Showing posts with label rise of islam. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rise of islam. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 6, 2013

UAE Begins Trial Of Egyptians, Emiratis Over Brotherhood Ties - Gulf Business News


Twenty Egyptians and 10 Emiratis are charged with setting up an illegal branch of the Muslim Brotherhood in the UAE.


By

Reuters

18 hours ago


Thirty Emiratis and Egyptians went on trial on Tuesday accused of setting up an illegal branch of Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhood in the United Arab Emirates.


The Federal Supreme Court in Abu Dhabi adjourned the case, which is viewed as an attempt to stamp out what the UAE says is a threat from political Islam, until November 12.


The UAE, a U.S. ally and major oil exporter, has long been distrustful of the Muslim Brotherhood, which helped propel Egypt’s Mohamed Mursi to power last year. The UAE has welcomed Mursi’s ouster by the army after mass protests against his rule.


Twenty Egyptians, six of whom are being tried in absentia, and 10 Emiratis are charged with setting up an illegal branch of the Muslim Brotherhood in the UAE, stealing and airing state security secrets and collecting funds illegally, activists said.


The defendants denied all the charges, a family member of one of the detainees who attended the trial told Reuters, adding that some of the Egyptians had said they were physically abused in custody and their confessions were obtained under coercion.


“One Egyptian said they were subjected to all kinds of torture,” the family member said, on condition of anonymity.


The UAE denies using torture. The court ordered medical tests for some of the defendants, state news agency WAM said.


The 10 Emiratis who went on trial on Tuesday are among 61 Islamists convicted by a UAE court in July of plotting to overthrow the government, activists said.


Many of the jailed Islamists are members of the al-Islah group, which the UAE says has links to Egypt’s Brotherhood. Al-Islah denies any organisational links to the group.


New York-based Human Rights Watch (HRW) has raised concerns about Tuesday’s trial and questioned the ability of the UAE judicial system to uphold basic rights of free speech and peaceful association.


Thanks to its state-sponsored cradle-to-grave welfare system, the UAE has largely avoided the unrest that has unseated long-serving Arab rulers elsewhere in the region.


But it has shown little tolerance towards dissent. Dozens of people have been detained since 2011 and most were tried and convicted of planning to overthrow the government.


Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhood said at the time of their arrests that some of the Egyptians now on trial are its members and said they had been wrongfully arrested.


Relations between Cairo and Abu Dhabi soured after Hosni Mubarak was toppled as Egypt’s president in 2011. He had been a longtime ally of the Gulf Arab states.


The rise of the Brotherhood in Egypt since 2011 unsettled most Gulf Arab states, including the UAE, which feared it would embolden Islamists at home.


Days after the army ousted Mursi in July, the UAE offered $3 billion in support for Egypt’s economy.


Mursi himself is facing trial in Cairo along with 14 other Islamists on charges of inciting violence. He appeared in court on Monday for the first time since he was deposed on July 3.


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UAE Begins Trial Of Egyptians, Emiratis Over Brotherhood Ties - Gulf Business News

Tuesday, November 5, 2013

A Field Guide to Losing Friends, Influencing No One and Alienating the Middle ... - The Nation.

Watching President Barack Obama in Kabul

Watching President Barack Obama in Kabul (AP Photo/Musadeq Sadeq)


This article originally appeared at TomDispatch.com. To stay on top of important articles like these, sign up to receive the latest updates from TomDispatch.com.


Put in context, the simultaneous raids in Libya and Somalia last month, targeting an alleged Al Qaeda fugitive and an alleged kingpin of the al-Shabab Islamist movement, were less a sign of America’s awesome might than two minor exceptions that proved an emerging rule: namely, that the power, prestige and influence of the United States in the broader Middle East and its ability to shape events there is in a death spiral.


Twelve years after the US invaded Afghanistan to topple the Taliban and a decade after the misguided invasion of Iraq—both designed to consolidate and expand America’s regional clout by removing adversaries—Washington’s actual standing in country after country, including its chief allies in the region, has never been weaker. Though President Obama can order raids virtually anywhere using Special Operations forces, and though he can strike willy-nilly in targeted killing actions by calling in the Predator and Reaper drones, he has become the Rodney Dangerfield of the Middle East. Not only does no one there respect the United States, but no one really fears it, either—and increasingly, no one pays it any mind at all.


