A year later, Egypt activists seek more revolution
The activists who led the uprising that toppled Hosni Mubarak last year have been holding hundreds of such flash mobs around the country in the past weeks, in a public campaign titled "Liars" — referring to the military. The campaign to direct show people recent abuses by the military, they say, has injected new public support behind their demands the generals quickly surrender power.
But it also raises questions.
"What do they want?" one passer-by, Mohammed Ali, asked about the activists at the flash mob earlier this week.
"Even if (the military) are liars... we are going to get power transferred to civilians in six months, that is not bad," the 30-year-old said. "It doesn’t deserve all this noise. Let’s wait and see."
Egypt on Wednesday marks the first anniversary of the start of the 18-day wave of protests that toppled Mubarak. Activists are trying to turn public discontent over lack of change into support for continuing revolutionary protests. But they face the task of explaining to Egyptians who are sick of turmoil: Revolution for what?
The revolution’s second year, they say, must pressure both the ruling military, which they say is as authoritarian as Mubarak, and the Muslim Brotherhood, which dominates the new parliament and which they fear is allying itself with the generals.
The Jan. 25 anniversary itself shows the tensions. Each of the country’s powerbrokers has its own plans to mark the day, underlining the stark differences over the very meaning of the revolution and raising the potential for a clash. State and pro-military media blare warnings that the protesters aim to "burn the country," raising concerns over a crackdown.
The activists are organizing new major nationwide protests for the occasion. Thousands rallied in Tahrir on Friday, starting what they say will be several days of demonstrations, including Monday when parliament convenes and on the Wednesday anniversary.
The military has put together its own elaborate Jan. 25 celebrations, declaring the day a national holiday. It plans a nationwide airshow, including flyovers by warplanes that it boasts will be bigger than those it holds for anniversaries of the 1952 coup that first brought the generals to the helm of Egyptian politics. Other planes will drop gift coupons to the public. Officers will be decorated for their role helping the anti-Mubarak protests.
The military’s message is that it supported the anti-Mubarak uprising, but the time for revolution is over.
"Stability is the first goal," said Maj. General Ismail Etman, a member of the military council that took power after Mubarak’s Feb. 11 fall. "If there is tension between the people and the Armed Forces, it must be removed ... We want the big family to enjoy love and stability."
For many in Egypt and the activists, the army celebrations aim to co-opt their movement.
"We are not going down to celebrate, we are going to finish our revolution," activist Ahmed Imam said at a press conference by youth movements this week. "We will not celebrate while the blood of martyrs is shed without retribution ... We will not celebrate, because they are liars."
Critics say the military is keeping the status quo with a slight reshuffle of the cards but with the same authoritarianism and abuses by security forces, if not worse. They point to almost 100 protesters killed in military crackdowns since Mubarak’s fall, some run over by armored vehicles. Nearly 12,000 civilians have been tried by military tribunals, and female protesters have been subjected to humiliating "virginity tests."
They say the revolution’s vision of "freedom, social justice and dignity" have been aborted in favor of an emerging ruling coalition between the Islamists and the military.
The difficulty for the activists is that a transition plan is in place, set by the generals and backed by the Brotherhood.
The military promises to transfer power to an elected civilian president by the end of June. Before that, a constitution is to be written by a committee chosen by the Islamist-controlled parliament while the generals are still in charge.
Brotherhood officials deny any alliance with the military. They argue that they want the army to step down, but that parliament not protests can ensure they do so. They suggest protesters endanger the process by creating turmoil
Ahmed Abou Baraka, a leading Brotherhood member, said the revolution against Mubarak aimed "to grant the people sovereignty and build a state based on the rule of law."
Protests must be "within the law and ...uphold the higher interests of the state," he said.
The "Liars" campaign — "Kazeboon" in Arabic — have been a new way for revolutionaries to reach out to a skeptical public.
Hundreds of impromptu street shows highlighting military abuses have been put on around the country in past weeks, sometimes more than 10 a day. The campaign has mobilized thousands of volunteers, a sign of activists’ increasing reach, said Rasha Azab, an organizer.
"Kazeboon is a bridge between the street and the square ... They are now seeing that Tahrir is no longer the only expression of the revolution," she said. "They cornered us in the square, now there are 50 squares."
Many of the gatherings have been harassed by hecklers activists believe are hired. At this week’s flash mob in Cairo’s Mohandessin district, young men tried to disrupt the show. One shouted that the screen and video projectors had to be packed up in five minutes. Across the street, another shouted, "Down with revolution."
Activists’ alternative to the military’s transition plan remains hazy. They want the military to step aside, but are divided whether it should hand executive powers to the parliament, a president or perhaps to a council of civilians.
