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REVOLUSI Arab? Update : Hosni Mubarak Letak Jawatan #1206
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Post Last Edit by NIXAR at 12-2-2011 09:57
Selepas revo;lusi di Tunisia, kini beberapa lagi negara Arab mengalami rusuhan anti kerajaan di Mesir, Yemen, dan Jordan
Paling teruk sekali di Mesir,.....talian internet dan telefon di gantung. kemalangan nyawa semakin meningkat di Mesir. Anak lelaki dan pewaris ;takhta' mesir telah pun lari ke London. ( yeeeee Lon Don bukan Lan Den)
Bekas ketua Agensi Nuklear PBB...El Baradei menyatakan kerajaan Hosni Mubarak kini di hari-hari terakhirnya..... tetapi Israel menyangkal dengan menyatakan kerajaan Massier akan terselamat.
Bilakah kerajaan Saud Arab Saudi pula mengalami hal yang sama?
Adakah Dunia Arab kini mengalami satu lagi proses kebangkitan?? |
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Post Last Edit by mbhcsf at 29-1-2011 08:26
ntahlah tapi pada peminat konspirasi teori well ini sangat "interesting" ...
macam seolah olah kebangkitan di Tiananmen Square pulak....tapi ....tu lah was this being navigated from a far? or well....??
oh manalah strategist forum cari ni? |
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biarlah derang nak tertonggeng ke terbalik ke. lantak pi lah depa. |
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dulu pernah gelombang demonstrasi yang berlaku Indonesia sampai ke Malaysia ni tapi berjaya di pertahankan sehingga hari ini ....
hal ini tidak sepatutnya berlaku kerana masalah dalam satu negara berbeza dengan satu negara lain tetapi bila minda2 telah dirasuk dengan ide ide negatif ia merebak ke negara2 jiran seperti berlaku di Tunisia, Mesir, Yemen, Urdun |
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mmg sepatutnya para diktator di sana dijatuhkan.....si Mubarak ni dr dulu nak naikkan anak dia jadi pengganti. |
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bangsa arab ni pun mmg haru......sesama derang leh bergaduh.......yahudi pun bersorak |
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mmg sepatutnya para diktator di sana dijatuhkan.....si Mubarak ni dr dulu nak naikkan anak dia jadi ...
NIXAR Post at 29-1-2011 10:44
sejak bila sistem Presiden u jadi macam pewarisan pulak like monarki , ye?
hmm, menariknya ialah apa hal pencetus? |
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najib kecut t*l*r takut-takut merabak ke tenggara asia pulak... indonesia dah pernah berlaku |
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sejak bila sistem Presiden u jadi macam pewarisan pulak like monarki , ye?
hmm, menariknya ia ...
mbhcsf Post at 29-1-2011 10:51 AM
itu la pasal rakyat marah.....dia nak wariskan ikut mcm sistem monarki. dr masa dia war2kan benda ni mmg dah ada tentangan, lagipun sejarah si Mubarak ni bukan baik pun. |
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Post Last Edit by NIXAR at 29-1-2011 10:58
'We are witnessing today an Arab people's revolution'
By Salman Shaikh, Special to CNN
January 28, 2011 -- Updated 2120 GMT (0520 HKT)
Editor's note: Salman Shaikh is a Senior Fellow at the Brookings Institution and the Director of the Brookings Institution's Doha Center. in Doha, Qatar. He focuses on mediation and conflict resolution in the Middle East and South Asia, and has also worked for the United Nations, including a post as a special adviser to the U.N. secretary-general on the Middle East. Brookings is a Washington, D.C.-based nonprofit public policy think tank.
(CNN) -- We are in the midst of a brave new world.
The uprisings raging from Tunisia to Egypt to Yemen are heralding a new Arab, post-Islamist revolution.
Today's events across Egypt illustrate the futility of a dictatorial Mubarak regime seeking to push back the tides of history with mere repression and brutality. They will not succeed.
President Hosni Mubarak's days, like those of deposed Tunisian President Zine El-Abidine Ben Ali, are numbered. The effects on the region were, until today, unthinkable.
