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Not only Egyptian Citizens, but American Taxpayers need to be asking about the IRI

February 6, 2012 in Corporations, Economy, Egypt

As an American,  don’t want my tax dollars going to support right-wing democratization of other nations.

It looks like the Egyptians feel the same way as Egypt says that 19 Americans will be ordered to stand trial.

U.S. has threatened to suspend $1.3 billion in annual aid to Egypt’s military–a move that, while not likely welcome by the Egyptian military, would be a move that is welcomed by the majority of the people of Egypt.

State media reported judges have referred 43 people, including 19 Americans, to be prosecuted on charges of violating foreign funding laws for nongovernmental organizations working in Egypt. One of them is reported to be Sam LaHood, the Egypt director of the Washington-based International Republican Institute, or IRI, and son of U.S. Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood.

The younger LaHood and other Americans working for IRI received haven last month at the U.S. Embassy  amid fears they might be arrested after a travel ban was placed upon them. Employees at two other U.S.-based groups — Freedom House and the National Democratic Institute — are also under investigation. The charges reportedly carry a penalty of up to five years in prison.

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ABOUT THE IRI

The International Republican Institute (IRI) was founded in 1983 and is funded by the United States government.  It conducts international political programs sometimes labeled “democratization programs.”  It has been chaired by John McCain since January of 1993.  Among its other activities, the IRI has organized right-wing political parties in Poland and has been involved in political activities in Egypt during the Arab Spring. The majority of the IRI’s funding comes from the US Agency for International Development (USAID), the US State Department, and the National Endowment for Democracy.  As a 501(c)(3) tax-exempt organization, it plays no part in domestic U.S. politics. However, the majority of its board, staff and consultants are drawn from the Republican Party.

Among other things, The IRI is accused of training some of the leaders of the 2004 Haitian coup d’état, as well as funding opposition groups in the country in a destabilization campaign in the months leading up the removal of democratically-elected President Jean-Bertrand Aristide by a coalition of Canada, the US and France. Aristide was replaced with an unelected government.

I don’t want my tax dollars going to support right-wing democratization of other nations–Do you?

How about if we defund the IRI and use their annual budget of $79 million to create jobs and repair some of the USA infrastructure?

Big business, lobbyist groups and foundations annually donate $1.4 million to the IRI, a small fraction of the organization’s $79 million budget. Such donors to the IRI include UPS, AT&T, Anheuser-Busch, Bell-South, Lockheed Martin, Blackwater, Chevron, ExxonMobil and BP. It is worth noting that several of these donors regularly lobby regarding issues under the jurisdiction of the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation where McCain is the second-highest ranked Republican. Private donations account for only $200,000, significantly less than one percent of the IRI’s total income.

 

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    Now Libya’s new government is taking advice from an accused war criminal

    January 8, 2012 in Libya


    ADVICE FROM WAR CRIMINAL OMAR HASSAN al-BASHIR

    Inviting a war criminal to your country to listen to his advice?  Bashir’s visit does not say  much in terms of Libya’s promise to be a new democratic nation.  Al Arabiya reports this morning that Libyan officials welcomed Omar Hassan al-Bashir,  President of Sudan,in a red carpet ceremony at a Tripoli airport, and Prime Minister Abdurrahim el-Keib called him one of Libya’s friends.

    Al-Bashir, the dictator of Sudan, was accepted into Libya over the weekend.  Omar al-Bashir, who has been charged with crimes against humanity for atrocities committed in Darfur, was there on Saturday to provide advice on how to disarm Libya’s former rebel fighters and integrate them into the army and police forces.  (After all, you can’t have dissent among the police when agencies from the West come in to pillage Libya because those in charge who will profit from this will need all the help they can get to quell the dissent in the streets that is sure to arise when the price of gas goes from 15 cents a gallon to $5, when free electricity goes to $100 monthly electric bills, when free college education goes to unaffordable for 99% of the population.)

    The International Criminal court in The Hague, Netherlands, has charged Bashir with crimes against humanity for atrocities committed against civilians during the Darfur conflict.

    Erwin van der Borght, the group’s Africa director, called it “cynical” of Sudan to offer to help with militia integration, given that country’s experience in arming militias like the Janjaweed, which is blamed for some of the worst abuses in Darfur.

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    Here are the official counts from the ICC of crimes against humanity for Omar Hassan al-Bashir

    And Libyan leaders want to listen to the advice of this criminal?  I guess next week they will be inviting Assad and then perhaps after that some of the U.S. military trained thugs from Hosni Mubarak’s army.

