Posts Tagged ‘egypt’

The Great Tao doth provide

// September 18th, 2005 // 3 Comments » // Travel

Two wonderful weeks in Africas biggest city led me to believe that I would not find the mental space I sought there- so I have turned north, towards the Mediterranean where for thousands of years people have sat and drank juice/traded grain/compiled existing written knowledge/looked up and thought “hmmm”. I have come to rest in fair Alexandria- or “al-ʼIskandariyyah”- a “little place” of only 3.5 million (or 6, or 9 depending on the city limits). I have only been here a few days but from the moment I felt the warm sea breeze I knew that this is the place I came for. Much more to write in days to come, but so far Im set up in my own wonderful apartment 5 minutes from the sea so there is plenty of everything for all. A salute to Deinocrates of Rhodes, committee president of the “Found Alexandria” project.

// September 18th, 2005 // No Comments » // Travel

Sweet Victory Posted by Picasa

// September 18th, 2005 // No Comments » // Travel

I win Posted by Picasa

Moved from Cairo to Alexandria.

Ayman Nour: hits the Fan

// September 14th, 2005 // No Comments » // World Issues

If only I was the editor of some egyptian english language newspaper- imagine the front page puns. But enough malarky. Previously I have written about Ayman Nour, يمن عبد العزيز نور, runner up in Egyptian elections (8% official, up to 30% say some observers), and leading proponent for real change in the Egyptian system. (see photos from the largest rally of the elections below).

Some history. After five rejections from the Government he founded the al-Ghad (Tomorrow) Party. Then he “was imprisoned by the Egyptian government for 45 days this year on charges that he forged signatures on a candidate petition… released after U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice cancelled a trip to Egypt to protest his detention”. And has published a book advocating liberalism over Islamist politics, Yawmiyat Suhufi Mushaghib (The Memoir of a Troublemaking Journalist). Key indicators that he is definitely a man to watch, and perhaps one for Egyptians and the International community to pin their hopes to.

Nour was interviewed through a translator at his home in Cairo by Sharon Otterman on Sept. 5 (before the elections).

More info: Middle East Quarterly: Ayman Nour

The Faluka

// September 14th, 2005 // 2 Comments » // Travel

Faluka boat we rode at midnight upon the Nile. Posted by Picasa

The Nile

// September 14th, 2005 // No Comments » // Travel

Awesome Nile (and view from our balcony). Posted by Picasa

Bad, but not sooo bad.

// September 12th, 2005 // 1 Comment » // World Issues

Every Egyptian Ive talked to has a story about the elections; their name had been taken off the role, their friends had not been allowed in, if you voted for Mubarak you got a chicken, etc etc. But how much would the vote rigging have influenced the outcome- official with 88% of the vote to Mubarak and 7% to his closest contender Ayman Nour? The University of Pitsburgh School of Law Publication, The Jurist, summarises authoritively.

“The Egyptian Organization for Human Rights (EOHR) [advocacy website] issued a joint report with 21 other rights groups Saturday on last week’s Egyptian presidential elections [JURIST news archive], concluding that although up to 15 percent of the votes cast may be questionable, there was lass fraud in Egypt’s first ever contested elections than in past ballots. Monitors reported widespread fraud and violations [JURIST report] during Wednesday’s election and a losing candidate has alleged fraud in the vote count, but EOHR said that the amount of fraud would not be enough to over turn the victory of Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak. One of the main problems during Wednesday’s vote was that groups of voters were bused to polling stations and were allowed to cast ballots without showing registration. The EOHR also reported low voter turnout, saying that actual turnout was likely less than the official figure of 23 percent.

So yes it seems “officially dodge”- but not dodgey enough that anyone is at all surprised- and apparently a hell of a lot more real than the previous “presidential ratifications”. So bad Mubarak- but a move in the right direction. How ’bout we do it for real next time?

And though I do not endorse free electoral chicken- it can be oh so tasty.*

*By F.D.A standards McChickens must actually include at least 7% “electoral chicken”, or other B list “electoral meats”.

WonderClubbing?

// September 8th, 2005 // 1 Comment » // Travel

Oh yes Indeed. Tonight I�m going to a party/club event at… The Pyramids. I don�t care how awesome your local club is, how underground the scene, or excellent the vibe- show me your Wonders of the World.

Scarily little is know about the Ancient Egyptians use of Photoshop.

Elections in Cairo

// September 8th, 2005 // 1 Comment » // World Issues

Yesterday Egypt held Presidential Elections! Go voting its your birthday!

The BBC Says “While pro-government papers overflow with praise for what they see as the start of a new democratic era, independent and opposition papers highlight flaws in the vote and the need for faster and more radical reform”.

I think both pretty much right. Its an incredible step, and one that will hopefully lead to chain reaction of similar steps- however there are still massive things that need to change before a real democracy is built.

Everyone I talked to up till the vote took the outcome of the election as given – Mubarak to be returned once more, for good reasons and for bad. The outcome was a foregone conclusion- but the reason is deeper than issues of vote rigging or unbalanced access to media alone. Egyptian power structures have reached a balance that seems to work for a hell of a lot of people- and looking at what it is really balancing here, things could be a lot worse. The balance between a police state which has had the military deployed for 30 years, with the resurgence of extremism who want a much more conservative Islamic state, with the largest base of moderates Muslims in the region, with the oldest and one of the most respected Islamic bodies (Al-Azhar) in the region, and to mix it up – a country with a 42% illiteracy rate. Now how is democracy meant to work here again? A tough act- and so the “support the Status Quo” argument has a bit more to lean upon than the “dictator model” alone would suggest.

The general consensus is that these elections have been a step in the right direction- the very act of comparing candidates and having people speak out for change is an important cultural and political development. However, a huge amount needs to be improved in the coming 6 years if the next election is to be close to “free and fair”, but it does give a timeline for change and a base to compare the political futures with. Voting and a freer and fairer media is only part of the battle- what can democracy mean with almost half the country unable to read the information on which they are meant to be deciding? The bigger issues- poverty and education- must be at the forefront of change if real progress in democratic instititions are to have a meaningful effect in bringing political freedom to this country.

A salute to all Egyptians who voted yesterday! May it truly be a landmark in your history.

Egyptianess market turnaround

// September 1st, 2005 // No Comments » // Travel

Despite some uncertainty earlier in the day Arthur has experienced the biggest one day increase in Egyptianess since an early April high. Experts believe this trend is only due to increase in coming months due to a stronger euro and a steady supply of mango juice and victory schwarma. Despite recent logistical challenges in the marketplace, analysts are happy to note that the June-July crash in Egyptianess has bounced back so definitely, with some suggesting a peak around the end of Ramadan.

Safe and happy in Cairo. Peace.