Today's Arab revolution is no less significant than those that preceded it in recent decades in Eastern Europe and Latin America. This time, Arabs are not being led by their leaders -- from colonialism to pan-Arabism or Islamism or any other "ism" -- as was the case in the past.
Instead, they have turned on those leaders who have failed to provide them their dignity, justice and a better life. Make no mistake, we are witnessing today an Arab people's revolution.
Like those before them, today's Arab revolution will transform the region's politics. What is happening today is nothing short of what the respected Arab commentator, Rami Khouri, prophetically described late last year as the birth of Arab politics. He was right. Politics in the region will never be the same again.
Propelled by the young and the digital revolution, citizens will demand nothing less than the right to choose and change their representatives in the future.
To glimpse the nature of what can emerge, we should understand the rapidly changing social structure of Arab societies. Those societies are more educated, urban and connected than ever before. Due to the phenomenal growth of secondary and university-level education, literacy rates among the region's youths have skyrocketed in the past 40 years. The percentage of people living in Arab cities has risen by 50% in the same period.
The number of mobile phone users and internet users has proliferated to hundreds of thousands since the technology was introduced to the region 10 or 15 years ago. No wonder, then, that the people have finally snapped at the lack of opportunity and representation and the high levels of corruption and control that characterize their lives.
Most tellingly, more has united the protesting people than divided them. Notable has been the absence of a clear, emerging leader of the protests, particularly from Islamist party leadership.
The call for dignity, justice and a better life has been a universal value -- not the domain of any one particular opposing party or movement. Instead, the national movements, which these conditions have spawned, will continue to demand a political system that is more pluralistic, democratic and produces effective and competent governments sensitive to the legitimate aspirations of all the society's people.
Crucially, the unfolding events will also require a new set of calculations from the old regimes' main backers: the United States and its allies. The long-term changes for Western policy in the region should be profound. Gone should be the reflex to side with those who willfully subvert the democratic and constitutional process out of fear of the Islamist boogeyman.
The binary calculation between supporting stability on the one hand and the risks of unprecedented regime change, particularly the rise to power of Islamist parties, no longer holds. The people of the region are deciding.
The irony is that while U.S. policymakers have been playing catch-up, it has largely been U.S.-created technology -- the internet, particularly Facebook and Twitter -- that has sustained the spread of the Arab revolution.
Now is the time for policymakers to suggest an appropriate response to support a peaceful political transition in each country. Western policymakers must strike a careful balance between ensuring key interests (including support for a comprehensive peace in the Arab-Israeli conflict and Israel's security) and respecting the wishes of the region's people. In this regard, support for the peace process and Israel's interests will best be ensured by real and tangible progress over the next year.
In the case of Egypt, the most populated Arab nation and symbol of Arab leadership, the transition will be particularly important. If managed well, it will provide a useful example for all in the days and weeks ahead. The U.S. in particular has a role in persuading Mubarak to outline a peaceful transition of power to an interim administration that will manage the process to a new democratic constitution and elections.
There should also be a role for international and regional organizations such as the United Nations, the European Union, the Gulf Council and the Organization of the Islamic Conference to lend technical and material support to the transition.
It has not been lost on many that the U.S. and other Western governments have been trying to catch up to the unfolding events -- attempting to balance support for old friends and allies with a call for restraint and urgent economic and political reforms.
This will not do. It is time to break through the past fears that have guided Western policy with fresh hope for a better future for the people of the region. It is time to choose change.
The opinions expressed in this commentary are solely those of Salman Shaikh. |
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itu la pasal rakyat marah.....dia nak wariskan ikut mcm sistem monarki. dr masa dia war2kan bend ...
NIXAR Post at 29-1-2011 10:52
pada saya egypt ni di kalangan kelompok negara arab kan ... apa depa pikiaq ? i mean sayat tahu yg dulu yess dia jadi pusat tamadun etc etc but now ya allah in a mess really, kan? |
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pada saya egypt ni di kalangan kelompok negara arab kan ... apa depa pikiaq ? i mean saya ...
mbhcsf Post at 29-1-2011 10:58 AM
di bawah punca2 bermulanya revolusi dr pandangan penulis CNN di atas.