    Counts

    Mr Al Bashir is allegedly criminaly responsible ten counts on the basis of his individual criminal responsibility under Article 25(3)(a) of the Rome Statute as an indirect (co) perpetrator including:

    • five counts of crimes against humanity: murder – Article 7(1)(a);
      extermination – Article 7(1)(b); forcible transfer – Article 7(1)(d); torture – Article 7(1)(f); and rape – Article 7(1)(g);
    • two counts of war crimes: intentionally directing attacks against a
      civilian population as such or against individual civilians not taking part in hostilities -Article 8(2)(e)(i); and pillaging – Article 8(2)(e)(v).
    • Three counts of genocide: genocide by killing (article 6-a), genocide by causing serious bodily or mental harm (article 6-b) and genocide by deliberately inflicting on each target group conditions of life calculated to bring about the group’s physical destruction (article 6-c).
    Proclaim the Queen!

      Regarding the current situation in Egypt

      December 19, 2011 in Egypt

      Why would anyone expect anything different with Mubarak’s USA trained military in charge of the Egyptian government?

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        Big Turnout for the Vote in Egypt–Egyptians Flock to the Polls

        November 28, 2011 in Egypt

        In spite of all the fear mongering to the contrary, the Egyptians has a much larger than expected turnout for their first post- Mubarak election.

        The election, due to run through to mid-January, is a test for the credibility of Egypt’s generals who have struggled to deal with social unrest and growing pressure for a quick handover to civilian rule.

        The army said it would not allow foreigners to monitor the vote but seems to have backed down, allowing groups such as NDI, The Carter Centre, the International Republican Institute and South African, Turkish, Polish and Danish groups to take part. Alongside 300 foreign civil society representatives are 25,000 accredited monitors and thousands more concerned citizens who have pledged to alert the organizers to abuses.

        Monitors Without Borders said the turnout was the biggest in six decades, and was accompanied by a flurry of citizen activism on social networks and YouTube, where people were uploading examples of violations.

        MORE AT AL ARABIYA NEWS

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          Morocco holds a good promise for improved government soon

          November 26, 2011 in Africa

          Al Arabiya News reports that Morocco’s moderate Islamists won slightly more than 100 parliamentary seats in elections held on Saturday november 26, 2011, but all the count is not in yet.  The Justice and Development Party’s (PJD), a party supported largely by Morocco’s poor hopes to push Islamic finance which makes charging interest on loans illegal.  The PJD vows to steer clear of imposing a strict moral code–a promise they they will be forced to keep because, in order to wield any power, the PJD will be forced to form alliances with other political groups as while they may be the strongest among the other parties, capturing a little more than a 100 seats, they are far from the majority of the  total 395 seats–just a little more than 25%. PJD has said it aims to obtain a majority by joining forces with three parties in the current governing coalition, including the left-wing Socialist Union of Popular Forces (USFP) and the nationalist Istiqlal of Prime Minister Abbas al-Fassi.

          The King will pick the next prime minister from the party that wins the most seats.

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          King Mohammed VI of Morocco

          Still all is not well in Morocco as evidenced by voter turnout:  Only 6 million of  21 million eligible to vote participated in the election. This is in protest to King Mohammed.  Many say that his reforms do not go far enough and thus thousands of people boycotted the elections. The king revived a reform process this year hoping to sap the momentum out of a protest movement and avoid the violence-ridden revolts in Tunisia, Libya, Egypt, Yemen and Syria.  It looks like he may have been successful, at least for the time being.

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          ILWQ COMMENTS

          Yet,  when compared to Egypt, Libya, Yemen, Syria, Bahrain and even Tunisia, Morocco appears to be the leader on the path to establishing a government that is more reflective of the will of the people–ironic since it is a monarchy.

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            Every day it sounds more and more like a bunch of thugs with the assistance of NATO took over Libya

            November 24, 2011 in Libya

            7,000 New Detainees?  Some of them tortured?  This is freedom?

            Al Arabiya News reports that despite a new government line-up in Tripoli, which drew praise from Washington on Wednesday, a United Nations report has revealed that some 7,000 people, are being held in Libyan detention centers controlled by “revolutionary brigade” militias.

            Foreigners and many women and children are among the detainees, a report by U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon ahead of a Security Council meeting Monday on Libya’s reconstruction after the death of dictator Muammar Qaddafi. Some of the detainees have allegedly been tortured, the report notes. The estimated 7,000 are new detainees, which have no access to courts “in the absence of a functioning police and judiciary,” said the report.

            The U.N. said that a large number of those held are sub-Saharan Africans accused or suspected of being Qaddafi mercenaries. “Some detainees have reportedly been subjected to torture or ill treatment. Cases have been reported of individuals being targeted because of the color of their skin,” Ban’s report said.

            The largely tribal-based “revolutionary brigades” united to force Qaddafi out of power but have retained significant control in their own regions, according to diplomats and U.N. officials.

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            ILWQ COMMENTS

            Libya sounds like one giant mess.

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              Egyptian people reject promises from Egypt’s military as “Too little too late.”