There are plenty of reasons why America’s previously unchallenged hegemony in the Middle East is in free fall. The disastrous invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq generated anti-American fervor in the streets and in the elites. America’s economic crisis since 2008 has convinced many that the United States no longer has the wherewithal to sustain an imperial presence. The Arab Spring, for all its ups and downs, has challenged the status quo everywhere, leading to enormous uncertainty while empowering political forces unwilling to march in lockstep with Washington. In addition, oil-consuming nations like China and India have become more engaged with their suppliers, including Saudi Arabia, Iran and Iraq. The result: throughout the region, things are fast becoming unglued for the United States.


Its two closest allies, Israel and Saudi Arabia, are sullenly hostile, routinely ignore Obama’s advice, and openly oppose American policies. Iraq and Afghanistan, one formerly occupied and one about to be evacuated, are led, respectively, by Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, an inflexible sectarian Shiite closely tied to Iran, and President Hamid Karzai, a corrupt, mercurial leader who periodically threatens to join the Taliban. In Egypt, three successive regimes—those of President Hosni Mubarak, Mohammad Morsi of the Muslim Brotherhood and the chieftains of the July 2013 military coup—have insouciantly flouted US wishes.


Turkey, ostensibly a NATO ally but led by a quirky Islamist, is miffed over Obama’s back-and-forth policy in Syria and has shocked the United States by deciding to buy a non-NATO-compatible missile defense system from China. Libya, Somalia and Yemen have little or no government at all. They have essentially devolved into a mosaic of armed gangs, many implacably opposed to the United States.


This downward spiral has hardly escaped attention. In a recent address to the National Council on US-Arab Relations, Chas Freeman, the former American ambassador to Saudi Arabia, described it in some detail. “We have lost intellectual command and practical control of the many situations unfolding there,” said Freeman, whose nomination by Obama in 2009 to serve as head of the National Intelligence Council was shot down by the Israel lobby. “We must acknowledge the reality that we no longer have or can expect to have the clout we once did in the region.”


In an editorial on October 29, The New York Times ruefully concluded: “It is not every day that America finds itself facing open rebellion from its allies, yet that is what is happening with Saudi Arabia, Turkey, and Israel.” And in a front-page story on the administration’s internal deliberations, the Times‘s Mark Landler reported that, over the summer, the White House had decided to scale back its role in the Middle East because many objectives “lie outside [its] reach,” and henceforth would adopt a “more modest strategy” in the region.


Perhaps the most profound irony embedded in Washington’s current predicament is this: Iran, for decades the supposed epicenter of anti-Americanism in the region, is the country where the United States has perhaps its last opportunity to salvage its position. If Washington and Tehran can negotiate a détente—and it’s a big if, given the domestic political power of hawks in both countries—that accord might go a long way toward stabilizing Washington’s regional credibility.


Debacle in Syria


Let’s begin our survey of America’s Greater Middle Eastern fecklessness with Exhibit A: Syria. It is there, where a movement to oust President Bashar al-Assad devolved into a civil war, that the United States has demonstrated its utter inability to guide events. Back in the summer of 2011—at the very dawn of the conflict—Obama demanded that Assad step down. There was only one problem: short of an Iraq-style invasion of Syria, he had no power to make that happen. Assad promptly called his bluff, escalated the conflict and rallied support from Russia and Iran. Obama’s clarion call for his resignation only made things worse by convincing Syrian rebels that the United States would come to their aid.


A year later, Obama drew a “red line” in the sand, suggesting that any use of chemical weapons by Syrian forces would precipitate a US military response. Again Assad ignored him, and many hundreds of civilians were gassed to death in multiple uses of the dreaded weapons.


The crowning catastrophe of Obama’s Syria policy came when he threatened a devastating strike on Assad’s military facilities using Tomahawk cruise missiles and other weaponry. Instead of finding himself leading a George W. Bush–style “coalition of the willing” with domestic support, Obama watched as allies scattered, including the usually reliable British and the Arab League. At home, political support was nearly nil and evaporated from there. Polls showed Americans overwhelmingly opposed to a war with or attack on Syria.


