Category Archives: politics

Why Tunis, Why Cairo?

‘Egypt is not Tunisia,’ the pundits repeatedly said on television after Zine Abedine Ben-Ali fled Tunis for Saudi Arabia. They pointed to the differences between the two countries: one small, well-educated, largely middle-class; the other the largest in terms of population in the Arab world, with a high rate of illiteracy and ever widening inequality. Tunisia was a repressive police state in which information was tightly controlled and most people never dared to criticise the leadership out loud. Egypt was a military dictatorship that allowed a fair amount of freedom of expression, as long as it had no political consequences: you could criticise the president, but not launch a campaign to unseat him. In Tunisia, a rapacious first family indulged in widespread racketeering, alienating every social class. In Egypt, most of the elite benefited from the stability the regime maintained, and while corruption was endemic, it was not generally identified with a single clan.

But there were also important similarities. In recent years, the legitimacy of both regimes had begun to wane; in each case the ruler had been in place so long that half the population had no memory of his predecessor – more than 23 years in the case of Ben-Ali, nearly 30 in the case of Hosni Mubarak. People were uncertain about the future. Both regimes had effectively emptied formal politics of meaning by banning any party that had real popular appeal and restricting others to the status of a loyal opposition, thus depriving itself of intermediaries between the state and its citizens who could have negotiated an end to the crisis. Both countries’ supposed stability was dependent on a strategic relationship with the West. Tunisia enjoyed a warm and privileged relationship with Paris: it was reassuring for the French, angst-ridden about the growing visibility of their Muslim minority, to be able to look approvingly on a Muslim country that peddled its own commitment to laïcité as a signal that although it might be a dictatorship, it was an enlightened and progressive one. As for Egypt, Anthony Eden may have described Nasser as ‘that Hitler on the Nile’, but after the 1978 Camp David Accords the country became a pillar of American interests in the Middle East and – by its withdrawal from the Arab-Israeli conflict – an unwitting enabler of the expansionism of the Zionist state.

Above all, Tunisia and Egypt were the last places in which most people – whether experts or ordinary citizens – would have expected to see uprisings anything like those of recent weeks. On the evening of 27 January, I sat in a hotel room in Tunis, eyes glued to Twitter for news of what was happening in Egypt. I had come the previous week to report on the Tunisian revolution, which on 14 January had forced Ben-Ali to flee. The mood in Tunis was exhilarating, the situation seemed pregnant with possibility. I didn’t recognise the country I knew: a people I had thought cowed by years of subtle psychological terror as practised by one of the Arab world’s most sophisticated police regimes, had changed overnight. On my last visit to Tunis, in 2003, people had seemed to be on the edge of a nervous breakdown, and in some way – cruel though it may be to say this – complicit in their own predicament. Now Tunisians were high on the freedom not only to express themselves, but to imagine the future shape their country might take. …

via LRB · Issandr El Amrani · Why Tunis, Why Cairo?.

The NS Interview: Nadine Gordimer

It’s been over 16 years since apartheid ended. How close is the goal of a “rainbow nation”?

I have always called myself a realistic optimist. During the time of the struggle, we were so completely preoccupied with getting rid of apartheid that we didn’t have the time or state of mind to think about the future. When we all voted together for the first time – an absolutely wonderful occasion – we partied and celebrated. Now, the next day, comes the headache.

Why has there been such a rise in violence?

It is mainly because we have this tremendous gap between the poor and the rest of the population, who are at various stages of achieving a liveable life, going right up to the very rich. This huge backlog of poverty is an inheritance that you can’t deal with in 16 years.

What’s the mood ahead of the World Cup?

It’s a strange thing. While there is great excitement about the World Cup, at the same time we’ve got these tremendous difficulties. I’m certainly not a killjoy. People need bread and circuses, and this is a big circus. Let it be enjoyed. But what about the bread?

Will it be a good thing for South Africa?

It’s difficult to gauge what the benefits will be afterwards. Take the stadiums – does one really need them, and what do you do with them? The money that’s being spent could provide housing for so many who are living in shacks.

What do you think about the African National Congress today?

There is a lot of dissent within the party. Capable opposition always wakes up a ruling party. But there is dissent within the opposition parties, too.

Who was who in Ireland?

The definition of Irishness is notoriously contested, which is perhaps the reason why the Irish have had to wait so long for a dictionary of national biography. Individual and rather scrappy volumes have long circulated, notably by Alfred Henry Webb (1878), John S. Crone (1928) and Henry Boylan (1979); but otherwise, prosopographical guides tended to be organized by genre or subject, such as Padraic O’Farrell’s useful Who’s Who in the Irish War of Independence 1916–1922 (1980), later extended into Who’s Who in the Irish War of Independence and Civil War 1916–1923, Walter Strickland’s venerable but invaluable Dictionary of Irish Artists (1913), or Brian Cleeve’s three-volume Dictionary of Irish Writers (1967–71: updated, with Anne Brady, as A Biographical Dictionary of Irish Writers in 1985). The standard of biographical entry became a good deal more demanding with the appearance of Oxford University Press’s large-scale Companions to Irish literature and to Irish history, edited respectively in 1996 and 1998 by Robert Welch and Sean Connolly, but the people whose lives were covered were necessarily selective. Now, at last, we have a large-scale multi-volume Dictionary, available online (dib.cambridge.org) or in nine thumping volumes. It is packed with detailed entries, all of them signed, and accompanied by guides to sources; the trawl is laudably ambitious, and the editorial labour Herculean. This project has come in triumphantly on time; and many of the entries incorporate very recent scholarship, though some do show signs of having been composed some time ago. Previous compendium-projects in Irish academe have not always proceeded smoothly, with histories of running badly behind schedule and producing work that is inconsistent in approach or outdated by the time it is printed; the Dictionary of Irish Biography has vindicated the format. It is safe to say that it will transform the world of Irish scholarship.

October 9th 2009: Barack Obama has won the Nobel Peace Prize; NASA Moon Bombing

Legendary Uruguayan Writer Eduardo Galeano on Immigration, Latin America, Iraq, Writing – and Soccer

Here.

Eduardo Galeano: one of the most celebrated writers from Latin America. He was born in Uruguay in 1940. He was imprisoned and forced to leave the country following the 1973 military coup. He is the author of many books including “The Open Veins of Latin America” and “Memory of Fire.”

Barack Obama Inaugural Address Part 2

Obama ‘s Inaugural Speech Part 1

Good luck!

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.