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There seems to be some big misconceptions about the Egyption crisis Variant Send a noteboard - 31/01/2011 11:52:37 PM
This may surprise some people but the Jan. 25 demonstrations that touched off Egypt's rebellion were anything but spontaneous. They were carefully organized by an opposition coalition, led by the April 6 movement - a secular organization dominated by young people. The movement originated three years ago, when it organized a day of protests and strikes; its Facebook group has nearly 90,000 members. April 6 is one of several broad secular coalitions that formed in recent years to promote democracy in Egypt. Another, led by former U.N. nuclear energy official Mohamed ElBaradei, has more than 240,000 Facebook members.

Over the weekend, most of the secular opposition groups and the banned Muslim Brotherhood met to form a joint platform. They called for Tuesday's mass demonstration and worked toward consensus on a platform. This probably will call for a transitional government, possibly headed by Mr. ElBaradei, that would lift political restrictions and lay the groundwork for free and fair elections. The coalition contains business owners, former members of parliament and defectors from the regime, and it has the capacity to oversee a political transition.

The Muslim Brotherhood remains Egypt's best-organized opposition political movement, but so far it has played a marginal role in the demonstrations. Its long-term aim of establishing an Islamic government in Egypt is at odds with what the mostly secular and middle-class demonstrators have been calling for, which is the democratization and modernization of the country. The Brotherhood, unlike its Palestinian offshoot Hamas, abandoned violence decades ago.

No one knows how the Islamists would fare in a free election, since one has not been held in Egypt during the past half-century. But many Egyptian analysts believe an Islamist party would attract a minority of voters and would be unlikely, in the short term, to come to power. In the longer term, the best defense against it is well-organized and dynamic secular parties - which will only be possible if the current authoritarian regime is dismantled.
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If anyone's looking for up-to-date info on what's going on in Egypt - 28/01/2011 08:08:31 PM 696 Views
I've been following it on the BBC website. - 28/01/2011 09:49:47 PM 434 Views
Clarify: Democracy fans should favor the protesters because they have more violent thugs,right? - 28/01/2011 11:37:48 PM 549 Views
and socialism fans should favor the violent dicator since he can bring order and subsidies - 29/01/2011 12:16:37 AM 419 Views
He mainly seems to bring close diplomatic ties to the US and alternatives to the Muslim Brotherhood - 29/01/2011 12:59:48 AM 564 Views
You might want to do a quick check on the political situation in Egypt at this time. - 29/01/2011 11:37:02 AM 481 Views
I've done a quick one; it makes me question whether government by the protesters would be better. - 29/01/2011 11:44:10 PM 458 Views
They're not saying "We want to rule". - 30/01/2011 01:26:03 AM 464 Views
SOMEONE is going to rule. - 30/01/2011 02:16:43 AM 489 Views
It's a fairly simple matter, really. - 29/01/2011 11:52:41 AM 481 Views
The trouble with free elections is: They're free. - 29/01/2011 11:53:22 PM 404 Views
A vote for dictatorship and against democracy it is. Just checking. - 30/01/2011 12:08:41 AM 433 Views
I haven't cast a vote. - 30/01/2011 02:02:11 AM 429 Views
Not one that counts no, but still. - 30/01/2011 01:11:59 PM 889 Views
None of any kind. - 31/01/2011 12:10:07 AM 460 Views
Since I'm clearly a glutton for punishment... - 01/02/2011 06:49:38 PM 810 Views
Re: Since I'm clearly a glutton for punishment... - 04/02/2011 11:38:10 PM 575 Views
You're not seriously expecting them to do their revolution American Revolution-style, are you? - 29/01/2011 11:28:31 AM 462 Views
British Colonialism wasn't a walk in the park - 30/01/2011 03:53:58 AM 415 Views
Comparatively speaking, yes, it really was. Or at least in the US - not always so much in Asia. - 30/01/2011 10:42:53 AM 401 Views
Re: Comparatively speaking, yes, it really was. Or at least in the US - not always so much in Asia. - 30/01/2011 02:32:52 PM 462 Views
You can't be serious. - 30/01/2011 03:07:18 PM 396 Views
Pretty serious - 30/01/2011 04:52:24 PM 556 Views
Re: Pretty serious - 30/01/2011 05:11:50 PM 435 Views
This is ridicolous - 30/01/2011 05:31:31 PM 509 Views
you forget that it was supposdely thier own citizens the British were abusing. - 31/01/2011 12:39:33 AM 500 Views
Sure, but organized into hostile armies. A rather different matter, that. *NM* - 31/01/2011 09:46:25 PM 175 Views
true - 31/01/2011 10:04:38 PM 412 Views
Your comparison is very odd - 30/01/2011 04:38:16 PM 493 Views
Why? - 30/01/2011 05:02:47 PM 444 Views
I dont know if this will help you understand what is going on there - 30/01/2011 02:45:41 AM 440 Views
I never called anyone an animal. - 30/01/2011 04:50:12 AM 536 Views
Yikes indeed - 29/01/2011 03:57:25 AM 464 Views
There seems to be some big misconceptions about the Egyption crisis - 31/01/2011 11:52:37 PM 717 Views

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