When, in desperation, the president appealed to Congress for a resolution to authorize the use of military force against that country, the White House found (to its surprise) that Congress, which normally rubber-stamps such proposals, would have none of it. Paralyzed, reluctant to choose between backing down and striking Syria by presidential fiat, Obama was rescued in humiliating fashion by a proposal from Syria’s chief ally, Russia, to dismantle and destroy that country’s chemical weapons arsenal.


Adding insult to injury, as Secretary of State John Kerry scrambles to organize a long-postponed peace conference in Geneva aimed at reaching a political settlement of the civil war, he is faced with a sad paradox: while the Syrian government has agreed to attend the Geneva meeting, also sponsored by Russia, America’s allies, the anti-Assad rebels, have flatly refused to go.


Laughingstock in Egypt


Don’t think for a second that Washington’s ineffectiveness stops with the ongoing Syrian fiasco.


Next door, in a country whose government was installed by the United States after the 2003 invasion, the Obama administration notoriously failed to convince the Iraqis to allow even a small contingent of American troops to remain there past 2011. Since then, that country has moved ever more firmly into Iran’s orbit and has virtually broken with Washington over Syria.


Since the start of the civil war in Syria, Shiite-led Iraq has joined Shiite Iran in supporting Assad, whose ruling minority Alawite sect is an offshoot of Shiism. There have been widespread reports that pro-Assad Iraqi Shiite militias are traveling to Syria, presumably with the support or at least acquiescence of the government. Ignoring Washington’s entreaties, it has also allowed Iran to conduct a virtual Berlin Airlift–style aerial resupply effort for Syria’s armed forces through Iraqi air space. Last month, in an appearance before the Council on Foreign Relations in New York during the United Nations General Assembly session, Iraqi Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari undiplomatically warned Obama that his government stands against the US decision—taken in a secret presidential finding in April and only made public last summer—to provide arms to Syria’s rebels. (“We oppose providing military assistance to any [Syrian] rebel groups.”)


Meanwhile, Washington is also flailing in its policy toward Egypt, where the Obama administration has been singularly hapless. In a rare feat, it has managed to anger and alienate every conceivable faction in that politically divided country. In July, when Egypt’s military ousted President Mohammad Morsi and violently clamped down on the Muslim Brotherhood, the Obama administration made itself look ridiculous to Egyptians (and to the rest of the Middle East) by refusing to call what happened a coup d’état, since under US law that would have meant suspending aid to the Egyptian military.


As it happened, however, American aid figured little in the calculations of Egypt’s new military leaders. The reason was simple enough: Saudi Arabia and the Arab states of the Persian Gulf, bitter opponents of the Morsi government, applauded the coup and poured at least $12 billion in cash into the country’s near-empty coffers. In the end, making no one happy, the administration tried to split the difference: Obama declared that he would suspend the delivery of some big-ticket military items like Apache attack helicopters, Harpoon missiles, M1-A1 tank parts and F-16 fighter planes, but let other aid to the military continue, including counterterrorism assistance and the sale of border security items. Such a split decision only served to underscore the administration’s lack of leverage in Cairo. Meanwhile, there are reports that Egypt’s new rulers may turn to Russia for arms in open defiance of a horrified Washington’s wishes.


Saudi and Israeli Punching Bag


The most surprising defection from the pro-American coalition in the Middle East is, however, Saudi Arabia. In part, that kingdom’s erratic behavior may result from a growing awareness among its ultraconservative, kleptocratic princelings that they face an increasingly uncertain future. Christopher Davidson’s new book, After the Sheikhs: The Coming Collapse of the Gulf Monarchies, outlines the many pressures building on the country.


One significant cause of instability, claims Davidson, is the “existence of substantial Western military bases on the Arabian Peninsula, [which are considered] an affront to Islam and to national sovereignty.” For decades, such an American military presence in the region provided a security blanket for the Saudi royals, making the country a virtual US protectorate. Now, amid the turmoil that has followed the war in Iraq, the Arab Spring, and the rise of an assertive Iran, Saudi Arabia isn’t sure which way to turn, or whether the United States is friend or foe.


Since 2003, the Saudi rulers have found themselves increasingly unhappy with American policy. Riyadh, the area’s chief Sunni power, was apoplectic when the United States toppled Iraq’s Sunni leader Saddam Hussein and allowed Iran to vastly increase its influence in Baghdad. In 2011, the Saudi royal family blamed Washington for not doing more to prevent the collapse of the conservative and pro-Saudi Mubarak government in Egypt.


