Der 43-jährige Ingenieur ist einer ihrer Anhänger, steht aber etwas abseits. Zu gefährlich sei es ihm inmitten der Masse. "Die Stimmung ist enorm geladen."

Die ägyptische Armee hatte am Montagmorgen vor dem Hauptquartier der Republikanischen Garde auf Mitglieder der Muslimbruderschaft geschossen. Es war der bislang blutigste Zusammenstoß seit dem Sturz des Präsidenten Mohammend Mursi vor knapp einer Woche. Mindestens 51 Menschen starben, mehr als 400 wurden verletzt. Seither fürchten die Ägypter eine weitere Eskalation der Gewalt. Aus Militärkreisen heißt es zwar, bewaffnete Anhänger der Muslimbrüder hätten versucht, das Hauptquartier in der Dämmerung zu stürmen. Doch das glaubt hier niemand. Es war ein gezieltes Massaker, krakeelen zwei Männer. Sie wollen die Gläubigen auslöschen, ruft ein anderer.

Etliche Mursi-Anhänger waren bereits in den vergangenen Tagen in Bussen aus dem ganzen Land angereist, um ihre Glaubensbrüder in Kairo beim Kampf für die Wiedereinsetzung ihres Präsidenten zu unterstützen. Jetzt kommen noch mehr, um ihre Toten zu sühnen. Die Freiheits- und Gerechtigkeitspartei hat offiziell zu einer Intifada aufgerufen. Seither rüstet sich das Land am Nil für den Ausnahmezustand. In Kairo säumen Panzerwagen wichtige Zufahrtsstraßen, schwer bewaffnete Soldaten besetzen Wachtürme und Kreuzungen, Stacheldraht umzäunt Militärgebäude. "Wir unterstützen den frei gewählten Präsidenten Mursi. Dafür haben wir protestiert", sagt Ingenieur Elwan. "Doch jetzt geht es um alles. Jetzt schlagen wir zurück."

Ein paar Meter weiter hat ein Student eine Matte ausgerollt. "So viele Menschen sind tot. Das ist nicht gut für unser Land", sagt Ahmed el-Maghdy. Zusammen mit seinem Bruder will er gegen "die brutale Vorherrschaft der Armee" protestieren. El-Maghdy ist ein Anhänger der Salafisten, der zweitgrößten islamistischen Strömung in Ägypten. Deren Nur-Partei, die anfangs Seite an Seite mit den Mursi-Gegnern stand, hatte den nationalen Dialog der Übergangsregierung nach den Schüssen auf die Muslimbrüder aufgekündigt. "Jetzt sind die Fronten für alle Zeit verhärtet", sagt el-Maghdy und blickt auf die Männerhorden, die sich an den überfüllten Minibussen vorbeipressen. Die Armee, sagt er, missbrauche ihre Macht. "Sie macht alles kaputt."

"Warum schießen die auf Demonstranten? Warum reicht nicht Tränengas?", ruft Sherif Adel, 34, grüne Hose, Sportschuhe, Hemd. "Die Armee soll die Menschen schützen. Nicht töten." Adel steht vor einem Kiosk unweit des Präsidentenpalastes in Kairo und kippt eine Limonade hinunter. Noch vor wenigen Tagen jubelten hier Hunderttausende den stetig kreisenden Militärhubschraubern zu, feierten Frauen und Männer bis in die Morgenstunden den Fall des verhassten Präsidenten. Jetzt herrscht gähnende Leere auf den Straßen, Mülltüten flattern im Wind, ein paar Soldaten schlendern mit müdem Blick über den heißen Asphalt. Jungen in Unterhemden verkaufen Poster mit dem Porträt des ägyptischen Armeeführers Abdel Fattah al-Sisi. Abnehmer dürften sie schwerlich finden.
Mursi-Sturz: Ägyptens Armee verliert ihr Ansehen | ZEIT ONLINE

Ein Gespräch über Massenvergewaltigungen auf dem Tahrir-Platz und tägliche Belästigungen.

Ägypten: "Gewalt gegen Frauen ist akzeptiert" - Panorama - Süddeutsche.de
 
Ägyptens enttäuschte Revolutionäre: Die Abgehängten

Aus Kairo berichtet Raniah Salloum

Hurra, Mursi ist weg - erst haben die Demonstranten auf dem Tahrir-Platz noch gejubelt, schon eine Woche später folgt die Ernüchterung. Ägyptens Jugend fürchtet, dass wieder andere von den Protesten profitieren. Doch selbst in die Politik? Das will kaum einer.

