It is a Revolution
that is changing the face of the Middle East
By Mohamed
Kamel
Feb 6, 2011
What we
have been seeing in Egypt over the last couple of weeks or so, is not a coup d’état
and it is not a simple demonstration, but it is a people's revolution against tyranny.
Mubarak
kept rejecting repeated calls, by the Egyptian people, for democracy and justice.
But no one ever thought that the Egyptians will revolt in this mass, carrying strong
demands with a clear determination.
Why did the
Egyptians revolt?
In the last
30 years, Egypt was going from bad to worse.
The situation of services and basic needs are deteriorating daily, while
selective money makers are building their wealth on people’s suffering. These individuals
joined forces with the governing family, creating an unholy marriage between
the wealth and the regime.
Why now?
In the last
year, the arrogant regime extended its humiliation of the Egyptian people
without conservation. It became well
known that the regime doesn’t care about anything but staying in power whatever
the price could be.
Almost a
year ago, police brutality crossed the line when youth were killed and thrown in
the streets. Their parents were ordered
to bury them without knowledge of the reason behind their death. The murder of Khaled
Said on June 6th, 2010, shocking Egypt is what opened people’s
eyes to these crimes.
This crime was
trailed by the well known fraudulent parliamentary election in November 2010.
Parallel to
this the Egyptian government was raising the sectarian tension between Muslims
and Christians. While this has been going on for a long time came the attack on
Alexandria’s church to prove that this regime will do anything to control the
people and turn them against each other. Many believe that this was done by the
regime, while the most conservative views say it was ignored intentionally.
To cover it
up, the government arrested Mohamed Sayyid
Bilal and after using all sorts of torture they failed to get a confession out of him. After which, they did the same thing as with
Khaled Said.
This
accumulation of humiliation to the Egyptian people encouraged the youth, all born
during the Mubarak regime.
This
generation has been taught that revolution is a bad word and dignity has been
removed from their dictionary. They have
been portrayed as drug addicts, carless and a useless generation. This reached the
point that we thought it was true.
As Egypt
was, Tunisia was as well. When the
Tunisian people decided to revolt, no one ever thought that this would happen
or even less that they would succeed. But
they did, and that was the trigger that showed to all Arab people that their will
could and will prevail.
On the
other side, there is the Egyptian regime, the USA policies and the cold peace
accord between Egypt and Israel.
USA and
Israel bid on the death of the Egyptian people, as they planned to create a new
reality in the Middle East. A reality in
which, Israel has a peace accord with some puppet governments where they can
brain wash people to the point where they would be convinced that there is no
way out.
USA’s
hypocrisy in breaching democracy and supporting dictatorship, as long as they
are their allies, was the corner stone of this failed policy.
The only
solution for peace is democracy and justice.
When people can have their rights and a say in their future, only then
Israel could live in peace and USA people’s interest could be served.
While the revolution
is gaining ground, Mubarak is still playing his deceptive game. However, he has
finally been pressured to make a few concessions as a move to contain the
revolution.
He dismissed
his failed government, because it failed him, not because if failed the
Egyptian people. He appointed a vice-president because it became clear, only
the army can defend him and Omar Soliman was the army candidate that was
struggling with Mubarak’s son.
Meanwhile,
his son and his gangs released their thugs and police forces onto the streets to
kill whomever they can, such as during the Tahrir Square massacre.
While the
Egyptian people showed Mubarak the red card he remains defiant. Why?
The
revolution gained a lot of grounds, and proved to the entire world that the Egyptian
people are not as they have been portrayed.
Mubarak realized that even if he is going to be able to crush the
revolution, he lost his family’s dream to appoint his son as a new president
and guarantee the continuity of his family’s power control and accumulation of
wealth, estimated at $70 Billion.
As such, he
can’t leave before taking revenge from the Egyptians. And if he has to destroy Egypt he will, as
Mohamed Hassanin Haikel said: “The worst in Egypt will try to destroy the best
of it”.
Back to the
USA and Israel dream. They woke up to
this storm that proved to them that they were wrong from day one. They certainly will not give up so quickly, and
so they are trying to buy time to rearrange the cards in Egypt and the entire
region.
Are they
going to succeed? I am sure not. The Egyptian people are solidly united in
thought and action. They are tired of the fabricated sectarian tension that was
unheard of before Mubarak’s Machiavellian policy of “Divide and Conquer.”
Today, both Christians and Muslims are standing together, hand in hand. Now, we
see Muslims and Christians praying in public in Tahrir square and we see the Muslim
Brotherhood protecting churches.
When people
revolt, it is a sign that people broke the siege of fear that had been built around
them. A broken fear can never be re-injected.
* Mohamed S. Kamel: is a
Freelance writer, the editor of http://forafreeegypt.blogspot.com/
, he is a professional engineer, a co-founder of the Canadian Egyptian for
Democracy (CEFD), National Association for Change in Egypt (Taghyeer –
Canada). He could be reached at public@mohamedkamel.com
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