Saturday, January 29, 2011

Singaporeans should learn from the Egyptians & Tunesians their experience



Whatever their outcomes may be, they stood up and fight for a better national future, they should be proud. Their efforts and experience are going to be valuable to the billions of oppressed and exploited people in this world, in particular Singaporeans. And Singaporeans will have to learn both from the positive and negative angles and compare what these people did against what was done by others in this world, e.g. Thais, Taiwanese, Ukrainians, etc. A huge amount of dos and don't can be learned from every such campaigns. What prices did the people paid and what result did they secured. These knowledge will be useful in our own calculations and plannings. ;)

Everyone must had made mistakes, and did something creative or extraordinary or commendable, so via these different angles Singaporeans as a people of a young country can benefit from experience of these people who had put up their fights and paid their prices. Universities not limited to Political Science faculty can make studies into these mass civil movements. Activists can do case study & workshop of it. LEEgime can chew on it and try to calculate your own new position. ;-)

I urge Singaporeans to watch these events closely.

Mubarak holds crisis talks at presidency: TV


CAIRO: Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak was holding crisis talks with senior officials at the presidency, state television reported on Saturday, as mass riots demanding his ouster entered their fifth day.

"President Mubarak is now holding an important meeting with officials at the presidency," TV reported.

Earlier, at least three people were killed during anti-regime protests in downtown Cairo on Saturday, medics at a mobile hospital told AFP as they tended to dozens of the wounded.

Tens of thousands of protesters gathered on the central Tahrir square in defiance of a curfew and an order not to congregate during a fifth day of nationwide protests demanding that veteran President Hosni Mubarak stand down.




Egyptian police open fire on Cairo protesters



Egyptian police opened fire on a massive crowd, killing at least one demonstrator in downtown Cairo as the protests demanding the ouster of President Hosni Mubarak took another deadly turn on Saturday.

The body of a dead protester was carried on the shoulders of a chanting crowd and many others were wounded after riot police opened fire in the heart of Egypt's capital city.

Thousands of protesters are now attempting to storm the offices of the Interior Ministry as protests against Egypt's authoritarian government stretched through its fifth day.

The clash comes shortly after a government-imposed curfew went into affect at 4 p.m. local time, following a relatively peaceful day of protest.

Public demonstrations and looting continued on Saturday even as the Cabinet resigned on the orders of the president.

State television was reporting that Mubarak named a new vice-president on Saturday, choosing his intelligence chief and close confidant Omar Suleiman to the post.

It was not immediately clear how the announcement would impact public demands that Mubarak leave his post after 30 years of authoritarian rule.

Mubarak has refused to meet the protesters' demands to step but pledged to usher in political reform.

The concession did little to stem the tide, as thousands of anti-government protesters returned to central Cairo on Saturday, chanting for Mubarak to leave the country.

The protest – the largest Egypt has experienced in decades – has been prompted by anger over the country's crushing poverty, unemployment and corruption.

At least 26 protesters and 10 police officers have been killed in the clash. Security officials say the death toll is likely much higher and will adjust as hospitals and morgues report in from across the country.

Al Jazeera is reporting that at least 100 people have been killed in protests across the country.

The number of people who have been wounded is being counted in the thousands.

For five days, crowds have overwhelmed police forces in Cairo and other major cities, often accompanied by rock attacks and firebombs.

Armoured vehicles and military forces were posted overnight near government buildings and around demonstration sites such as Tahrir Square. Unlike police forces, which are loathed for their cruelty, protesters appeared to accept the military presence.

Saad Abedine, a CNN reporter posted in Cairo, told CTV News Channel protesters did not appear swayed by Mubarak's promised regime changes, insisting the crowds would not be satisfied until the president had stepped down.

"I spoke to various people yesterday right after his speech and everybody said the same thing. They don't respect him, they don't like him and they have had enough," he said.

"Everybody is shouting for one thing. It is a time for the whole system to just collapse and bring in new people, a new regime. They don't believe that the government is enough. They want the parliament to be gone, they want free elections and they want the president definitely to resign."

The military was protecting heritage sites such as the Egyptian Museum, which is home to some of the country's most treasured antiquities. The pyramids were closed to tourists on Saturday.

During the worst of the clash on Friday, protesters attacked the ruling party's headquarters, burning the facility to the ground.

In a televised address, Mubarak dismissed his Cabinet and made vague promises of social reform while accusing protesters of plotting to destabilize Egypt by destroying the legitimacy of his regime.

The address outraged protesters who stayed in the streets well into the night, chanting for an end to his three-decade of authoritarian rule.

"What we want is for Mubarak to leave, not just his government," Mohammed Mahmoud told The Associated Press. "We will not stop protesting until he goes."