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
* Salman Shaikh says uprisings herald new Arab, post-Islamist people's revolution
* He says it's transformative, nothing short of the birth of Arab politics
* He says it was propelled by youth, digital technology, increased literacy
* Shaikh: The West must strike balance: Support democracy and ensure peace in region |
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Tentera Tunisia menyelamatkan revolusi rakyat. Tetapi di negara2 Arab yg lain yg di ambang revolusi seperti Mesir dan Yemen - pihak tentera besar kemungkinan tidak akan lakukan hal yg sama.
US beri kerajaan diktator Mesir USD1.3 billion setiap tahun untuk memperkuatkan kerajaan dan tentera dan kebanyakkan general hidup mewah dari sumbangan US ini. Jadi general2 ini akan pastikan Mubarak terus berkuasa.
Kalau ada revolusi besar di Mesir, ramai akan mati kena tembak oleh pihak tentera - this one for sure. Ramai perlu dikorbankan baru Mubarak boleh ditumbangkan.
Sekarang ni pun public figure, El Baradei yg menentang Mubarak pun dah kena house arrest. Internet dan SMS dah kena sekat, mmg payah Mubarak nak tumbang. Unless, dgn izin Allah sesuatu yg luarbiasa berlaku ..... dgn general2 sekali tumbang baru demokrasi boleh dipulihkan... |
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jadinya jgn dipandang enteng kekuatan generasi muda |
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Selepas revo;lusi di Tunisia, kini beberapa lagi negara Arab mengalami rusuhan anti kerajaan di Mesi ...
KingNepTune Post at 29-1-2011 07:07
the years before 2012... |
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mmg sepatutnya para diktator di sana dijatuhkan.....si Mubarak ni dr dulu nak naikkan anak dia jadi ...
NIXAR Post at 29-1-2011 10:44
malaysia bukan sama jugak kaa baik BN atau PR... |
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the years before 2012...
darkcloud Post at 29-1-2011 11:03 AM
aku ada terfikir jugak tue |
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malaysia bukan sama jugak kaa baik BN atau PR...
totokumngok Post at 29-1-2011 11:05 AM
Malaysia layennnnnnnnn...... |
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dulu pernah gelombang demonstrasi yang berlaku Indonesia sampai ke Malaysia ni tapi berjaya di perta ...
joe_sniper Post at 29-1-2011 10:32
hoii... bukan demntrasi laa... tapi revolusi.....apo laa kau nih...
bagi aku revolusi indonesia telah berjaya menghapuskan ketuanan keturunan pemimpin tuhhh ajer pegang jadi ketua....
malaysia pulak masih belum lagi mencapai revolusi seperti negara2 arab tersebut.. jika cakap tahun 98 adalah revolusi malaysia, bagi aku tak sebab ketika itu perbalahan hanyalah berkisarkan ketidakadilan sistem kerajaan ajer.. macam tuh pun aku masih dalam umno gak lagi...
tetapi awas kepada malaysia, kerana yg benar2 revolusi malaysia ternyata akan berlaku dalam masa yg tidak lama dimana rakyat dah semakin terbuka minda, melihat segala jenis kekuropan para pemimpin, hidup rakyat semakin tertekan dek segala kenaikan, dengan kerakusan jawatan dan pembaziran wang negara oleh isteri PM yg menganggap first lady, rasuah dikalangan pemimpin semakin berleluasa dan menjadi2, pemimpin yg buruk lagi nista rekod mereka terus dijaga... ini semua titik tolak bermulanya revolusi malaysia bakal menjelma...
kita penerangan demi penerangan dari pihak pembangkang semakin jelas kepada rakyat, rakyat dah terbuka minda mengetahui buruk dan salah laku para pemimpin negara... mereka akan beramai2 melakukan transformasi untuk mengubah pemerintahan negara...dan ketika itu parti pemerintah yg dalam keadaaan terdesak akan melakukan apa saja cara untuk terus kekal berkuasa kerana terlalu lama memegang pemerintahan akan membuat secara bermain kasar dan rakyat akan memulakan revolusi... |
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tamaddun yg baru hanya akan dapat dibangunkan atas runtuhan tamaddun yg lama.... |
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