PKPolitics Discuss » Current Issues

مصر میں مظاہرے شدت اختیار کرگئے، 3 ہلاک

(9 posts)
  1. Analyists see as an end of West supported govt's in Arab world

    مصر کے کئی شہروں میں بدھ کو مسلسل دوسرے روز بھی حکومت مخالف مظاہرے جاری رہے جن کے دوران ہلاک ہونے والے افراد کی تعداد تین ہوگئی ہے۔

    بدھ کے روز سب سے بڑا احتجاجی مظاہرہ دارلحکومت قاہرہ میں ہوا جس میں شریک ہزاروں افراد اورپولیس کے درمیان شدید جھڑپیں ہوئیں۔ پولیس نے مظاہرین پر لاٹھی چارج کیا، تشدد کا نشانہ بنایا اور کئی سو افراد کو گرفتار کرلیا۔
    http://www.voanews.com/urdu/news/egypt_anti_government_rallies_26jan11-114663579.html

    Posted 1 year ago on 27 Jan 2011 6:32 #
  2. Egyptians rise up and get rid of this leech that has been sucking your blood dry for God knows how long!!

    We on the other hand, voted in a leech after leech after leech thinking they might just be the cure of our diseases but Alas! all we got more misery..

    Posted 1 year ago on 27 Jan 2011 6:45 #
  3. ajhons
    Member

    MG sir
    Is this the beginning of what we both beleive on.The rising of suppressed ummah .I can feel the glimps of joy.

    Posted 1 year ago on 27 Jan 2011 7:32 #
  4. shirazi
    Member

    I hope this 'd reach to some logical conclusion unlike prior unrests in Arab world. Arabs seem to be most immune race to dictatorships that are mostly puppets of west.

    Posted 1 year ago on 27 Jan 2011 7:51 #
  5. toamin
    member

    that was a pure racist and factually incorrect comment, it is known how oppressive the tyrants are... they are literally shooting at their own civilians-

    Posted 1 year ago on 27 Jan 2011 12:11 #
  6. Reports of ‘massacre’ in Suez as protests in Egypt move into third day
    Anti-government protests in Egypt moved into their third day early Thursday, with unconfirmed reports of police "massacres" of civilians in the port city of Suez.

    In Cairo, protesters "played cat and mouse with police" into the early hours of Thursday, Reuters reported. Opposition groups reported on their websites that electronic communications had been cut off in the city center, and parts of the city were experiencing blackouts.

    The official death toll stood at six over the first two days of protests, but social networks were abuzz with claims of police shooting at protesters, many of those reports focusing on the city of Suez, where protesters torched a government building on Wednesday.

    "Security forces are committing heinous massacres and there is zero media coverage," read an update on the web page of Suez from Egyptian Association for Change - USA, an opposition group that had joined the call for an uprising starting on January 25.

    "Government is trying to cover up what happened in city of Suez. Media banned from entry," read another update. "Reporters from Suez, Al Jazeerah, Dream and Al Mehwar were prohibited from entering Suez to enforce a media blackout on the subject."...

    Posted 1 year ago on 27 Jan 2011 13:13 #
  7. America Ka Dard-e-Sar. Arab World might stand up against "Promised Land" if dictator romoved.

    واشنگٹن ( مانیٹرنگ ڈیسک )مصر میں جاری کشیدگی نے امریکہ کو پریشان کردیا ہے اور وہ صدر حسنی مبارک اور مظاہرین کی حمایت اور مدد کا فیصلہ کرنے کی مشکل میں پھنس گیا ہے اور تذبزب کا شکار ہے کہ حتمی طور پر کیا فیصلہ کیا جائے ۔ لیکن زیادہ امکان ہے کہ امریکہ کو بحالتِ مجبوری حسنی مبارک کو اقتدار چھوڑنے کی تجویز دینا پڑے گی ۔امرکی حکام کے خیال میں مظاہرین کی حمایت کی صورت میں خدشہ ہے کہ اس کے اثرات پورے مشرقِ وسطیٰ پر ہونگے اور اس سے اسرائیل کا وجود خطرے میں پڑ جائے گا کیونکہ مصر اس خطے میں اسرائیل کیلئے سب سے بڑی سپورٹ ہے ۔ اے آر وائی نیوز کے مطابق امریکی محکمہ دفاع ، وائٹ ہاﺅس اور پینٹا گون مصر کی صورتحال کی سنجیدگی سے مانیٹرنگ کر رہے ہیں جبکہ امریکہ کو ھسنی مبارک کے حامی یہ تاثر دینے کی کوشش کررہے ہیں کہ حسنی مبارک کی سپورٹ کتم کرنے اور اس کا اقتدار ختم ہونے سے شدت پسند مسلمان اقتدار میں آجائیں گے جس سے اسرائیل کے خطرات لاحق ہونگے ۔ آج مسری تنطیموں نے امریکہ بھر میںصدر حسنی مبارک کے خلاف مطاہروں کا اعلان کیا ہے اور امریکی حکام ابھی مصری فوج کی جانب دیکھ رہے ہیں کہ وہ حتمی طوپر کیا فیصلہ کرتی ہے جبکہ فوج کی جامنب سے ایسے واضح اشارے ملے ہیں کہ وہ حسنی مبارک کی حمایت نہیں کرے گی ۔ ایسی صورت مین امریکہ کیلئے حسنی کی حمایت جاری رکھنا ممکن نہیں رہے گا ۔ میڈیا رپورٹ کے مطابق امریکہ نے ابھی تک مظاہرین اور حسنی مبارک میںسے کسی کی حمایت کا باضابطہ اعلان نہیں کیا لیکن جب وزیر خارجہ ہیلری کلنٹن سے صحافیوں نے پوچھا کہ کیا وہ مظاہرین کی حمایت کرتی ہیں تو وہ خاموش رہیں اسی طرح جب ان سے یہ دریافت کیا گیا کہ جب ایران میں ایسی صورتحال تھی توامریکہ نے فوری طور پر مظاہرین کی حمایت کا اعلان کیاتھا مگر انہوں نے اس کا بھی جواب نہیں دیا ،۔ سیاسی اور سفارتی ماہرین کے مطابق امریکہ کیلئے مظاہرین کی مخالفت اور حمایت کا فیصلہ کرنا ”مکھی نگلنے نہ اگلنے “ جیسی صورتحا کے مترادف ہے کیونکہ وہ جمہوری حق کی کھل کر نفی نہیں کرسکتا اور حسنی مبارک کی حمایت اس کے لئے اسرائیل کا وجود برقرار رکنے کیلئے لازم ہے لیکن اس وقت حالت حسنی مبارک کی حمایت کی اجازت نہیں دیتے اس لیئے غالب امکان یہی ہے کہ امریکہ کو مظاہرین کی مخالفت سے گریز کرنا پڑے گا اور امکان ہے کہ وہ اپنے اہم ترین اتحادی حسنی مبارک کو اقتدار چھوڑنے کا مشورہ دے سکتا ہے لیکن خدشہ ہے کہ اس سے مشرقِ وسطیٰ کے دوسرے ممالک میں بھی جمہویت لانا پڑے گی ۔
    http://www.dailypak.com/index.php?pag=detail&id=20258