Cell phone and Internet service was cut off earlier in the conflict, but reports suggested that cell phones were working Saturday morning. Internet service appeared to remain blocked, hampering protesters who used social networking sites to organize.

The situation prompted criticism from U.S. President Barack Obama, who asked Mubarek to take concrete steps to improve human rights.

Obama's government threatened to reduce its $1.5 billion foreign aid program if the Egyptian government, Washington's most important Arab ally, escalated the use of force.

Foreign affairs experts derided Mubarak's decision to dismiss his government's cabinet as shortsighted, saying that a change to his staff would not satisfy those calling for constitutional change.

Speaking from the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, U.S. Senator John Kerry called for Mubarak to respond to his citizen, adding that the dismissal of his government didn't address those issues.

"I think that we have to see how things move today and, obviously, the key here is for President Mubarak to respond to the needs of his people in a way that is more directly connected to their frustrations, much more so than apparently yesterday's speech succeeded in doing," Kerry told The Associated Press.

With files from The Associated Press

Saturday, January 22, 2011

Series of Videos for Polling; Counting & Election Agents







I have wanted to produce booklets since last GE to assist volunteers assisting opposition as agents during the future GEs, now instead of booklets I will be using YouTube videos for this purpose. The part 1 is already online. This is un-cut.

sammyboy.com thread

Sunday, January 02, 2011

From Captured Gurrila Warrior to President - Dilma Rousseff



Wikipedia.org Page URL

Yahoo News URL

xinhuanet URL

63 years old Dilma Vana Rousseff is sworn into presidency for Brazil yesterday 1.Jan.2011, the first woman as Brazilian President. From 3 years imprisonment behind bars and being tortured with electrical shocks as a captured Guerrilla Warrior who fought to overthrow dictatorship of previous Brazilian gorvernance.

She has Marxist-Leninist background, and were member of at least 2 different Guerrilla forces including National Liberation Commandos and VAR Palmares. She was captured with arms and sent to prison (1970-1972) and tortured. She joined party politics in 1980s.

Rousseff was Chief of Staff of Brazil between 2005-2010, and Minister of Mines and Energy 2003-2005.

I think she is a representation of fighter of strong political will, fighting oppressors from the very bottom all the way to the very top.

Her success story will encourage fighters globally. :)


Yahoo News Quote:
Rousseff sworn in as Brazil's new president

By BRADLEY BROOKS, Associated Press – Sat Jan 1, 5:01 pm ET
BRASILIA, Brazil – From torture in a dictatorship-era jail cell to the helm of Latin America's largest nation, it's been an unlikely political rise for President Dilma Rousseff, a former Marxist rebel turned career technocrat who claimed Brazil's seat of power Saturday.

In becoming the country's 36th president, Rousseff pulled off a feat nearly unthinkable a year ago when the relative unknown was tapped by then-President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva to be the ruling Workers Party candidate.

She swept into office on the back of Silva's near universal adoration in Brazil.

"I am going to consolidate the transformative work done by President Lula," said Rousseff, 63, during a 40-minute inaugural address. "He changed the way the government is run and led the people to trust in themselves."



巴西“铁娘子”:从囚徒到总统
2011年01月02日 10:55:30  来源: 新华网 【字号 留言打印关闭

1月1日,在巴西首都巴西利亚的总统府高原宫,巴西新总统迪尔玛·罗塞夫(左)与前任总统卢拉执手相望。当天下午,巴西新一届总统就职典礼在巴西利亚举 行,在去年的总统选举第二轮投票中获胜的劳工党候选人迪尔玛·罗塞夫正式宣誓就职,成为巴西历史上首位女总统。新华社/圣保罗通讯社

  新年第一天,南美洲国家巴西迎来首位女总统迪尔玛·罗塞夫。

  迪尔玛是保加利亚移民与巴西本地人的后代,坐过牢、受过刑,以经济学家身份进入政府,在前任总统路易斯·伊纳西奥·卢拉·达席尔瓦力挺之下走上政治顶峰。

  囚徒

  迪尔玛现年63岁,1948年出生于巴西东南部米纳斯州首府贝洛奥里藏特一个中产阶级家庭,父亲佩德罗·罗塞夫是保加利亚移民,母亲迪尔玛·哈内·席尔瓦是土生土长的巴西人。

  1964年至1985年,巴西军政府独裁统治时期,迪尔玛投身反独裁地下组织,参加以武装推翻军政府为目标的游击队。

  迪尔玛1970年1月在圣保罗市被捕入狱。度过将近3年铁窗生涯后,她1972年底出狱。她事后说,入狱期间,她受过电刑。

  巴西恢复民选体制后,迪尔玛开始研修经济,1986年重返政治,最终加入卢拉领导的劳工党。

  她先后出任阿雷格里港市财政局长和南里约格朗德州能源厅厅长。

sammyboy.com thread URL