here's a post from Juan Cole, who seems a reliable expert:

>>Top Ten Accomplishments of Egypt Demonstrators

Posted: 05 Feb 2011 12:13 AM PST

The protest movement in Egypt scored several victories on Friday, but
did not actually succeed in getting President Hosni Mubarak to step
down. Their accomplishments include:

1. The hundreds of thousands (the Egyptian Arabic press is saying a
million nationwide) of demonstrators showed that they had not been
cowed by the vicious attacks of Ministry of Interior goons on
Wednesday and Thursday, which killed 7 and wounded over 1,000.

2. By their determination and steadfastness, they put the Egyptian
army in the position of having to protect them from further attacks by
the petty criminals and plainclothes secret police deployed by the
Interior Ministry. The alternative would have been a bloodbath that
could have destabilized the country and would have attracted further
international condemnation.

3. They showed that they still have substantial momentum and that the
cosmetic changes made in the government (switching out corrupt
businessmen for authoritarian generals as cabinet ministers) have not
actually met their demands for reform.

4. They showed that they are a broad-based, multi-class movement, with
working-class Egyptians clearly making up a significant proportion of
the crowd in Tahrir Square.

5. They demonstrated that they are a nation-wide movement, bringing
hundreds of thousands out in Alexandria, Suez, Ismailiya, Mansoura,
Luxor, Aswan and elsewhere.

6. They put pressure on the Obama administration to hold Mubarak’s
feet to the fire about an early departure.

7. They so reassured Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan that
they are the future of Egypt that he took the risk of calling for
Mubarak to step down.

8. By making a Mubarak departure seem sure, they tempted new
presidential candidates into the arena, as with the Secretary General
of the Arab League, Amr Moussa, who visited the crowds at Tahrir
Square to some acclaim.

9. The optimism created by crowd actions caused Nobel prize winner
Mohamed Elbaradei to make an about-face and affirm that he would be
willing to run for president if drafted.

10. Gave cover to to Ayman Nur of the Tomorrow (Ghad) Party and other
leaders of opposition political parties to continue to demand
Mubarak’s departure.<<

-- 
Jim Devine /  "Living a life of quiet desperation -- but always with style!"
_______________________________________________
pen-l mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.csuchico.edu/mailman/listinfo/pen-l

Reply via email to