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Official Egyptian Press Tall Tales about the Protesters
10 February 2011 By Ahmed Amr
The campaign against the Egyptian
protest movement by Egyptian officialdom, has been
two-pronged. One tactic has been to attempt to neuter
the foreign press. This step then allowed a propaganda
campaign by the organs of the State-owned media, which
has been shameless in distorting the realities on the
ground. The employees of Egyptian government
newspapers and television stations are nothing more
than ruling party hacks but they are not without their
talents. While some of the rumors they were
circulating were marginally plausible, others were off
the wall.
The general theme of the
government’s propaganda assault has revolved around
foreign agents organizing and deceiving the naïve
anti-regime protesters. One concocted report in Al-Akhbar
had 300 foreign saboteurs caught red handed in Suez.
In government media accounts, alien provocateurs were
everywhere to be found. The source of the mischief all
depended on which hallucination you were reading. The
agitators are apparently Israeli spies sponsored by
Americans and Hamas activists financed by Iranians on
a joint mission to turn Egypt into a striptease club
ruled by a Shiite theocracy.
Perhaps the most entertaining
rumor was the “Kentucky Fried” allegation. According
to one story circulated by the pro-Mubarak ‘national
press,’ the million-plus protesters came to the square
in expectation of being rewarded, by shadowy
anti-regime forces, with a platter of spicy chicken
and 50 Euros. The fictional foreign agents serving the
crowd were alleged to come armed with tons of cash and
the Colonel’s secret recipe. Whoever dreamed up that
rumor forgot to mention that there is only one
Kentucky Fried outlet in Tahrir Square and it’s been
closed since the uprising began.
To give you an idea of how
disgraceful Egyptian state journalism can be; it took
ten days for the official newspaper, Al-Ahram, to
notice that the demonstrator’s essential demand was
for Mubarak to abdicate his throne. Until yesterday,
the flagship of the government’s propaganda machine
portrayed the demonstrations as rallies against high
food prices and unemployment and in support of
unspecified ‘reforms.’ The day after the slaughter at
Tahrir Square, Al-Ahram boasted this headline
“Millions demonstrate in support of Mubarak.” The
reporting is so scandalous that many
government-employed journalists have quit in protest
and others are simply refusing to write.
The regime’s efforts at damage
control were not ineffective. The campaign hit a chord
with the argument that Mubarak had already resigned
and was just waiting for his term to expire in
September. Egyptians are a sentimental people and the
appeal to treat Mubarak as the father of the nation
had some resonance. They failed to mention that
Mubarak was the kind of father who devours his own
children. So far, over 300 hundred have died because
of his stubborn refusal to accept early retirement.
To date, the government owned
papers have yet to raise or answer questions regarding
the virtual disappearance of the police force. On the
one hand, their editorials paint the soon to be
deposed president as the only man on the planet who
can insure internal security and prevent chaos. On the
other hand, they can’t explain where or why his police
vanished, who gave the orders to disband them or why
Egypt even needs a police force. For over a week, the
people have managed quite nicely without them and
crime stats are probably at an all time low. Thanks to
the citizen security committees that were set up to
confront the criminal elements, no burglar in his
right mind would brave the gauntlet of checkpoints set
up on virtually every block. It’s always been safe to
walk Cairo’s streets. It’s even safer now. After we
toss the dictator out, the costs of Mubarak’s bloated
security forces obviously needs to be addressed.
Another part of the propaganda
campaign is to portray the uprising as an organized
plot by the Muslim Brotherhood. The truth is that the
uprising was spontaneous and unorganized. While the
fuse was lit by a group of liberal-minded
internet-savvy activists, it has evolved into a
nationalist movement dominated by citizens
unaffiliated with any group or party. They have all
rallied around a single cause – bringing down the
regime. All you have to do is walk around Tahrir
Square and read the home-made signs. “The people
demand the removal of the regime,” “He Goes – We Stay”
“Go already, Have some self-respect, I’m tired of
holding up this sign.” What you won’t find are “Death
to America” signs or anyone burning an American flag.
When the demonstrators in Tahrir square got the badly
translated message that Obama had asked Mubarak to
step down – they were ecstatic. Of course, Obama had
done nothing of the sort. It’s now clear that the
United States has decided to throw its weight behind
Mubarak’s regime. With or without Mubarak, America
wants a compliant dictator to rule over Egypt.
If history repeats itself in
Egypt, it will lead to a new polity in the Turkish
mold not a replay of the Iranian Revolution.
Unfortunately, Hillary and Obama have apparently
fallen victim to the canard that this uprising will
lead to a power grab by mullahs. Egypt doesn’t have
mullahs and Egyptians don’t do theocracy. Win or lose,
the American betrayal of the Egyptian revolt against
tyranny will not be soon forgotten.
Another bit of slander against
the young rebels is that they are agents of chaos.
Nothing could be further from the truth. It wasn’t the
rebels who resorted to violence – it was Mubarak’s
goons. The rebels didn’t throw open the prison gates –
that was a chore left to Mubarak’s security forces who
then abandoned their stations and betrayed their duty
to maintain law and order. Had the regime allowed
peaceful demonstrations, the tourists in Sharm, Luxor
and Hurghada would have stayed put.
It wasn’t the rebels who turned
off the internet and cell phones. Again, that was
Mubarak. It wasn’t the rebels who enforced the curfew
that paralyzed economic activity; that was Mubarak. To
extend his thirty year dictatorship, the strongman
canceled train service, blocked highway travel, closed
the banks and brought the country to a virtual
standstill. So aside from being a ruthless dictator,
the man is an economic arsonist.
The last time Mubarak bothered to
speak to his subjects was last Tuesday night – five
days ago. To say that he has a tin ear would be the
understatement of the year. He’s always treated
Egyptians with utter disdain and he’s most likely in a
vengeful mood. If he prevails, Egyptians will pay
dearly for daring to rise up against his regime.
There is really only one story
here and it is ever so uncomplicated. This is an
uprising against an octogenarian dictator who could
have done us all a favor by retiring two decades ago.
After he goes, the remaining 84 million Egyptians can
sort things out among themselves. Everything else is
fiction.
Keep the faith – freedom is being
born.
Ahmed Amr is an
Egyptian-American and the former editor of
Nilemedia.com.
©
EsinIslam.Com
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