Eigentlich sollte Samich al-Masri zufrieden sein. Der 32-Jährige war einer der Koordinatoren der "Front 30. Juni", einem buntgemischten Bündnis von Tahrir-Platz-Aktivisten, das den Sturz von Mohammed Mursi forderte. Seit einer Woche ist der Islamist nicht mehr Präsident, sondern steht unter Hausarrest. Und Masri ist enttäuscht.
Nicht über das Schicksal derMuslimbruderschaft. Den Religiösen trauert Masri nicht nach. Er schenkt sich ein Glas Cola ein und zündet eine Zigarette an, trotz Fastenzeit. Sein nachgemachtes Marken-T-Shirt zieren die Namen westlicher Metropolen.

Was Masri ärgert, ist das neue Verfassungsdekret, das der vom Militär eingesetzte Präsident Adli MansurMontagnacht veröffentlichte. "Ich lehne es rundum ab", sagt Masri. "Die tun gerade so, als hätte es unsere Proteste nie gegeben."
Vergangene Woche hatte Militärchef Abd al-Fattah al-Sisi PräsidentMohammed Mursi für abgesetzt erklärt. Dabei zeigte er sich mit einer seltsamen Koalition. Hinter ihm stand die Führung der salafistischen Nur-Partei, der koptische Papst, die Revolutionsjugend, die Gelehrten der Al-Azhar-Moschee und die Nationale Heilsfront, das Bündnis der wichtigsten liberalen Parteien.
Doch als Mansur am Montagabend die neue Verfassung und den zukünftigen Fahrplan veröffentlichte, waren mehrere Koalitionspartner wütend: Sie wurden vor der Erklärung gar nicht erst befragt.

Liberale haben viele Einwände gegen Verfassungsdekret
Die neue Verfassung garantiert dem Militär seine Rolle als Staat im Staate. Sie kommt den Salafisten entgegen, indem sie die Interpretation der Scharia zur Hauptquelle der ägyptischen Gesetze erklärt. Den Übergangspräsidenten macht sie zum allmächtigen Herrscher, der keiner Kontrolle untersteht - außer der des Militärchefs Sisi, der ihn einsetzte.
"Wir haben ein paar Vorbehalte", sagt Chaled Dawud, Sprecher der liberalen Nationalen Heilsfront SPIEGEL ONLINE. So sei man unzufrieden mit der Art, wie die Erklärung zustande kam, dem Artikel über die Rolle der Scharia und der Allmacht des Präsidenten. Auch am politischen Fahrplan für die Zukunft sei etwas zu bemängeln. Man wolle erst Präsidentschafts- und erst dann neue Parlamentswahlen, nicht wie bisher vorgesehen umgekehrt. Ob er auch ein Problem in der Unabhängigkeit des Militärs sehe? "Wir haben derzeit wichtigere Probleme", sagt Dawud.
Auch für Masri ist Ägyptens Militär eine Art heilige Kuh. Wie jeder Ägypter kennt er viele, die dort gerade ihren Wehrdienst ableisten. Er selbst hat sogar freiwillig länger gedient. Wie viele Jahre es waren, möchte er nicht verraten - "zu lange" ist alles, was er dazu sagt. Inzwischen verdient er sein Geld als Informatiker.

Viele junge Ägypter wollen nicht in die Politik
Zwar schimpft Masri über das neue Verfassungsdekret. Er bezeichnet es sogar als "Versuch, unsere Revolution wieder rückgängig zu machen". Dennoch lässt er auf Militärchef Abd al-Fattah al-Sisi nichts kommen. "Sisi ist die Stimme der Jugend in der Armee", sagt Masri. Der 58-jährige Sisi war der Jüngste im obersten Kreis der Generäle, als Mursi ihn 2012 zum Militärchef machte. "Ihm liegt das Wohlergehen des ägyptischen Volkes am Herzen", sagt Masri.
Auch wenn das Militär hauptverantwortlich für das Verfassungsdekret ist, wettert Masri lieber über die "Felul", die Überbleibsel des Mubarak-Regimes. Husni Mubarak wurde zwar 2011 gestürzt, doch seine Funktionäre haben nun wieder Aufwind.
So sind Präsident Adli Mansur und Premierminister Hasim al-Beblawi beide Technokraten, die schon unter Mubarak führende Posten innehatten. Die neue Verfassung wird von zehn Richtern und Jura-Professoren geschrieben werden, die unter Mubaraks autoritärer Herrschaft Karriere machten. "Die Alten wollen uns wieder zurückdrängen, dabei sind wir die Zukunft", klagt Masri.