Now, the Saudis are on the verge of a complete break over Washington’s policies toward Syria and Iran. As the chief backers of the rebels in Syria, they were dismayed when Obama chose not to bomb military sites around Damascus. Because it views Iran through the lens of a regional Sunni-Shiite struggle for dominance, it is no less dismayed by the possible emergence of a US-Iran accord from renewed negotiations over that country’s nuclear program.


To express its pique, its foreign minister abruptly canceled his address to the United Nations General Assembly in September, shocking UN members. Then, adding insult to injury, Saudi Arabia turned down a prestigious seat on the Security Council, a post for which it had long campaigned. “Upset at President Barack Obama’s policies on Iran and Syria,” reported Reuters, “members of Saudi Arabia’s ruling family are threatening a rift with the United States that could take the alliance between Washington and the kingdom to its lowest point in years.”


That news service quoted Saudi Arabia’s intelligence chief, Prince Bandar bin Sultan, as saying that his country was on the verge of a “major shift” in its relations with the US. Former head of Saudi intelligence Prince Turki al-Faisal lambasted America’s Syria policy this way: “The current charade of international control over Bashar’s chemical arsenal would be funny if it were not so blatantly perfidious. [It is] designed not only to give Mr. Obama an opportunity to back down [from military strikes], but also to help Assad to butcher his people.”


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This is shocking stuff from America’s second most reliable ally in the region. As for reliable ally number one, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has visibly decided to be anything but a cooperative partner in the region, making Obama’s job more difficult at every turn. Since 2009, he has gleefully defied the American president, starting with his refusal to impose a freeze on illegal settlements in the occupied West Bank when specifically asked to do so by the president at the start of his first term. Meanwhile, most of the world has spent the past half-decade on tenterhooks over the possibility that his country might actually launch a much-threatened military strike on Iran’s nuclear facilities.


Since Hassan Rouhani was elected president of Iran and indicated his interest in reorienting policy to make a deal with the Western powers over its nuclear program, Israeli statements have become ever more shrill. In a September speech to the UN General Assembly, for instance, Netanyahu rolled out extreme rhetoric, claiming that Israel is “challenged by a nuclear-armed Iran that seeks our destruction.” This despite the fact that Iran possesses no nuclear weapons, has enriched not an ounce of uranium to weapons-grade level and has probably not mastered the technology to manufacture a bomb. According to American intelligence reports, it has not yet even militarized its nuclear research.


Netanyahu’s speech was so full of hyperbole that observers concluded Israel was isolating itself from the rest of the world. “He was so anxious to make everything look as negative as possible he actually pushed the limits of credibility,” said Gary Sick, a former senior official in the Carter administration and an Iran expert. “He did himself harm by his exaggerations.”


Iran: Obama’s Ironic Beacon of Hope


Both Israel and Saudi Arabia are fearful that the Middle Eastern balance of power could be tipped against them if the United States and Iran are able to strike a deal. Seeking to throw the proverbial monkey wrench into the talks between Iran, the United States and the P5+1 powers (the permanent members of the UN security Council plus Germany), Israel has put forward a series of demands that go far beyond anything Iran would accept, or that the other countries would go along with. Before supporting the removal of international economic sanctions against Iran, Israel wants that country to suspend all enrichment of uranium, shut down its nuclear facilities, not be allowed any centrifuges to enrich uranium, abandon the heavy-water plant it is constructing to produce plutonium, permanently close its fortified underground installation at Fordo and ship its stockpile of enriched uranium out of the country.


In contrast, it’s widely believed that the United States is ready to allow Iran to continue to enrich uranium, maintain some of its existing facilities, and retain a partial stockpile of enriched uranium for fuel under stricter and more intrusive inspection by the International Atomic Energy Agency.


Ironically, a US-Iran détente is the one thing that could slow down or reverse the death spiral of American influence in the region. Iran, for instance, could be helpful in convincing President Assad of Syria to leave office in 2014, in advance of elections there, if radical Sunni Islamic organizations, including allies of Al Qaeda, are suppressed. Enormously influential in Afghanistan, Iran could also help stabilize that country after the departure of US combat forces in 2014. And it could be enlisted to work alongside the United States and regional powers to stabilize Iraq.


