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Entrevista a Nidal Tahrir, anarquista egipci 0 comments Rozhovor s egyptským anarchistami 0 comments Интервью с k... 0 comments Recent Articles about North Africa Community strugglesA rua egípcia mais forte que as urnas! Dec 20 13 La rue égyptienne plus forte que les urnes Jul 09 13 Οι δρόμοι της &... Jul 09 13 Interview with an anarcho-communist activist in Freedom Square in Cairo
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interview
Friday February 04, 2011 18:40 by NEFAC International Secretary - North-Eastern Federation of Anarchist Communists
"The most difficult obstacle Egyptian revolutionaries face is the cutting of communications. Western revolutionaries must put pressure on their governments to prevent the Egyptian regime from doing this. That's for now, but no-one can say what will happen in the long term. If the revolution is successful, then Western revolutionaries must build solidarity with their Egyptian comrades against the expected aggression from the USA and Israel. If the revolution is defeated, then it will be a massacre for all Egyptian revolutionaries." Interview with an anarcho-communist activist in Freedom Square, CairoCan you please tell me your name and what movement you are from? I'm Nidal Tahrir, from Black Flag, a small group of Anarcho-Communists in Egypt. The world is watching Egypt, and even moving in solidarity. However, due to the internet being cut, information was difficult to find. Can you tell me about what has happened in Egypt in the past week? What did it look like from your perspective? The situation in Egypt is so crucial right now. It began with an invitation to the day of rage against the Mubarak regime on January 25th. No-one expected that an invitation to a day of rage from a loose group, a Facebook page, not really organized, called "We are all Khalid Said" (Khalid Said is a young Egyptian who was killed by Mubarak's police in Alexandria last summer), it was that Tuesday that began everything, it was the spark for the whole fire. On Tuesday there were big demonstrations in the streets in every Egyptian town, on Wednesday the massacre began. It began with trying to finish the sit-in in Tahrir Square late on Tuesday night, and continued into the following days, especially in Suez town. Suez has a special value in every Egyptian heart. It was the centre for resistance against the Zionists in 1956 and 1967, in the same district. It fought Sharon's troops back in the Egyptian-Israeli wars. Mubarak's police carried out a massacre - at least 4 people killed, 100 injured, gas bombs, rubber bullets, flame throwers, a strange yellow substance thrown above people, maybe mustard gas. Friday was called the Jumu'ah of Rage - Jumu'ah is Arabic for Friday, it's the national weekend in Egypt, in many Islamic countries also. It's a sacred day in Islam because of the big prayers on this day, called Jumu'ah prayer. It was planned for demonstrations to go on after prayers, at noon, but the police tried to prevent the marches with all of its power and violence. There were many clashes in Cairo, (downtown, in Mattareyah, east of Cairo), all over Egypt, especially in Suez, Alexandria, Mahalla (in the delta, one of the centres of the working class). From noon to sunset, people marched in Cairo to Downtown, for a sit-in in Tahrir, till Mubarak's regime was removed, chanting one slogan: "The people demand the removal of the regime". At sunset, 5pm CLT, Mubarak declared a curfew and brought the army into Egyptian towns. This curfew was followed by a police-planned breakout, letting out the criminals and thugs called Baltagayyah. The police planned a widescale breakout of criminals in many Egyptian prisons to scare people in Egypt. No police, many army troops couldn't control the street, people were scared. It was followed by a news jam on Egyptian TV channels, radios, newspaper about luddites in many towns, about thieves firing at people. People organized "popular committees" to secure every street. This was welcomed by the regime to make people more scared about instability in the country, but it is also a point we could start from to build workers councils. As of Wednesday, there are clashes between pro- and anti-Mubarak people. Is that the correct way to describe it? Who are the "Mubarak supporters?" How are these clashes affecting the attitudes of average working-class Egyptians? It's absolutely wrong to call it clashes between anti- and pro-Mubarak. The pro-Mubarak demonstration consisted mostly of Baltagayyah and secret police, to attack the protesters in Tahrir. It only began after Mubarak's speech yesterday, after Obama's speech too. Personally I think Mubarak feels like a slaughtered ox who is trying to throw his blood over his killers. He feels like Nero and wants to burn Egypt before his removal, trying to make people believe he's a synonym for stability, safety and security. In this way he's really made some progress - a holy national alliance has now been formed against the Tahrirites (Tahrir protesters) and the "Tahrir Commune". Many people, especially the middle class, are saying that the demonstrations must end because Egypt has been burned, famine has begun, but it's not true at all - it's only an exaggeration. Every revolution has its difficulties and Mubarak is using fear and terror to stay longer. Personally, I'm saying that even if the protesters were responsible for this situation, even IF, Mubarak must leave, he MUST go because of his inability to deal with the situation right now. What do you see happening in the next week? How much is the position taken by the US government affecting the situation there? Nobody can figure out what will happen tomorrow or next week. Mubarak is a stubborn idiot and the Egyptian media is making the biggest media campaign in its history to detain the protests planned for next Friday, 4th February. There are calls for another million-person march to Tahrir, called the "Jumu'ah of salvation". The position taken by the US government affects us more than the demonstrations. Mubarak is such a traitor, capable of killing the whole people, but he couldn't say no to his masters. What has the participation of class-struggle anarchists been? Who are their allies? Anarchism in Egypt is not a big trend. You can find some anarchists but it's not a big trend yet. Anarchists in Egypt have joined both the protests and the popular committees to defend the streets from the thugs. Anarchists in Egypt put some hope in these councils. The anarchists' allies in Egypt are the Marxists, of course. We are not now at a time of ideological debate - the whole left is calling for unity and then argue about anything. The anarchists in Egypt are a part of the Egyptian left. What forms of solidarity can be built between revolutionaries in Egypt and revolutionaries in the "West"? What can be done immediately and what should we do in the long term? The most difficult obstacle Egyptian revolutionaries face is the cutting of communications. Western revolutionaries must put pressure on their governments to prevent the Egyptian regime from doing this. That's for now, but no-one can say what will happen in the long term. If the revolution is successful, then Western revolutionaries must build solidarity with their Egyptian comrades against the expected aggression from the USA and Israel. If the revolution is defeated, then it will be a massacre for all Egyptian revolutionaries. What will the main tasks be, once Mubarak leaves? Has there been much planning about this on the street level? What have anti-capitalist revolutionaries proposed? The main task now, speaking about the street demands, is new constitution and provisional government, and then new elections. There's much planning about this issue by many political trends here, especially the Muslim Brotherhood. Anti-capitalist revolutionaries are not very numerous in Cairo - the communists, democratic left and Trotskyites are calling for the same demands about the constitution and new elections, but for us as anarchists - anti-capital, anti-State too - we will try to ensure that the committees that have been formed protect and secure the streets, make them stronger and try to turn them into real councils. What do you want to say to revolutionaries abroad? Dear Comrades all over the world, we need solidarity, a large solidarity campaign and the Egyptian Revolution will win!
