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'Kifaya' is the bud of a new movement on Arab streets
Gulf News ^ | 3/8/2005 | Youssef M. Ibrahim

Posted on 03/08/2005 1:58:43 PM PST by mdittmar

The recent protests in Cairo and Beirut have been organised with the chant of a new Arab movement kifaya, Arabic for enough.

The word, says the Egyptian democracy advocate and sociologist Dr Saad Al Din Ebrahim, is fast becoming a mantra for millions of Arabs wanting to seize their own destiny.

Certainly the slogan has surfaced in banners carried into those street demonstrations, but more important it has now found its way on television shows, read in opinion columns by Arab pundits and certainly advocated by millions of Arabs in the privacy of their homes from Casablanca to Riyadh.

Could this one word be a harbinger of a muscular popular Arab revolt such as the movement that guided millions of people in Eastern Europe in shedding their tired old despotic regimes after the fall of the Soviet Union?

Scepticism abounds, but so do tell-tale signs that it is in fact building up into a people's revolution, certainly in Lebanon, but also in Egypt and to some extent elsewhere in the Arab world.

Ever since the assassination of the former prime minister of Lebanon Rafik Hariri on February 14, the Lebanese have taken the lead from the Egyptians, who started the Kifaya movement.

Egyptians have for a year now been asking President Hosni Mubarak not to run for a fifth, six years, term at age 77 or in the least to create the mechanism for orderly succession.

The Lebanese adopted it in their street protests as a vehicle to demand that Syria ends its 29-year-occupation of Lebanon.

Could this be early warnings of an Arab political tsunami? If so, which ruler or what Arab policies are next in the line of fire?

Certainly across the region, kifaya is now addressed to concepts of government including dynastic tyrannies handed down from father to son, massive theft of public funds, the prevalent lack of transparency in business and the conduct of the affairs of state and mental retardation spread by imposters posing as religious leaders.

To all of these, Arabs have for some time now said kifaya.

The events of Lebanon and Egypt, however, suggest that like a rain forest awakening to a new dawn, a thousand other sounds are rising from the ground across the vast Arab landscape. Arabs are questioning their conditions in varying degrees of loudness.

Freedom, human rights, rule of law, entitlement are all on the agenda for what may very well be a popular uprising which transcends the ordinary. It is coupled with another morphing of the proverbial Arab street as it re-examines America too.

Whether they like or hate American policies in this region, many Arabs catch themselves quietly approving, indeed enjoying, the pressure Washington is exerting on their governments to democratise and cleanse their act.

Around the Arab world nowadays, many will tell you: look here, starting with a messy invasion in Iraq, the Americans have delivered a few things, including ridding Iraqis of a bestial dictatorship, giving them a first taste of free elections and significant freedom of speech.

Then, they might say: whether the intentions of President George W. Bush were either good or bad, the result seems a significant advance of the human, legal and constitutional rights for 27 million Iraqis. That is something good for them, and good for other Arabs, is it not?

Raw sentiments

Surely many Syrians across the borders from Iraq must be wondering why not a similar change in Damascus?

And given the raw sentiments in the aftermath of the killing of Lebanese leader Rafik Hariri, many of those same Arabs may not mind seeing American muscle deployed against Syria to lighten up on Lebanon and clean its own government.

This may not improve the situation between Arabs and Israelis, but will certainly improve the quality of life for millions of Syrians and Lebanese.

Arab governments seem to get the point. Either under popular pressure or out of ire at Damascus, they have refrained from extending "sisterly'' support to Syria as it faces this gathering storm of American, French and world pressure to get out of Lebanon.

This kifaya tsunami has done damage in Egypt already. Its rumblings were strong enough to persuade Mubarak into a hesitant declaration that he would contest his fifth presidential term against some opponents instead of running alone in a referendum.

Whether he means it or not remains to be seen, but the kifaya folks will not let up.

Egyptians were quick to swat down carpet baggers who rushed to colour the president's concession as a great advance for mankind, reminding them that already two thirds of the world have free presidential elections.

One watched with amusement the other day when in the Egyptian and Saudi daily newspapers writers such as Anees Mansour of Al Ahram and Mamoon Fandi of Asharq Al Awsat rushed to congratulate the Egyptian leader on making what they described, with considerable chutzpa, as the first genuine reform in 6,000 years ever since the Pharaohs ruled Egypt!

The refreshing thing is that the Egyptian street greeted such vulgar declarations appropriate contempt quoting in effect, the well known Egyptian proverb which says "those with a sense of shame must be dead'' in order for anybody to make such a highfalutin claim.