    Posted 1 year ago on 29 Jan 2011 12:20 #
  8. yahya
    Member

    US/UK Europe supporting the coup;
    http://www.jang.com.pk/jang/jan2011-daily/29-01-2011/updates/1-29-2011_60947_1.gif

    Posted 1 year ago on 29 Jan 2011 12:32 #
  9. An excerpt from ‘Quantum Note: Arab Street in Revolt’ by Dr. Muzaffar Iqbal

    Nixon had candidly admitted that in the Muslim world, “demographic, economic, and political trends make conflict increasingly inevitable” and he had advocated a control strategy that revolved around building special relationships with the most modern and moderate Islamic countries, so that they may become “poles of attraction” in the Muslim world. The four countries he selected were Turkey, Egypt, Indonesia, and Pakistan. He believed that over a generation their success would have a profound effect on political evolution elsewhere. “Now that Communism is dead,” he wrote, “we must redefine the American global mission.”

    The Nixon Doctrine, establishing proxies of American power around the world, had a further policy imperative: build working relations with “moderate Muslims” around the world. Ben Ali was a perfect model. Behind the fine-tuned, over-simplified gloss lay yet another detail: attach to every “moderate” Muslim an expiry date and take action before that expiry date and replace the soon-to-expire dictator with another setup which will bring new faces to power but ensure continuity of the underline grid. That is exactly what has happened in Tunisia. Old Ben Ali is gone, not because a Jasmine revolution, but simply because he had reached his expiry date. It was imperative to remove him to save the system and the system he had constructed is firmly in place, even though he has escaped with his millions amassed over two decades of plunder.

    Hosni Mubarak’s expiry date is not in sight, if we are to believe the Secretary of State’s strong words. Another problem is the lack of a substitute; no one trusts his hated son and although there is the old and tried hand of Mohammed El Baradei, the former head of the International Atomic Energy Agency, who was once considered a substitute for Mubarak, but he is too old for the job and he has already done enough for America by overseeing its Iraq invasion.

    Thus the Arab street may be in revolt, but it is a revolt without a leadership and a revolt without a leadership is like a body without a head. No matter what happens on the Arab street, ultimately Uncle Sam is fully in control and challenge to power without a visionary leadership will lead to chaos. But even that chaos has a function: it dissipates built up anger—some Nixon had advised in his book. He had argued that from time to time, the United States must let provide escape routes to the built up anger, so that things remain within proportions. That is exactly what we are seeing: an escape valve that is allowing the Arab frustration to dissipate on the streets, leading to no real change.

    There is only one real unreal in this equation: The very large percentage of young people in MENA region, desperate for jobs, food, and housing. This factor may change the old scenario and upset the equation. The youth bulge and concomitant demands on the labor force, educational, housing, health, and other social systems are putting enormous pressure on the old system. As the youth bulge reaches prime family-formation age in each country, the number of births is likely to increase, fueling considerable future growth. The population on the Arabian Peninsula is projected to double to 124 million by 2050. Iraq and the Palestinian Territory will more than double in size. Iran and Turkey are slated to have about 100 million people each. In North Africa, Egypt will continue to dominate demographically, with a population exceeding 120 million.

    This population explosion—and complexity built into this process—may one day give birth to a genuine Arab street revolt with a direction and aim; that day has not come yet. All we have for now is either senseless and leaderless street revolts leading to dissipation of energy, or a controlled process to change of those faces whose expiry date has come.

    http://www.opinion-maker.org/2011/01/quantum-note-arab-street-in-revolt/

    Posted 1 year ago on 29 Jan 2011 15:12 #

RSS feed for this topic

Reply

You must log in to post.