More broadly, a US-Iran entente might lead to a gradual de-escalation of the US military presence in the Persian Gulf, including its huge naval forces, bases, and other facilities in Qatar, Bahrain and Kuwait. It’s even conceivable that Iran could be persuaded to join other regional and global powers in seeking a just and lasting negotiated deal between Israel and the Palestinians. The United States and Iran have a number of common interests, including opposing Al Qaeda–style terrorism and cracking down on drug smuggling.


Of course, such a deal will be exceedingly difficult to nail down, if for no other reason than that the hardliners in both countries are determined to prevent it.


Right now, imagine the Obama administration as one of those vaudeville acts that keep a dozen plates spinning atop vibrating poles. At just this moment in the Middle East, those “plates” are tipping in every direction. There’s still time to prevent them all from crashing to the ground, but it would take a masterful effort from the White House—and it’s far from clear that anyone there is up to the task.



A Field Guide to Losing Friends, Influencing No One and Alienating the Middle ... - The Nation.

Monday, November 4, 2013

Tunisia"s ruling Islamists, opposition suspend talks over new government - Reuters


Beji Caid Essebsi (C), former Tunisian prime minister and leader of the Nida Touns (Call of Tunisia) secular party, gestures after a meeting as part of a dialogue between ruling Islamists and the opposition to pave the way for the formation of a transitional government, in Tunis November 4, 2013.


Credit: Reuters/Zoubeir Souissi


By Tarek Amara



TUNIS |

Mon Nov 4, 2013 6:58pm EST


(Reuters) – Tunisia’s ruling Islamists and opposition parties suspended talks on Monday over forming a new caretaker government to end the country’s crisis after the two sides failed to agree on naming a prime minister.


The suspension was a blow to hopes of a quick end to political deadlock in a country whose 2011 uprising inspired the “Arab Spring” revolts across the region. It was not clear when negotiations would restart.


Tunisia’s Islamist-led government has already agreed to step down later this month to make way for a temporary administration that will govern until elections, but the two sides remain deeply split over details of their agreement.


“They were unable to reach a consensus over the prime minister. The dialogue has been suspended until there is solid ground for negotiations,” said Hussein Abassi, leader of the powerful UGTT union that brokered the talks.


He said the union may propose names for the premier if moderate ruling Islamist party Ennahda and the opposition were unable to reach agreement.


Ennahda leader Rached Ghannouchi said the impasse would not last long, but the opposition accused his party of political games in an attempt to hang on to power.


“Ennahda wants to leave by the door and come back in through the window,” said Hamma Hammami, an opposition party leader.


Since its uprising ousted autocratic leader Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali nearly three years ago, Tunisia has struggled with a widening division over the role of Islam in one of the most secular countries in the Muslim world.


But the assassination of two secular opposition leaders this year by Islamist militants sparked protests by opposition parties who demanded Ennahda resign in part because it was too soft on hard-liner Islamists.


Recent militant clashes with police and a suicide bomber at a beach resort last week underscored the rise of the militants in Tunisia.


Ennahda and the opposition must still negotiate over a date for new elections and the composition of an electoral board and finish work on the country’s new constitution before Ennahda steps down later this month.


(Writing by Patrick Markey; Editing by Sandra Maler and Philip Barbara)



Tunisia"s ruling Islamists, opposition suspend talks over new government - Reuters

Sunday, November 3, 2013

In Perkasa, striking resemblances to the Tea Party in the US - The Malay Mail Online

Members of Perkasa hold a rally outside the Court of Appeal in Putrajaya on October 14, 2013 before the court ruling on the ‘Allah

Members of Perkasa hold a rally outside the Court of Appeal in Putrajaya on October 14, 2013 before the court ruling on the ‘Allah’ appeal. — Picture by Saw Siow FengKUALA LUMPUR, Nov 4 — Dismissed by critics as a fringe group and not an embodiment of the largely moderate Malays, Perkasa has muscled its way front and centre into political significance in a divided country, in much the same way as the conservative Tea Party movement has taken hold in the United States.


And just as Tea Party activism has hijacked and forced the Republican Party in the US to tack right, political observers and analysts note that Perkasa also has a similar hold on Umno, the ruling Barisan Nasional’s (BN) lynchpin.