The bottom line is more Arabs are really saying to their leaders words are cheap, so please show me instead of just telling me.

And for those facilitators of dictatorships, the carpet baggers and apologists they are saying as hundreds of banners carried in Beirut: "Puppets: your time is up''.

There was for example plenty of sarcasm on Saudi internet chat sites about those much celebrated municipal elections.

In truth, these internet Saudi critics were saying kifaya. Either we have free elections or we don't. There is no such thing as being half-pregnant with democracy.

It may be early days for Arab liberation to blossom, but hopefully all Arabs will remain tuned to Lebanese, Egyptian and Iraqi scenes of people's power unfolding before our eyes.


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; Government; News/Current Events; War on Terror
KEYWORDS:

1 posted on 03/08/2005 1:58:43 PM PST by mdittmar
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To: mdittmar

Bush's fault. Really! Bush's fault


2 posted on 03/08/2005 2:04:01 PM PST by lormand (Yankee Go Home!...but please take me with you)
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To: lormand

Yep, this is Bush's fault. If this movement gains momentum, it could move mountains.


3 posted on 03/08/2005 2:10:48 PM PST by Sax
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To: mdittmar

The dominoes are falling like a house of cards. Checkmate.


4 posted on 03/08/2005 2:12:22 PM PST by ThinkDifferent (These pretzels are making me thirsty)
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To: mdittmar; eyespysomething

When my wife organized a support the troops rally before we went into Iraq, she gave a speech and one of the points she made was that if we could free Iraq we might free the Middle East. Now, why could my wife see that two years ago, but all the pundits just seem to be catching on now that it's happening?


5 posted on 03/08/2005 2:14:59 PM PST by SittinYonder (Tancredo and I wanna know what you believe)
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To: mdittmar
"It may be early days for Arab liberation to blossom..."

They have to have a beginning somewhere. After that last straw drops and public opinion becomes the groundswell of popular uprising, it's up to the people themselves to continue working for completely representative government powered and economic freedom. I wish the Arab world luck in this rather late coming yearning for the freedom to determine their own, individual destinies.

6 posted on 03/08/2005 2:15:43 PM PST by cake_crumb (Leftist Credo: "One Wing to Rule Them all and to the Dark Side Bind Them")
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To: ThinkDifferent
The dominoes are falling like a house of cards. Checkmate.

I've heard of similes and mixed metaphors, but that, that's ....what do you call that?

7 posted on 03/08/2005 2:21:37 PM PST by DeFault User
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To: SittinYonder

'Cause she's smart and loves her country,they aren't and don't.


8 posted on 03/08/2005 2:25:40 PM PST by mdittmar (May God watch over those who serve to keep us free)
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To: mdittmar

You may be right!


9 posted on 03/08/2005 2:33:33 PM PST by SittinYonder (Tancredo and I wanna know what you believe)
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To: DeFault User

allusion to the fall of the Soviet Union and the continuing fall of Communism?!


10 posted on 03/08/2005 3:12:38 PM PST by benjibrowder (Kerry lied while good men died...Remind you of Clinton?)
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To: mdittmar
One of my favorite authors "Rafik Schami" like so many in the Syrian exile community has spoken often of his reoccuring dream of returning home to Damascus one day. Of course this could only happen if the Baathists fall from power. Who knows what will happen, until two years ago, his books had been translated into every language except....

Arabic.

11 posted on 03/08/2005 3:18:03 PM PST by Katya (Homo Nosce Te Ipsum)
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To: SittinYonder

Your wife is abviously a brilliant woman and you should consider yourself lucky to have had the opportunity to meet and marry such a great woman.

Oh, and she's got some common sense I bet.


12 posted on 03/08/2005 8:13:34 PM PST by eyespysomething (Vous pouvez vous rendre au garde de securite!)
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To: eyespysomething

Funny, I just thought she had a good speech writer.


13 posted on 03/08/2005 10:50:36 PM PST by SittinYonder (Tancredo and I wanna know what you believe)
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To: SittinYonder

Obviously she needs someone to check her spelling.


14 posted on 03/08/2005 10:51:48 PM PST by eyespysomething (Vous pouvez vous rendre au garde de securite!)
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To: mdittmar

bttt


15 posted on 03/08/2005 10:55:32 PM PST by nopardons
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To: eyespysomething

Abviously.


16 posted on 03/08/2005 10:55:33 PM PST by SittinYonder (Tancredo and I wanna know what you believe)
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