Ägyptens Revolutionsjugend schaut wieder nur hilflos zu. 2011 halfen sie mit, Husni Mubarak zu stürzen. Anschließend mussten sie mit ansehen, wie die Muslimbrüder die Macht übernahmen. Nun haben sie mitgeholfen, die Islamisten zu verdrängen. Doch wieder werden es andere sein, die davon profitieren.
Masri will nicht in die Politik. Wie so viele seiner Altersgenossen hält er wenig davon. Sein Traum ist es, sich um Straßenkinder und Slum-Bewohner zu kümmern. "Dann, wenn die Revolution ihr Ziel erreicht hat und wir Brot und soziale Gerechtigkeit haben." Doch noch, sagt er, sei die Zeit nicht gekommen.

http://www.spiegel.de/politik/ausland/aegypten-jugend-wuetend-ueber-das-neue-verfassungsdekret-a-910512.html



Dieser Artikel ist interessant, weil er, außer der Sackgassen in denen die ägyptische Jugend-Bewegung sich befindet, auch die Schwächen der "Demokratie" nach westlichem Modell zeigt, und wie leer ihre Versprechen sind.
 
Zuletzt bearbeitet:
Muslimbruderschaft mit Fotofälschung


HonestReporting Media BackSpin, 12. Juli 2013

Abbildung: Die Facebook-Seite der ägyptischen Partei für Freiheit und Gerechtigkeit (FJP) – dem politischen Arm der Muslimbruderschaft – stellte alte Fotos ein, die in Syrien getötete Kinder zeigen.
Dazu ist auf der Webseite von Al Arabiya zu lesen (Hervorhebung durch uns):

Die Muslimbruderschaft wird grober Täuschung in ihren Fernsehausstrahlungen und Sozialen Medien beschuldigt, darunter einiger Darstellungen, die von einem Leser als „faustdicke Lüge“ angeprangert wurden.
Sowohl die Mainstream-Medien als auch Soziale Medien wie Facebook und Twitter wurden während der Unruhen zu Schlachtfeldern zwischen den gegnerischen Seiten, was zum Sturz von Mohammad Mursi in Ägypten geführt hatte.
Kritiker verweisen auf Fälschungen durch Medien, die mit der Muslimbruderschaft kooperieren, während der Vorwurf der Voreingenommenheit gegen Al Jazeera fallen gelassen wurde, aber auch andere wie Al Arabiya und CNN wegen ihrer Berichterstattung angegriffen worden waren.

In einem der dreistesten und bedenklichsten Fälle zeigt die ägyptische Partei für Freiheit und Gerechtigkeit (FJP) – der politische Arm der Muslimbruderschaft – Bilder von Kindern, die in Syrien getötet worden waren – mit der Behauptung, sie wären Opfer der jüngsten Unruhen in Ägypten.

Kommt uns bekannt vor, oder? Es ist nicht das erste Mal, dass Bilder von toten syrischen Kindern missbraucht wurden.
Zu Beginn der Operation Säule der Verteidigung im Jahr 2012 twitterte der palästinensische Journalist/Aktivist Hazem Balousha ein bewegendes Foto eines Mädchens auf einer Tragbahre, das angeblich bei einem israelischen Luftangriff verletzt worden war.
BBC-Reporter Jon Donnison war beeindruckt und sorgte für die Verbreitung des Fotos. Aktivisten entdeckten jedoch, dass das Foto in Wirklichkeit einen Monat vor Kriegsbeginn in Syrien aufgenommen worden war.

Donnison2.jpg


Dies veranlasste HonestReporting, Donnison eine Auszeichnung für den unaufrichtigsten Reporter des Jahres 2012 zu verleihen. Wie viele andere werden dieser speziellen Form besonders grober Fauxtography noch auf den Leim gehen?

Muslimbruderschaft mit Fotoflschung
 
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