Author Topic: Egypt: Google Protest Hero Barred From Stage by Islamists at Victory Rally  (Read 1684 times)

Fury

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http://www.hindustantimes.com/Egypt-protest-hero-Wael-Ghonim-barred-from-stage/Article1-663996.aspx

Agence France-Presse
Cairo, February 18, 2011

Google executive Wael Ghonim, who emerged as a leading voice in Egypt's uprising, was barred from the stage in Tahrir Square on Friday by security guards, an AFP photographer said. Ghonim tried to take the stage in Tahrir, the epicentre of anti-regime protests that toppled President Hosni Mubarak, b

 
ut men who appeared to be guarding influential Muslim cleric Yusuf al-Qaradawi barred him from doing so.
Ghonim, who was angered by the episode, then left the square with his face hidden by an Egyptian flag.

Qaradawi gave a Friday sermon in the square, where hundreds of thousands of people gathered a week after Mubarak's fall, in which he called for Arab leaders to listen to their people.

Ghonim, Google's head of marketing for the Middle East and North Africa, administered a Facebook page that helped spark the uprising that toppled Mubarak's regime.

The 30-year-old also appeared in an emotional television interview shortly after he was released from police custody after 12 days in custody which is credited with re-energising the movement just as it seemed to be losing steam.

In an interview with CBS's "60 Minutes" that aired on Sunday, Ghonim said the protests which led to Mubarak's ouster would not have happened without online social networks.

"If there was no social networks it would have never been sparked," he said.

"Because the whole thing before the revolution was the most critical thing. Without Facebook, without Twitter, without Google, without YouTube, this would have never happened."

http://www.hindustantimes.com/Egypt-protest-hero-Wael-Ghonim-barred-from-stage/Article1-663996.aspx

Hahahaha. And you far-left geniuses thought this would actually end up in democracy and secularism. Ha. One of the biggest players in the revolution has already been cast to the side by the Brotherhood and the Islamists.

Soul Crusher

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Soul Crusher

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The useful idiots on the left are again going to get slaughtered as a result of their bullshit ideas on the world. 

Soul Crusher

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BREAKING NEWS: State media say Egypt has agreed to let 2 Iran navy ships through Suez Canal
MSNBC ^ | February 18, 2011 | MSNBC



Headline only.


(Excerpt) Read more at msnbc.com ...

Fury

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Where is the leftist pro-democracy brigade now. Already getting thrown to the wayside as the Brotherhood starts to assert itself. Hahahaha.



Ferguson destroying the egos of the IslamoNazi sympathizer brigade.

kcballer

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Niall is good at what he does - history and financial history.  Foreign policy commentator?  Erm not so much.
Abandon every hope...

Fury

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Niall is good at what he does - history and financial history.  Foreign policy commentator?  Erm not so much.

His Newsweek article was 100% spot-on. Pull your head out of Obama's ass and you'd know that Ferguson is right in everything he said. But that's asking WAY too much of you.

The Islamists have already started casting the leftists aside just like it went down in Iran. I'm already looking forwards to the excuses.

Soul Crusher

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His Newsweek article was 100% spot-on.

The Islamists have already started casting the leftists aside just like it went down in Iran. I'm already looking forwards to the excuses.


I read an article today that the MB Preacher has already set up shot in the square for the masses.   

Fury

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I read an article today that the MB Preacher has already set up shot in the square for the masses.  

I'd put my money on it playing out just like it did in Iran. The Commies/Leftists/Various braindead morons have now served their purpose and will be purged from the ranks as the Brotherhood grows in power. This Google guy was one of the original organizers of the protests and look at him already; cast aside like the fool he is.

You should read Houshang Asadi's book, "Letters to My Torturer". He was a staunch supporter of the Iranian Revolution who ended up being imprisoned and viciously tortured alongside the rest of his commie/leftist buddies after the Mullahs took power. The only reason he lived is that he had previously shared a cell with Khameini during the rule of the Shah and Khameini's wife begged for his life to be spared once she found out he was in prison. His friends weren't so lucky.

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Egypt revolution unfinished, Qaradawi tells Tahrir masses
The Middle East's Freedom Domino Effect
AP – Egyptian cleric Sheik Youssef el-Qaradawi speaks to the crowd as he leads Friday prayers in Tahrir Square …
By Dan Murphy Dan Murphy – Fri Feb 18, 9:04 am ET
Cairo – Editor's note: Updated on Feb. 18 at 11:49 a.m.



________________________ ________________________ _________-



Yusuf al-Qaradawi, a leading Egyptian Islamic theologian popularized by Al Jazeera, returned to Cairo today to deliver a stirring but overtly political sermon, calling on Egyptians to preserve national unity as they press for democratic progress.

