Monday, February 14, 2011

Lessons from Egypt, Part IV

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 III:

Lessons from Egypt, Part III

Pressuring Mubarak

In Washington that day, President Obama turned up, unexpectedly, at a 3:30 p.m. Situation Room meeting of his “principals,” the key members of the national security team, where he displaced Thomas E. Donilon, the national security adviser, from his seat at the head of the table.

The White House had been debating the likelihood of a domino effect since youth-driven revolts had toppled President Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali in Tunisia, even though the American intelligence community and Israel’s intelligence services had estimated that the risk to President Mubarak

[…] “When we saw people bringing their children to Tahrir Square, wanting to see history being made, we knew this was something different,” one official said.

[…]Mr. Obama told him [Mubarak], “You have a large portion of your people who are not satisfied, and they won’t be until you make concrete political, social and economic reforms.”

[…]Mr. Obama ended the call, the official said, with these words: “I respect my elders. And you have been in politics for a very long time, Mr. President. But there are moments in history when just because things were the same way in the past doesn’t mean they will be that way in the future.”

[…]The protesters — trying to stay true to the lessons they had learned from Gandhi, the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and Gene Sharp — tried for a time to avoid retaliating. A row of men stood silent as rocks rained down on them. An older man told a younger one to put down his stick.

[…] As a secret, illegal organization, the Brotherhood was accustomed to operating in a disciplined hierarchy. The group’s members helped the protesters divide into teams to organize their defense, several organizers said. One team broke the pavement into rocks, while another ferried the rocks to makeshift barricades along their perimeter and the third defended the front.

“The youth of the Muslim Brotherhood played a really big role,” Mr. Maher said. “But actually so did the soccer fans” of Egypt’s two leading teams. “These are always used to having confrontations with police at the stadiums,” he said.

Soldiers of the Egyptian military, evidently under orders to stay neutral, stood watching from behind the iron gates of the Egyptian Museum as the war of stone missiles and improvised bombs continued for 14 hours until about four in the morning.

Then, unable to break the protesters’ discipline or determination, the Mubarak forces resorted to guns, shooting 45 and killing 2, according to witnesses and doctors interviewed early that morning. The soldiers — perhaps following orders to prevent excessive bloodshed, perhaps acting on their own — finally intervened. They fired their machine guns into the ground and into the air, several witnesses said, scattering the Mubarak forces and leaving the protesters in unmolested control of the square, and by extension, the streets.

Once the military demonstrated it was unwilling to fire on its own citizens, the balance of power shifted.

[…] “Eighty-five million people live in Egypt, and less than 1,000 people died in this revolution — most of them killed by the police,” said Mr. Ghonim, the Google executive. “It shows how civilized the Egyptian people are.” He added, “Now our nightmare is over. Now it is time to dream.”


5 comments:

Anonymous said...

Khmer Democrat, if you go to school, you will fail by using too much different fonts and colors.

How can you call yourself a Khmer Intelligent if you are sure to fail school?

Anonymous said...

The more you learn,
the more you are stupid.The more you
get older,the
more you are dumb or doubt and wise.
If someone can't succeed,try and try and try again.
No one succeeds without failing.
Anyone can be a succeed,will be a succeed,and be a succeed.
No one fails everything,but he
fails something.
No one is perfect,
but he trains himself to be perfect.

Anonymous said...

Young Cambodians are too busy doing nothing so don't count on them to do anything.

Anonymous said...

what's next for egypt? i hope they don't go down the drain!

Anonymous said...

Let the showdown begins, start from all schools and out to the streets. The East army generals will back our movements he said.