Wan Saiful Wan Jan, chief executive of the Institute for Democracy and Economic Affairs (IDEAS) libertarian think-tank, said that Perkasa’s views likely did not represent the majority of Malays.


But he said Perkasa had grown in strength to be the most vocal group due to Umno’s dependence on support from the Malay rights group’s members.


“If anything, their belief in the position of an ethnic group is more like fascism then the conservative Tea Party movement,” Wan Saiful told The Malay Mail Online.


“Perkasa is nowhere near the Tea Party movement. The Tea Party is driven by a clear belief and ideology about how to improve their country, economically and socially. Perkasa is just a group of vocal individuals who have been very good at exploiting racial sentiments… if you closely examine the content of their message, intellectually it is zero,” he added.


Wan Saiful pinpointed Perkasa’s rise to a federal government, which is dominated by Umno, that is dependent on the blessings of such “extremists”.


“Unless Umno leaders become real men with the guts to demand moderation, Perkasa will continue to dominate our lives. But I do not see evidence that Umno leaders are brave enough to disown Perkasa or to advise their members against working for Perkasa. Similarly, none of the BN component parties are principled enough to take a stand,” he said.


Dr Lim Teck Ghee, director of the Centre for Policy Initiatives, took an even more critical view of Perkasa, comparing it to the Ku Klux Klan, the white supremacist movement in the US.


He said that the rise of Malay right-wing groups like Perkasa and Ikatan Muslimin Malaysia (ISMA) mirrored the growth of the white supremacist organisation in the US in the 1920s.


But noted that the difference was that Perkasa is sanctioned by Umno, unlike the outlawed KKK in the US.


“Perkasa and ISMA are more akin to the Ku Klux Klan, whose philosophy is that all of Christian civilisation depends upon the preservation and up-building of the white race,” Lim told The Malay Mail Online via email today.


“Substitute Malay and Muslim civilisation for Christian and white and you get the equivalent of the KKK in Malaysia, except that Perkasa members are not hooded or outlawed by the authorities,” added the political analyst.


The Tea Party movement is a loose American political group that generally supports the right-wing Republican Party and favours small governments, but differs from libertarians in social issues by promoting anti-abortion and anti-gay Christian conservative views, according to a Pew report quoted by the examiner.com news website in 2011.


The KKK, on the other hand, is a hate group that is on the decline since its membership of millions in the 1920s dwindled to between 3,000 and 5,000 currently, according to the Slate news website in 2012.


The Klan has a history of violence from the 1950s, at the start of the civil rights movement in the US, right until the 1980s, as Klansmen lynched African Americans and bombed activists’ homes.


UK newspaper The Telegraph reported in 2009 that the Klan’s criminal activities were curtailed and the movement was forced to split into smaller groups after civil liberties organisations successfully slapped it with multi-million dollar lawsuits.


“Note that Perkasa frequently alludes to the use of force against those it labels as anti-national — a sentiment which goes down well with the Malay ultra-nationalists. The KKK also justified the resort to violence and terror during its heyday,” said Lim.


Perkasa chief Datuk Ibrahim Ali had once threatened to burn copies of the Al-Kitab, the Malay translation of the Christian bible, that refer to God as “Allah”.


Ibrahim, however, insisted last month that Perkasa is not racist, and said that it is merely an NGO that fights for the constitutional rights of Malays and the sovereignty of Islam.


Political analyst Khoo Kay Peng said that Perkasa and ISMA could not really be considered fringe movements, as their struggle for Malay rights is not out of place in the country’s racial mainstream political discourse.


“Talking about Malay rights, or Chinese or Indian, is well within the confines of mainstream political dialogue or discourse, because our political structure is constructed in a way which is very race-based,” Khoo told The Malay Mail Online.


“What Perkasa is fighting for is not that different from what Umno is fighting for, and look at DAP, MCA, Gerakan, SAPP, pretty much not different — they are all pushing on how well they can protect their voting base,” he added.


The ruling Barisan Nasional (BN) is a race-based coalition, as membership in its three main component parties — Umno, MCA and MIC — is restricted to Malays, Chinese and Indians respectively.


Opposition pact Pakatan Rakyat (PR) has no such race-based memberships. PKR is a multi-racial party, but the DAP is seen as a predominantly Chinese party, while PAS is an Islamist party.


