Monday, February 28, 2011

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"The riots in North Africa" \u200b\u200bOliviero Diliberto - national spokesperson FdS

Le rivolte che si stanno susseguendo in tutto il Nord Africa hanno un tratto comune, ma ciascuna ha una propria specificità. Per quanto riguarda Egitto e Tunisia, la grande maggioranza dei manifestanti chiedeva innanzitutto pane, viste le condizioni di miseria totale in cui versavano decine di milioni di persone.

Intrecciato a ciò, vi era da un lato il desiderio di democrazia nelle parti più intellettualmente avanzate della popolazione, nonché anche pezzi di islamismo non necessariamente fundamentalist powerful but certainly grown in size in recent decades, especially in Egypt.
In particular crisis in Egypt were caught by surprise the two main allies: U.S. and Israel (and the PNA did not make us a great figure ...). The U.S. has tried the card in Egypt that El Baradei, however, does not count, do not exclude that they can secretly groped to deal with the Muslim Brotherhood even though essential to maintain control of the Suez Canal. But let me remind everyone that evokes the history of the apprentice sorcerer forces who then fails to check: just think that Bin Laden and Mullah Omar were supported, financed and armed by the CIA in anti-Soviet role. And then you know how that turned out ...
other hand, in Libya, the situation is slightly different. The per capita income is higher than other countries, not least because Libya is rich in raw materials. Although they enjoy the riches of a few. Surely
in Libya has felt the economic crisis that has sparked protests from all the countries of North Africa, in particular the surge in cereal prices and the rise of the bread.
I have the impression that a piece of the management team no longer agree with the policy of Gaddafi, which is no longer anti-imperialist, but it was been in the past (many of the management team are from the ranks of the army e si sono formati proprio sul mito della resistenza anticolonialista ormai ridotta invece in Gheddafi a mero orpello retorico).
Depone a favore di questa ipotesi la dissociazione di importanti esponenti del governo e dell’esercito libico rispetto alla repressione di questi giorni: il rappresentante libico dentro la Lega Araba con sede al Cairo, Abdel Moneim al-Honi (personaggio importantissimo perché era uno degli undici ufficiali libici che insieme a Gheddafi deposero il re Idriss nel 1969 prendendo il potere), si è dimesso e unito agli insorti; il ministro della Giustizia si è dimesso; addirittura vi sono voci su un possibile arresto del ministro della Difesa.
La crisi libica ha dunque sbocchi oggi imprevedibili anche perché, unlike the other countries of North Africa, Gaddafi chose the line of the massacre of his people just to stay in power (and one of the reasons for the growing discontent of the leading groups was also the idea of \u200b\u200bdynastic succession of a son of Gaddafi, who not by chance are among the protagonists of repression). Ultimately
throughout North Africa's key role is represented by the armies. In Egypt and Tunisia have control of the country. In Algeria there is already a substantial military junta that has controlled not by chance that the situation better than the other two countries.
scenarios are unpredictable. The only thing certain is the fool that is doing internationally in Italy regards Libya and beyond. With another government and another ruling class, we could play a key role in the Mediterranean in order to facilitate economic cooperation and development of democratic institutions, without any form of western presumption, because each people must choose their own forms of democracy.

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