“Don’t let anyone steal this revolution from you – those hypocrites who will put on a new face that suits them,” he said, speaking to at least 200,000 who gathered for Friday prayers in Tahrir Square, the epicenter of Egypt's uprising. “The revolution isn’t over. It has just started to build Egypt … guard your revolution.”

The massive turnout and Mr. Qaradawi's warning that the revolution is not complete demonstrate that if the military drags its feet on reform, another uprising could begin. And while his sermon was nonsectarian and broadly political, the turnout was also a reminder that political Islam is likely to play a larger role in Egypt than it has for decades.

Waving flags under the afternoon sun, the protesters in Tahrir today vowed to press on, assembling a list of 35 demands for what they say is Part II of the revolution.

“Egyptian people are like the genie who came out of the lamp and who have been in prison for 30 years,” says Hoda Youssry, adding that only one of their demands – Mubarak's ouster – has been met so far. “We are not going back in until all our demands are met.”

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Qaradawi, a spiritual leader to the Muslim Brotherhood here, sought to reassure Egypt’s Coptic Christian minority saying “in this square sectarianism died” and praised Copts for linking hands to symbolically protect Muslims while they prayed during the uprising.

“The regime planted sectarianism here … in Tahrir Muslims and Christians joined hands for a better Egypt,â€

And while he praised Egypt’s new military rulers, he warned that they must quickly restore civilian rule.

“The real message here was, 'Don’t mess with us Egyptians,' " says Shadi Hamid, research director at the Brookings Institute’s Doha Center in Qatar, who joined the crowd at Tahrir today. “It’s a clear message to the military, warning them that people are still willing to come out in massive numbers and it’s going to continue indefinitely if needed.”

Qaradawi's demandsThe devout crowd, many of whom turned out to hear Qaradawi give his first public speech since 1981, was also a reminder that huge sections of Egypt take their Islamic faith seriously – and that real and open democratic reform will almost certainly lead to a stronger role for the faith in the nation’s political life.

“Qaradawi is very much in the mainstream of Egyptian society, he’s in the religious mainstream, he’s not offering something that’s particularly distinctive or radical in the context of Egypt,” says Mr. Hamid. “He’s an Islamist and he’s part of the Brotherhood school of thought, but his appeal goes beyond the Islamist spectrum, and in that sense he’s not just an Islamist figure, he’s an Egyptian figure with a national profile.”

Qaradawi called for the immediate release of the thousands of political prisoners that remain in Egypt’s jails, an end to the feared state security services, the dissolution of the cabinet of Mubarak loyalists who have been retained by the country’s military junta, and an end to the economic blockade of the Gaza Strip.

After his speech, he read from the Quran, his voice cracking as he reached a verse on the fate of tyrants. Then the thousands settled into prayer amid a pin-drop silence before breaking out into shouts of “no to Hosni, no to his regime, no to his supporters.”

Protest movement still strong enough to pressure militaryThe throngs at Tahrir Square today for what’s been billed as a celebration of the revolution and a day of mourning for the hundreds killed in protests, demonstrated that Egypt’s protest movement still holds the power to generate mass demonstrations and pressure the military.

In recent days there have been emerging splits among the activists and protesters who drove Mubarak from power one week ago. Discussions with the broad coalition of activists who helped kick-start the uprising have revealed plans for at least five political parties with different purposes and ideological visions. The Muslim Brotherhood, too, is likely to start at least one party of its own.

There have been some signs of the military council now in charge of Egypt, led by Defense Minister Mohamed Tantawi, reaching out to the Brotherhood. The head of a constitutional reform committee that Mr. Tantawi appointed two days ago is ideologically simpatico with the Brothers.

But the senior military leadership is also deeply suspicious of political Islam. In a possible sign of their ambivalence about the role the Brothers might play in coming days, state television did not carry Qaradawi’s speech and the stirring events at Tahrir Square.

Scope of constitutional reform in doubtAnd whether democratic demands are going to be met remains an open question. The constitutional reform committee answers to the generals, and was appointed with no obvious input from the groups that pushed Mubarak from power.

Wael Nawara, a spokesman for the Ghad Party – a small opposition group that was involved in the democracy protests – says he’s worried that constitutional changes are being drawn up without any real input from Egyptian civil society and opposition politicians.

“There were people who worked against all odds, carrying the flag of change, for seven years or so,” Mr. Nawara says. “Trying to bypass those groups and starting to talk to individuals, however well intentioned, would be a huge mistake.”

Qaradawi has often been a controversial figure in the West – he was banned from traveling to the US because of his support for attacks on US troops in Iraq, for instance – but is very much in the Sunni Islamic mainstream.

When former Monitor reporter Jill Carroll was kidnapped in Iraq in 2006, Qaradawi issued a religious ruling reiterating his position that the kidnapping and murder of civilians is sinful and called for her immediate release.

Sarah Lynch contributed reporting from Cairo.

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