Datuk Dr Shamsul Amri Baharuddin, Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia (UKM) political analyst, said that every ethnic group in Malaysia has its own “so-called ‘right-wing groups’”, such as the now-defunct Chinese education reform group Suqiu, Indian rights movement Hindraf and Perkasa.


“Even ethnic-based parties are viewed, by the right-wing, as not capable of really fighting across parties for the ultimate ‘ethnic group interest’,” Shamsul told The Malay Mail Online.


“So when ethnic-based parties (DAP and PKR included), of all ethnic groups and stripes, are viewed as unsuccessful in the ethnic cause, then the extremist ethnic organisations appear. Perkasa wasn’t around during the Mahathir era. It appeared after the GE 2008,” he added, referring to the historic 2008 general election where BN lost its customary two-thirds parliamentary majority.


Shamsul questioned why “racist”, “supremacist” and “right-wing” labels are only tagged onto certain groups, and not all groups that fight for the interests of each race respectively.


“Are we, as analysts, so bereft of analytical tools and terminology that we are not able or willing to see them as just simply ‘interest groups’, like other NGOs and CBOs (community-based organisations) — each pushing a struggle based on particular issues, historical or/and contemporary in nature?” added the UKM founding director of Institute of Ethnic Studies.


Like Wan Saiful, James Chin from Monash University (Malaysian campus) said that the rise of Malay right-wing groups is due to Umno’s decision to “sub contract” its “racist” opinions to them, thus allowing BN to claim that “it is not racist.”


“There has always been a market for this type of ‘Ketuanan Melayu’ (Malay supremacy)/ Islam issues, maybe up to 30 per cent of the Malay population, but they did not come out openly because Umno was strong. When Umno was weakened in 2008, they decided that this was the way to go,” Chin told The Malay Mail Online.



In Perkasa, striking resemblances to the Tea Party in the US - The Malay Mail Online

Saturday, November 2, 2013

Satirist"s rise to fame and censure an allegory for Egypt"s press freedom - GlobalPost


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CAIRO, Egypt — On Friday night, millions of Egyptians gathered around televisions to find out who would be the latest target of boundary-pushing political satirist Bassem Youssef.


Known widely in the press as “Egypt’s Jon Stewart,” Youssef has offered fearless critiques and parodies of Egypt’s leadership since the 2011 revolution, something which has previously landed him in the prosecutor’s office.


Unsurprisingly, that’s made him hugely popular with many Egyptians frustrated by their country’s political powers-that-be.


But the viewers who tuned in Friday for what was to be second episode of the season were greeted by another presenter, the gray-clad Khairy Ramadan, who informed fans that the evening’s entertainment was cancelled.


In a statement, privately owned satellite channel CBC said that Youssef and his team’s “El Bernameg,” or “The Program,” had been pulled off the air because the show’s creators “insisted on violating [the channel"s] editorial policy.”


The satirist’s suspension has raised fears that the space for dissent, already limited under Morsi, has grown even narrower under Egypt’s new authorities. It comes just one week after Youssef’s season premiere mocked the fevered nationalism that has swept Egypt since the July 3 military-led takeover.


Oct. 25 was the first time in four months Youssef had appeared on TV. In the episode, he took aim at the growing cult of personality for General Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, the army chief whose likeness has become a favored truffle and cake decoration. “Sisi has turned into … chocolate,” Youssef joked.


Though Youssef avoided explicit criticism of the army, his condemnation of the ongoing military-initiated crackdown was clear.


“It is difficult to ignore the number of people who are treated unjustly, whether by being detained or killed, just because they are in the wrong place, or because of rumours or suspicion,” he said, referring to state efforts to push supporters of deposed Islamist President Mohamed Morsi from public life.


Mass killings and arrests since July have left more than 1,000 dead and more than 2,000 arrested. The sweeps have often engulfed non-Islamist opponents of the government as well as bystanders.


Youssef’s series opener prompted a number of legal complaints from military supporters. CBC, whose programming largely supported the July 3 coup, distanced itself from the program’s content.


The channel’s latest decision “shows very clearly that the extant Egyptian media has decided that post-Morsi Egypt is going to have different red lines,” said Dr. H.A. Hellyer, nonresident fellow at the Royal United Services Institute in London and the Brookings Institution.


“Bassem Youssef is only one media personality — but the message to him will be heard loud and clear by other media personalities, the more independent of which have yet to return to screens.”


