Monday, February 14, 2011

Lessons from Egypt, Part II

By Khmer Democrat, Phnom Penh
Power to the Cambodian Youth !!

Young Cambodians, here are lessons for you! Excerpts from The New York Times article, continuing from Part I:

From Dictatorship to Democracy - Lessons from Egypt, Part I


Another influence, several said, was
a group of Egyptian expatriates in their 30s who set up an organization in Qatar called the Academy of Change, which promotes ideas drawn in part on Mr. Sharp’s work. One of the group’s organizers, Hisham Morsy, was arrested during the Cairo protests and remained in detention.

[…]

‘This Is Your Country’

Then, about a year ago, the growing Egyptian youth movement acquired a strategic ally, Wael Ghonim, a 31-year-old Google marketing executive. Like many others, he was introduced into the informal network of young organizers by the movement that came together around Mohamed ElBaradei, the Nobel Prize-winning diplomat who returned to Egypt a year ago to try to jump-start its moribund political opposition.

Mr. Ghonim had little experience in politics but an intense dislike for the abusive Egyptian police, the mainstay of the government’s power. He offered his business savvy to the cause. “I worked in marketing, and I knew that if you build a brand you can get people to trust the brand,” he said.

The result was a Facebook group Mr. Ghonim set up: We Are All Khalid Said, after a young Egyptian who was beaten to death by police. Mr. Ghonim — unknown to the public, but working closely with Mr. Maher of the April 6 Youth Movement and a contact from Mr. ElBaradei’s group — said that he used Mr. Said’s killing to educate Egyptians about democracy movements.

He filled the site with video clips and newspaper articles about police violence. He repeatedly hammered home a simple message: “This is your country; a government official is your employee who gets his salary from your tax money, and you have your rights.” He took special aim at the distortions of the official media, because when the people “distrust the media then you know you are not going to lose them,” he said.

He eventually attracted hundreds of thousands of users, building their allegiance through exercises in online democratic participation. When organizers planned a “day of silence” in the Cairo streets, for example, he polled users on what color shirts they should all wear — black or white. (When the revolt exploded, the Mubarak government detained him for 12 days in blindfolded isolation in a belated attempt to stop his work.)

After the Tunisian revolution on Jan. 14, the April 6 Youth Movement saw an opportunity to turn its little-noticed annual protest on Police Day — the Jan. 25 holiday that celebrates a police revolt that was suppressed by the British — into a much bigger event. Mr. Ghonim used the Facebook site to mobilize support. If at least 50,000 people committed to turn out that day, the site suggested, the protest could be held. More than 100,000 signed up.

“I have never seen a revolution that was preannounced before,” Mr. Ghonim said.

By then, the April 6 movement had teamed up with Mr. ElBaradei’s supporters, some liberal and leftist parties, and the youth wing of the Muslim Brotherhood to plaster Cairo with eye-catching modernist posters advertising their Tunisia-inspired Police Day protest.



2 comments:

Anonymous said...

This is a beneficial
lesson for KHMER YOUNG GENERATION ME
to organize as groups
and get in touch other to up rise against Hun Sen dictator in Cambodia.
Now the wind of change began in Tunisia,Egypt,and
Yemen.
This change will come to ASEAN countries soon,
if Khmer young generation Me(20 to
50 years old) bring
up and organize as
groups to lead,manage,and be
responsible and accomplish effectively their duties.
Be sure to stick with UNITY,JUSTICE,
VIRTUE,and RULES OF
DISCIPLINE .
Be Brave!
Dare to Die for
FREEDOM and KHMER.

Anonymous said...

Yes, Khone Khmer please stand up and fight for your country. Be brave and start a new era for Khmer. It has been too long. It's time for a change.