              November 22, 2011 in Egypt

              Al Arabiya reports that Egypt’s Field Marshal Mohamed Hussein Tantawi said the ruling military council is ready to hold a referendum on immediate transfer of power to a civilian administration and vowed that the planned Nov. 28 elections would go ahead as planned. Tantawi said the army was “completely ready to hand over responsibility immediately, and to return to its original mission of protecting the nation if the nation wants that, via a popular referendum, if need be.”

              Tantawi, who took power when former president Hosni Mubarak was ousted, also said in a televised address that he had accepted the cabinet’s resignation.“The armed forces, represented by their Supreme Council, do not aspire to govern and put the supreme interest of the country above all considerations,” Tantawi added.

              But the concessions were immediately rejected by tens of thousands of protesters in Cairo’s iconic Tahrir Square threatening a “Second revolution.” 

              Abdulrahman al-Zaghimy, in the collation of youth revolution, told Al Arabiya that Tantawi’s speech came too late, adding that the protesters would continue their sit-in at Tahrir Square until the departure of the military council. The military council had earlier met with politicians to accept the resignation of Prime Minister Essam Sharaf’s cabinet and to replace it with a national salvation government. The military also agreed to hold presidential elections before the end of June 2012, a vote the ruling council has deemed the final stage necessary for the transfer of power.

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              ILWQ COMMENTS:  Too little, too late–a familiar story for leaders worldwide.  The people are stepping up to the plate and taking over.

              The people are right.  All they need to do is look at how much the promises of Yemen’s leader, Saleh have meant.  These people only use their promises to buy time.  Look at Assad of Syria and all the promises he made to the Arab Leaague and then less than 24 hours later he launched yet another huge assault against his people.

              Enough of their damn lies!  And this includes the leadership of the US Congress and the White House as well.

              Proclaim the Queen!

                The Egyptians raise the bar of expectations for politicians worldwide

                November 20, 2011 in Egypt

                Several political figures and coalitions boycott campaigning after police crackdown in Tahrir

                Can you think of even one American politician who would do what Hamzawy did?  If you can, then I advise you to vote for that person in 2012–someone who is more concerned about the people than their own political career.

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                Ahram Online reports today that the uncertainty surrounding the parliamentary elections was fuelled on Sunday after several coalitions and political figures protested the government’s violent tactics against the roughly ten thousand protesters on Saturday by boycotting campaigning.

                Police’s rough tactics to disperse protesters camping out in Tahrir Square backfired. To the contrary; it incited many activists to flock to the epicentre of January’s revolution in support of the protesters and eventually engage in mass confrontations with the notorious Central Security Forces.

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                ILWQ COMMENTS:  Too Bad that American Politicians don’t conduct themselves in a similar manner.  Unfortunately, they are too busy saying yes to Wall Street to notice the rest of us.

                I am impressed and deeply moved by these Egyptian politicians who are willing to do this and take a stand for the greater good of the majority–that is what real leaders do.  They don’t stand fast in a “Me-First” attitude.  They don’t choose the politically safe move to protect their careers.  They don’t think of themselves first.  They think of the people they represent and what is best for them.

                Compare this to how the shameful way that Democratic candidates responded in 2007 to the ousting of Mike Gravel from the presidential debates by MSNBC’S Chuck Todd:  Not a one of them uttered a peep and the debates went on as scheduled. All this  in spite of the fact that a corporate executive, Chuck Todd, representing GE, the largest war profiteer in the world, told a US Presidential candidate that he could not participate in a national Presidential debate because he had not raised a million dollars.  Todd is on record several months prior in June of 2007 as having said that they can’t have two candidates (Kucinich and Gravel) talking against the war.  The excuse he gave was that it would be “bad for the Democrats.”  It wouldn’t have been bad for the Democrats, it would have been bad for GE because that is how they , and many in Congress make their money–off war profits.

                I was so outraged by their self-serving behavior that I wrote letters to all the candidates, to the DNC, MSNBC and Chuck Todd.  If those Democrats had been true and fearless leaders, they would have stood up to GE and refused to debate unless Gravel was allowed to debate with them.  Obviously they cared more about their political careers than liberty and justice for all.  Kucinich, the other anti-war candidate, got his corporate come-uppence shortly after when the Gannett Corporation ousted Kucinich on rules (not having a storefront in Iowa for a certain period of time).  When our democracy has gotten to the point where Wall Street corporations make the rules for who is allowed to debate in our Presidential elections, it is time for REAL people to step in and stop them.

                The point is not whether you support Mike Gravel.  The point is whether you support the democratic process or a Wall Street Corporate process.

