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Top Pieces Of Unfinished Business In The Middle East
28 February 2011 By Juan Cole
1. Some 6000 protesters marched in Jordan on Friday.
They said they wanted to transform the Jordanian
monarchy into a European-style, constitutional
monarchy and to return to an unamended 1952
constitution.
2. Some 100,000 Tunisians came out into the streets of
Tunis on Friday to demand the resignation of caretaker
prime minister Mohamed Ghannouchi. The interim
government has set elections for mid-July, a key
demand of protesters. It has also dissolved the former
ruling party, the Rally for Constitutional Democracy
to deny it advantages in the elections. But they don’t
trust Ghannouchi, an insider in the regime of deposed
president Zine El Abdidin Ben Ali, to oversee the
lead-up to the elections. Ghannouchi is attempting to
gain popularity by seizing the assets of Ben Ali’s
corrupt inner circle, but so far has not been able to
shake his reputation as a Ben Ali crony himself.
[Update Check: Ghannouchi just resigned..]
3. Tens of thousands of protesters came to Tahrir
Square in dowtown Cairo, Egypt, on Friday, demanding
the cancellation of the emergency laws that have
suspended civil liberties in Egypt for 30 years. They
also wanted Prime Minister Ahmad Shafiq, an appointee
of deposed president Hosni Mubarak, to step down so
there would be a clean break with the old regime. The
Egyptian army prevented the crowd from going to the
prime minister’s residence for their protest, and
generally cracked down on the dissidents.
4. Some 200,000 protesters marched through Manama, the
Bahrain capital, on Friday. They want Bahrain’s
monarchy to become a constitutional monarchy, with
guaranteed civil liberties. The also want the prime
minister to be fired. The king has dismissed three
other cabinet ministers.
5. Protesters in Aden, Yemen demanded that strongman
Ali Abdullah Saleh step down. About 4 persons were
killed and two dozen wounded as security forces
over-reacted to the demonstration.
6. Overthrowing Muammar Qaddafi. The dictator’s
security forces abandoned the working class district
of Tajoura on Saturday after several days in which
they tried just shooting down protesters to quell the
demonstrations. They failed. If Qaddafi is losing
significant portions of Tripoli itself, the writing is
on the wall for him. (Update: Confirmation from
Western reporters who reached Zawiya Sunday that the
city, among the major population centers near the
capital of Tripoli, is in rebel hands.
The protesters in Egypt and Tunisia had had only
partial success, removing a strong man but wondering
where genuine reform might have gone. Libyans still
have not even removed the dictator, Qaddafi. And in
Bahrain, Yemen and Jordan, popular demands for genuine
economic and political reform have still largely
fallen on deaf ears.
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