Monday, January 31, 2011

TUNISIA: Opposition Islamist Ghannouchi not seek the presidency

Tunis hosted Sunday by thousands of supporters after an exile of 20 years, the Islamist Rachid Ghannouchi said he would not run in the first presidential election after Tunisia's Ben Ali, the former president who had rolled his movement.

"I'm not going for the presidency, and there will be no (candidate) member of al-Nahda," said the leader of the Islamist movement, in an interview with AFP at his brother's home in northern Tunis.

It is, however, remained vague about the involvement of al-Nahda laws, which should theoretically be organized, as the presidential election, within about six months.

"After 20 years of absence, my party is not ready to play a role in the political arena, the priority is to rebuild Ennahda," he said.

His training, which is prohibited under the reign of Ben Ali, was crushed in the 90s, some 30,000 of its members or presumed supporters arrested, while hundreds more were forced into exile.

He did not exclude a possible participation in the transition team was set up after the flight of President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali on January 14, after four weeks of an unprecedented revolt to which the Islamists have mostly attended by spectators.

"If we feel that the government meets the expectations of those who took part in this revolution, so why not?" He said.

This is the first time that the Islamist leader address from Tunisian soil, a message of openness to the transitional government, which will meet in the coming days to demand legalization of Ennahda.

From his exile in London, the old leader, 69, had remained very cautious, often leaving it up to his spokesman in France or Tunis to convey its message.

At Tunis airport, Rached Ghannouchi was greeted by a packed crowd who sang the national anthem and shouted his "pride Islamic recovered.

"Allah Akbar" (God is greatest), "he told the crowd, smiling, arms outstretched into the sky, before being swept away by a wave of militants, while defenders of secularism expressed their concerns about a return of "obscurantism".

Sunday morning, Ghannouchi had yet held reassuring: "Sharia (Islamic law) has no place in Tunisia" and "fear is only based on ignorance" - which he attributes to the policy of demonization of his movement by Ben Ali.

Rached Ghannouchi founded in 1981 Nahda (Renaissance) with intellectuals inspired by the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood.He said today represent a moderate form of Islam close to the AKP in Turkey.

Tolerated at the beginning of the era Ben Ali in 1987, his movement had been suppressed after the general election of 1989, where he supported the lists had received at least 17% of the vote.

Ghannouchi was then left Tunisia to Algeria, then London.In 1992 he was sentenced in absentia to life imprisonment for plotting against the president.

A penalty on Tunisian soil, the significance of his return is debatable.

For Mohammed Habib Azizi, a professor of history at the University of Tunis, "what happened in Tunisia in no way be taken as the work of Islamists, nationalists and communists," he told AFP.

At the airport, a union of 37 years, Mohammed Mahfoud, however had drawn up a sign on the "contribution" of al-Nahda in the "struggle against dictatorship," with the number of prisoners, exiles and martyrs ".

Friday, January 28, 2011

EGYPT: The police use force to disperse protesters

The tone rises in Egypt for the fourth consecutive day of protest in Egypt.

Despite the large police presence in place, mobile groups of a hundred people are moving towards Tahrir Square and al-Azhar mosque, the Mecca of Sunni Islam, where the situation has rapidly deteriorated.

Around the Mosque of al-Azhar, the police fired rubber bullets at demonstrators who responded by throwing stones at the police line, shouting slogans against President Hosni Mubarak.

According to the Special Envoy of FRANCE 24, Ygal Saadoun, present in a procession in Cairo, a policeman fired a tear gas grenade point blank in the belly of a demonstrator.

"The police decided to make a blitz to stop the protests by all means.The army took no part in the operation, but it is mostly policemen, riot police equipped with water bombs and tear gas, "said Yigal Saadoun.

Egyptian police also prevented the former director of the International Atomic Energy Agency Mohamed ElBaradei to move freely in Cairo, where he planned to join the procession of protesters, according to the news channel Al Jazeera.

Gatherings are also organized in Alexandria, Al-Mansoura, Suez and Aswan.

A large police

Dozens of police trucks patrolled the city center Friday morning, according to FRANCE 24 correspondents on the spot.Trucks occupied by militiamen in civilian clothes were also seen going around the streets of Cairo.

"The regular police are deployed everywhere. But there was also a parade of trucks barreling through the streets with their men in civilian board, with pieces of wood," says Gallagher Fenwick, FRANCE 24's special envoy in Cairo.

The "baltageyas" in Arabic, thugs recognizable by their clubs are paid per day by the government to "bring order".They are grouped near Tahrir Square, the main place of rassemblementdepuis events of 25 January.

"Sometimes they mingle with the crowd and club demonstrators," continues Ygal Saadoun.

On Facebook, Egyptian activists fear that employs the Egyptian police provocateurs whose actions serve as an excuse for repression.

"The activists expect that the government set fire to cars and accuse the demonstrators have burned everything, using it as a pretext to suppress demonstrations in the greater violence," reads the page Facebook Stephen McInerney, Director of the Project for Democracy in the Middle East, which was able to talk to protesters Thursday night.

A "fortress in the process of closing on itself"

All Internet and mobile phones are cut off since this morning. But opponents have made an appointment for several days at noon, local time, after the prayer.

"It feels like a fortress that is now closing in on itself," testifies Gallagher Fenwick.

Spearheading the protest, the movement of 6-April, a group of pro-democracy activists, calls for several days to continue the mobilization on Friday, despite the deployment of a large police.

"Date: Friday. Time: noon.Event: farewell to Hosni Mubarak, "it said in Arabic on the Facebook page of a young Egyptian.

But the police presence still leaves some doubt about the course of the day.

A major law enforcement system

At least 1,000 people were arrested since Tuesday, according to security services, 500 for a single day on Wednesday.Among these are about 90 people arrested in the area of Tahrir Square in central Cairo, and 121 members of the Islamist Muslim Brotherhood, officially banned but tolerated in practice, detained in Assiut, south of the Egyptian capital.

These events are unprecedented since the uprisings of 1977, caused by the rising price of bread.

Hosni Mubarak, 82, has been in power since 1981. A presidential election is scheduled for September, but the head of state has not yet made public its intention to seek re-election. His son Gamal, 47, was announced as a possible successor to the "rais".