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                Here is Mike Gravel’s response to being ousted from the Presidential debates by a representative of the world’s largest war contractor:

                October 22, 2007, Senator Gravel posted the following explanation for why MSNBC ousted him:

                ” In the past year, I have attended 11 national Democratic debates of which two were sponsored by corporate media giant NBC. However, last week, the network suddenly conjured up arbitrary polling and fundraising requirements specifically designed to exclude me. None of the previous debates I attended held such requirements.

                When my staff called NBC directly to find out why I was now barred from attending, Chuck Todd, NBC news’ political director, told us that there were three criteria we did not meet, namely that I had not campaigned in New Hampshire and/or Iowa at least 14 times in the past year, that I was not polling at 5% and that I hadn’t raised $1 million.

                It is abundantly clear that NBC just wants me out of the race. This was made evident by the fact that NBC did not even inform me of its arbitrary criteria before making the decision to stifle my campaign. NBC’s Todd waited until 5 p.m. on Friday, Oct. 19, to inform my staff that I was not invited to the Oct. 30 debate at Drexel University in Philadelphia. And, according to a recent CNN poll, I am tied with Joe Biden, Dennis Kucinich and Chris Dodd.

                NBC claims I haven’t raised enough money to qualify. I’m proud of the fact that I don’t collect millions from special interests (or fugitives like Norman Hsu). The reason why Senator Hillary Clinton seems to have a fundraising scandal every month is because money has corrupted our democracy.

                NBC’s decision is proof that our corporate media do not want a genuine debate over our impending war with Iran. During the last debate I was the only one to aggressively confront Senator Clinton over her vote to label the Iranian Revolutionary Guard a terrorist organization. Had I not brought up the subject, seasoned NBC commentator Tim Russert, the moderator of the Sept. 26 debate, would not have even asked about it.

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                  Indeed! 50,000 Egyptians in Tahrir Square protest the army!

                  November 18, 2011 in Egypt

                  Arab News reported that About 50,000 mainly Islamist protesters flocked to Cairo’s Tahrir Square on Friday to press Egypt’s military rulers to transfer power to elected civilians after the cabinet launched a move to exempt the army from parliamentary oversight.

                  The protesters chanted Islamic songs before Friday prayers while others handed out flyers demanding the withdrawal of the constitutional proposal and that presidential elections be held no later than April 2012, instead of at year end or in 2013.

                  “Does the government want to humiliate the people? The people revolted against Mubarak and they will revolt against the constitution they want to impose on us!” a member of an orthodox Islamic Salafi group cried out over loudspeakers.

                  “Down to military rule” and “No to making the army a state above the state” were some of the chants echoing across Tahrir. A military source said on Friday the army would hand power to a civilian government in 2012, without giving a exact date.

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                  ILWQ COMMENTS

                  Somehow I don’t think that a vague promise from Mubaraks US connected military promising to hand power to a civilian government “sometime” in 2012 is going to satisfy these people.

                  Egyptians are bracing for their historic parliamentary elections on Nov. 28 with the date of presidential polls still unclear.  It will be interesting to see what happens on Monday Nov 28 in Egypt

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                    Egyptians are back in Tahrir protesting army’s “supra-constitutional” plans

                    November 18, 2011 in Egypt

                    \
                    Protesters gathering in Tahrir Square Friday Nov 18 after prayers. – Al Arabiya 

                    Looks like the Egyptians don’t like the idea of a “supra” group any more than the citizens of the USA appreciate our “Super Committee”–that group of 60% Wall Street millionaires who will be deciding what is to be cut out of the national budget.  It will be interesting to see if they decide to cut Social Security since we all know that Social Security is a totally funded program that is NOT part of the national budget.  And already the millionaires have wiggled out of much of their responsibility for paying into Social Security as after an annual income of $106,000 they don’t have to pay a dime of Social Security tax whereas the rest of us continue to pay social security tax on 100% of our income.

                    What is it with the elites naming their committees “supra” or “super”?  Do they believe that their rhetoric has some special powers to make the rest of us believe they are invincible?

                    Listen to this description from Al Arabiya. If I didn’t know better, I would think I was listening to a description of the USA and the establishment of an Occupy Wall Street Camp.

                    “. . .Thousands of Egyptians were massing in Cairo’s Tahrir Square early on Friday for a mass rally against the military rulers’ proposed “supra-constitutional principles” that seek to shield the army from public scrutiny.  Liberal and Islamist group, including the powerful Muslim Brotherhood movement, announced they would hold the rally after the government went ahead with its plan to draft overarching constitutional principles.

                    Tents were pitched and sound stages set up as protesters returned to Tahrir square, the epicenter of an uprising that ousted President Hosni Mubarak from office in February, in what they said was an attempt to put “the revolution back on track.”

                    “There will be a big revolution tomorrow,” said a protester demanding rights for Egyptians killed and wounded in the revolution. The government’s draft drew fire from most quarters for including clauses that removed the ruling military’s budget from parliamentary oversight and allowed the military final say on military-related laws. . .”

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