From: Romi Elnagar <bluesapphire48@yahoo.com>
Date: Sat, Feb 19, 2011 at 11:31 AM
Subject: [bangla-vision] Who is Leading the Egyptian Uprising Now?
To:
Who is Leading the Egyptian Uprising Now?February 17, 2011 by peterrfay
As anticipated in these pages, there has been ever mounting evidence that the engine behind the Egyptian uprising has been less the educated tweeters, bloggers and middle-class youth than the 'unschooled' working class – particularly factory workers, many unionized, and the impoverished. This has become even more undeniable as tweeters went home and back to work after Mubarak resigned, while the workers instead went out on strike. As Weal Ghonim, the feted techno-leader, tweeter and Google marketing executive proclaimed after Mubarak resigned,
Apparently the nightmare was not over for the Egyptian workers, however. Nor was dreaming part of the plan. Rather, pushing forward the real revolution was the plan. Economic and political strikes were the plan. While the tweeters go home, the Egyptian military remains untouched. The Egyptian rulers, military and even many "democrats" are menacingly warning the workers to stop striking – for the "benefit of the nation". To anyone who has looked at Egypt prior to January 2011, the emerging split between the "democratic technocrats" and the working class behind the uprising should come as no surprise. There has been a growing surge of strikes across the country – ever more widespread over the past two years, ever more desperately seeking survival from relentless increases in food prices and cost of living. Especially recently, it has been noted,
For some reason American literati have been declaring the Egyptian Revolution (which isn't yet a revolution, and isn't in any way over) to be a "Facebook" or "Twitter Revolution". Said the New York Times,
However, the Wall Street Journal discovered the tweeters were largely left out of the initial uprising, as they were outmaneuvered by the police, and had never before been able to mobilize any large numbers:
The initial uprising, though coordinated to a point with social media, had as its center of gravity poor youth with no twitter, blogs or computers. Perhaps more representative of attitudes of Egypt's tweeters and bloggers was Tarek Amr, an NGO blogger and software programmer:
After weeks of stalemated protests, the trigger that finally tipped the military into ousting Mubarak, not surprisingly, was not techno-savvy democracy activists. Instead it was the surge of strikes that swept the nation, according to Hossam el-Hamalawy:
Why would this final 'tipping point' be reached, after three painful weeks, only by a surge of factory strikes, rather than by the huge crowds peacefully gathered in Tahrir Square? This question would need to be asked to those who actually run the country: the generals-cum-enterprise-managers who own and insinuate themselves into every pore of Egyptian business and corrupt dealing. The guarding of wealth in Egyptian enterprises is the sina-qua-non of Egyptian rule and rulers. El-Hamalawy continues:
And after Mubarak was pushed out, and Ghonim went home to "dream", the uprising split decisively in two, according to the Wall Street Journal ("Splits Emerge Among Egypt's Young Activists"):
And so the crisis in Egypt continues to spread – strikes, both economic and political, spread against the ruling class in Suez, Port Said and Ismailiya (where the American USS Enterprise aircraft carrier and a guided missile cruiser patrolled today, as if to remind Egyptians whose interests are at stake in Egypt), to Mahalla el-Kobra in the textile heartland – the very same location which sparked nation-wide strikes in 2006, and to Alexandria and Damietta. And in Cairo, where state banks are under siege from their employees who relentlessly hound the corrupt managers, the Charmain of the Egyptian National Bank resigned.
The workers are assuredly not dreaming now – they have woken up. |
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Palash Biswas
Pl Read:
http://nandigramunited-banga.blogspot.com/
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