Youssef’s rise to fame and censure is an allegory for Egypt’s shifting boundaries of political expression since its 2011 revolution. The former heart surgeon volunteered in makeshift medical centers during the uprising, before using the country’s apparent new freedoms to poke fun at political leaders in low-budget skits he uploaded to YouTube.


Today, the satirist’s hit television show has drawn over 30 million viewers. Youssef was included in Time Magazine’s 2013 list of the world’s most influential people, his entry penned by Jon Stewart, who described the Egyptian as his hero.


But the surge in attention has been accompanied by the more unwelcome gaze of Egypt’s authorities. In April, Youssef was interrogated for allegedly insulting both Morsi and Islam.


Media freedom in general has grown even more limited since the military-led takeover. Most Islamist media outlets have been shut down, and private media has largely stuck to the government script, backing the crackdown and depicting anyone who speaks out as an enemy of the nation.


Those present during the filming of Friday night’s unaired episode said that Youssef took the media, rather than the military, to task, focusing on the weakness of the Egyptian journalism and the double-standards of his own channel, CBC.


“He really bashed the channel,” said well-known Egyptian blogger Big Pharaoh, who was in the audience for the pre-recorded show. “His message was clear: we don’t have a free media, either in Egypt or in the Arab world.”


It wasn’t the first time that the satirist has taken aim at the channel’s owners, but Youssef now operates in a more charged political context with less tolerance for dissent. Experts believe that CBC’s claim that Youssef had broken contractual obligations provides cover for the fact that his willingness to touch upon sensitive issues could harm the show’s commercial viability.


“Self-censorship is likely in this situation and there are obvious commercial factors involved, given that it’s a very lucrative show” said Michael Hanna, a senior fellow at the Century Foundation. “Of course the mechanics of how and why it’s been pulled are still to be determined, but what is clear is that Bassem Youssef has run afoul of the stultifying environment of hyper-nationalism, and that was enough to cancel the show.”


Lina Attalah, the editor of new independent media venture Mada Masr, describes self-censorship as a “form of negotiation” that many publications in Egypt have used to survive years of authoritarianism.


It is also, she says, a problem that becomes particularly pronounced in a media landscape dominated by state publications or private media owned by a handful of individuals. She believes there is little space for diversity of voices or approaches.


“The problem with media here now is that they don’t operate as enterprises with working business models but are just dependent on the checks of their businessmen,” she said. “The best example is the decision by CBC to stop Bassem Youssef for political reasons despite the economic viability of the show.”


“The media [have been] reduced to the political discretion of their proprietors and not their own need to sustain themselves as independent entities,” she concluded.


Hanna believes the decision to take Youssef off-air will not play well for Egypt’s new administration.


“This was an unforced error,” he said. “It opens up a crude but ready-made comparison with the Morsi period. It’s very shortsighted because the new order comes out looking worse.”


http://www.globalpost.com/dispatch/news/regions/middle-east/egypt/131102/bassem-youssef-fame-censure-allegory-egypt-press%20freedom



Satirist"s rise to fame and censure an allegory for Egypt"s press freedom - GlobalPost

Tuesday, October 29, 2013

Gulf Strategic Conference highlights regional challenges - Bahrain News Agency

09 : 59 PM - 29/10/2013


Manama- Oct29 (BNA)The Gulf Strategic Conference today opened in the presence of Deputy Premier Shaikh Mohammed bin Mubarak Al-Khalifa. Bahrain Centre for Strategic, International and Energy Studies (DERASAT) is holding the two-day event.Addressing the opening ceremony, DERASAT board of trustees" chairman Dr. Mohammed Abdul Ghaffar stressed the need to adjust to current upheavals Read more [...]
Gulf Strategic Conference highlights regional challenges - Bahrain News Agency

Tuesday, October 22, 2013

Tensions Rise Between Turkey"s Government, Alevi Minority - Voice of America

— Alevi Muslims, Turkey"s largest religious minority, are widely seen as the biggest losers in the government"s recent package of democratic reforms.Recognition of Alevi religious rights was widely expected to be included among the reforms, and Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has said such a step could be taken after the issue is further studied. But the issue of Alevi religious rights remains Read more [...]
Tensions Rise Between Turkey"s Government, Alevi Minority - Voice of America