Some fear handing power to the parliament would further strengthen the Brotherhood.
"We would replace a tyrant with no popularity and a corrupt majority, with a tyrant supported by religious legitimacy and an organized majority," said Abdel-Gelil el-Sharnoubi, a former Brotherhood member who since last year’s revolution became a fervent opponent.
Ahmed Maher, of the April 6 activist movement, counters that it is the best tactic to draw the Brotherhood away from the military.
"They are civilians. We will argue with them, negotiate, fight, whatever," said Maher. "But with the military council, they will drive over us with armored vehicles."
Despite disagreements, the activists’ main intention remains to use street pressure for the long haul.
"It is hard...(but) we are creating a new country, we are creating the future," said Lobna Darwish, an activist with Mosireen, a media collective that produces most Kazeboon videos. "It is not even a choice — when you see people die ... you feel this is a commitment to go on."
At the Kazeboon rally, Mostafa Abou-el-Wafa parked his motorcycle and joined the crowd. He intends to attend the activists’ anniversary rallies, his first ever protest.
Nothing has changed under the military, the 26-year-old delivery man said, pointing to a recent bribe he had to pay to get his motorcycle licensed.
"The military council has no shame," he said. "I will go with what these people are saying."
NEWS FEED
Iran's Foreign Ministry reacts to U.S. airstrikes
Leyla Aliyeva and Arzu Aliyeva visit "CandyFest" summer festival and watch "Magic Pearl" water circus show-PHOTO
Leyla Aliyeva and Arzu Aliyeva participate in seasonal flower planting campaign on Baku Boulevard-PHOTO
Leyla Aliyeva and Arzu Aliyeva attend opening and presentation ceremonies at the Seaside National Park-PHOTO
Baltic states urge EU to speed up ban on Russian oil imports
Seoul says Chinese, Russian military aircraft enter its air defense zone
Ukraine strikes facility producing Iskander missile systems in Volgograd-VIDEO
Gold and silver rise in commodity markets
Natural gas falls on New York exchange
Azerbaijani oil trades at $74
Two police officers killed in armed attack on police checkpoint in Iran
Brent oil falls by more than 4%
Major global stock market indices
State Department: Lebanon agreement envisages withdrawal of Israeli forces
Saudi Arabia resumes oil loading in the Persian Gulf
Vance: US ready to discuss memorandum disagreements with Iran
IRGC says it struck US military positions in response to US airstrike on Iran
France wins Group I after beating Norway 4-1
US strikes Iranian targets in response to attack on cargo ship
Netanyahu says Israeli army will remain in southern Lebanon ‘security zone’ until Hezbollah disarmed
UK guarantees $1 billion World Bank loan to Ukraine
Israel, Lebanon sign framework peace deal after US-mediated talks
Venezuela quake death toll rises to 92
Trump accuses Iran of violating ceasefire with US
Scuffle breaks out during Georgian parliament session, proceedings suspended - PHOTO
Turkish ships stranded in Strait of Hormuz safely leave the region
Turkish actor Kadir İnanır dies at 77
Putin meets with Belarusian President Lukashenko
Putin bans deportation of foreigners serving under contract in Russian army
Seven Hezbollah fighters killed in Lebanon
Explosion followed by fire hits factory in Türkiye
Death toll hits 55 in France as drownings rise amid Europe heatwave
Baghaei: Joint statement by US and GCC is a distortion of truth
Rosatom says plans Bushehr staff return
Small aircraft crashes into Beijing’s tallest skyscraper - VIDEO
If Iran attacks Israel, it will ‘commit its biggest mistake’: Katz
Belarusian President Lukashenko departs for working visit to Russia
Russia advises its citizens against traveling to Moldova
Death toll from Venezuela earthquake rises to 589 - UPDATED - 4 - VIDEO
Azerbaijan and Italian foreign ministers hold phone conversation
Senior military ranks presented to servicemen of the Azerbaijan Ministry of Defense - PHOTO
CIS Secretary General: Armenia is not considering leaving the CIS
Former Russian Defense Minister Sergei Ivanov dies at 73
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen to visit Azerbaijan next week
Leadership of the Ministry of Defense visits Alley of Honor, Victory Park, and Military Memorial Cemetery - PHOTO
CIS Economic Council meeting held in Moscow, Armenia does not send high-level representative - PHOTO
Russia and Ukraine conduct prisoner exchange
Proposal made to lower the age of criminal responsibility to 12 in Russia
Iran, South Korea discuss regional developments and diplomacy
Hormuz shipping depends on coordination with Tehran, Iran deputy FM says