Interview edited by Anarkismo.net |
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Labour struggles, peasant struggles, the unemployed, the Amazigh [Berber] movement, the struggle in support of political prisoners and against the impunity of the dictatorship, all over Morocco, people are expressing their unease over the situation and the need for profound, real change. The February 20 Movement is demonstrating in the streets and preparing the first anniversary. [Castellano] Tunis: International meeting on the struggles 19:12 Fri 14 Oct 0 comments An international meeting was held in Tunis from 30 September to 2 October in which the CGT participated. The meeting was organized by Tunisian comrades from the Popular Liberation Front of Tunisia. [Castellano] The unemployed movement in Tunisia: an unstoppable process 17:25 Mon 25 Apr 0 comments Young people have been at the forefront of the revolution. Mohamed Bouazizi, whose death sparked off the revolt, was one of those educated young people who were rotting in villages with no prospect for the future. 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Mohamed Morsi has been ousted after a one-year reign and four days of demonstrations on an unprecedented scale in the history of the country. The Egyptians have reminded the world that an election is not a blank cheque which leaves representatives free from all constraint. [Français] [Castellano] [Italiano] [Ελληνικά ] Support to the Egyptian men and women repressed by the police! Feb 03 AL 0 comments Long live the struggle of the Egyptian people! Tunisia, Egypt, Algeria, Jordan, Yemen... Feb 02 International Secretariat 0 comments The wave of protests which began in Sidi Bouzid on 17 December continues to grow. Sparked off by a gesture of despair by Mohamed Bouazizi, it is giving hope for a better world to millions of people in a growing number of Arab countries. After the riots in Algeria and Libya earlier this month, now is the turn of Egypt, Jordan and Yemen to see extensive social movements... [Français] Tunisia: the revolution is not over Jan 20 Anarkismo 0 comments Our organizations affirm their full solidarity with the struggle of the Tunisian people for freedom and social justice and our support for militant anti-capitalist Tunisians. We condemn the attitude of the Western States and more generally their political classes, both right-wing and social democratic, who have always actively supported the authoritarian power of Ben Ali. [Français] |
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Spring zu Komment: 1Salaam Nidal Salaam,
I’m Richard from the GCI-ICG and I would like to intervene on your interview published by “Anarkismo.net”…
Firstly I would like to salute all the comrades and proletarians in struggle for the great expression of rebellion developed since two weeks (as well as in Tunisia, etc.)
Secondly what happens more precisely in Egypt? The opposition bourgeois factions (“here” and “over there”) as well as the mainstream media try to make us believe that it’s merely about a revolt “against the dictatorship”, “against the regime” (Ben Ali in Tunisia, Mubarak in Egypt, etc.) for more democracy… Obviously at the beginning, it’s about a social revolt, against misery and exploitation! The whole bound to the general crisis of world capitalism! Against the bourgeois repression also! The fact that proletarians also target the personification of this misery (Ben Ali and Mubarak) doesn’t change anything to the deep reasons of the uprising. Misery and exploitation also crystallize through its own bourgeoisie, and through the current regime that organizes this misery and this exploitation…
I am interested by all autonomous expression of our class. Of course, all this started spontaneously, but alone the spontaneity cannot explain the continuity of the movement (I won’t speak yet about “revolution”, as all the bourgeois media do since weeks). It’s obvious that the insurgents are capable to get organized more deeply than the simple spontaneity (that they equip themselves with ongoing structures of struggles) to assume on one hand the consolidating of the struggle, and on the other hand the overcoming of all the attempts of hijacking (“free elections”, “freedom of speech and association”, etc.)… According to you, what about these levels of autonomous organization and structuring of our class? Careful: we are obviously not waiting for “pure” expressions (this doesn’t exist!), for directly communist, anarchist and proletarian formalizations… But how our class get organized? Which anti-capitalist mottos are put forward? Which are discussions, perspectives? Etc.
Here I send you an interesting “Leaflet of solidarity with the Tunisian insurgents” signed by a French group called “Autonomous struggles”, and we translated in English (http://storage.canalblog.com/10/65/611482/61070976.pdf & http://storage.canalblog.com/60/96/611482/61070993.pdf). Moreover we also published our own leaflet in French and in English (http://gci-icg.org/leaflets/maghreb1101_eng.pdf). Don’t hesitate to use both materials for your intervention and propaganda. Don’t hesitate to send us any interesting material handed out during the protest. Don’t hesitate to send us detailed reports about what is happening now…
Class solidarity with the insurgents in the Maghreb, in Egypt… and all over the world!
Richard, for the ICG.