Jan 20, 2011 - Issue 410 |
|||||
|
|||||
The Jasmine Revolution
-
|
|||||
Shortly after the start of the New Year, Reuters reported that “Millions of Pakistanis are growing frustrated at widespread corruption, power cuts, poverty and rising inflation - problems that risk pushing more young men to join militants groups in the South Asian country of 170 million.” In that atmosphere, the country’s government decided last year, as part of an economic “reform” drive to raise the price of gas and other fuels. In the words of the New York Times, the regime chose to raise fuel prices nine percent effective January 1 “as the fastest and easiest way to increase revenues, before it struggled with more difficult tax reforms.” The result was predictable; there were protests. The newspaper Dawn reported on the “resentment shown by political parties, civil society organizations and people across the country.” “The increase in fuel prices was
deeply unpopular, hitting the poor hardest, and fraught with political
risks of its own,” Salman Masood
and J. David Goodman reported in the Times from A major party withdrew from the governing coalition and the government collapsed. On January 7, the government rescinded the price hike. Into this mess stepped the U.S. State Department. Turns out U.S. Secretary of State
Hilary Clinton tried to convince the Pakistanis to retain the unpopular
policy decision. She says three days before the government dropped the
price hike she met with It was a pretty heavy handed intrusion
into Pakistani affairs but the Skip ahead to January 13 to the The Sudanese protests came against
the background of the secession referendum then underway in the south
of the country that is expected to split the country in to. “It is not
about the referendum - there is almost no referendum in the north, it
is for their protection against social protests after increasing the prices,”
opposition politician Yasir Arman
told Reuters. “The north is feeling that the government has betrayed
all the dreams of having a new society, of a different route that could
have kept the unity of The Sudanese student protests came
as the world’s attention was focused on In “First it was And then it was the According to AFP, almost 3,000 people staged a sit-in in front of the Jordanian parliament building Sunday protesting the government’s economic policy and that trade unionists, members of left-wing parties and Islamists took part in the demonstration. The riots that erupted in the small
Jordanian city of “They are unhappy with the rising cost of food and, what they say is a lack of opportunity in the country,” said Al Jazeera as the protests spread through the region. “They are directing their anger at the government - they do not understand why an oil rich country is unable to offer a decent life to its people.” One problem is that the prices of
many basic commodities are rising across the globe. But the effect is
uneven because in the poorer countries in Asia, Africa and The United Nations’ world food price index rose 32 percent from June to December. Much of it can be traced to poor grain harvests – particularly grain – and weather-related problems. These factors and an increase in market speculation have pushed prices close to the crisis levels that have previously provoked shortages and riots in poor countries. “We are at a very high level,” said Abdolreza Abbassian, an economist for the United Nations’ Food and Agriculture Organization. “These levels in the previous episode led to problems and riots across the world.” Another factor contributing to the
upheavals is that the economic crisis that was spawned in the Observers point to another, perhaps most significant, factor driving the protests: the stubborn and increasing economic inequality in these countries. While most attention has been directed at the very real problem of unemployed college educated youths, President Ben Ali’s departure came after the students were joined in the streets by workers and young professionals. A general strike was called the day Ben Ali fled. In a January 6 statement, the leadership of the Algerian Workers Party (PT) called for urgent measures to overcome the crisis and “would also put a brake on all who seek to ride the wave of legitimate anger provoked among the Algerian citizens - who are worn out having endured constant increases in the prices of basic commodities - to direct this anger toward nefarious political ends.” “Because the situation is serious and because the interests of the nation must come first, the secretariat of the Political Bureau considers that the anger of young people raises the urgent need for real solutions to the unemployment problem by creating good full-time jobs, in order to combat the despair that is generated by social precariousness,” the Party’s statement read. “These four events hitting at roughly
the same time, for all their differences, seem to crystallize a long-developing
sense that these regimes have failed to meaningfully address this relentlessly
building wave of troubles.” Marc Lynch, That hasn’t kept In a speech last week at the Forum
for the Future conference in It should be noted that, with the
exception of the Last Saturday, after offering a litany
of deprivation and repression visited upon the country, the Financial
Times noted, “Despite all this, “The most imminent threat to U.S. interests in the Middle East, however, is not war; it is revolution,” a Washington Post editor Jackson Diehl wrote last week. Diehl went on: “The violence has
already migrated to The question before the Obama Administration is how to respond to the “Jasmine Revolution’ and how to move forward with the President’s promised “new beginning” in relations with that part of the world. To do something meaningful it must go beyond lecturing the local establishment leaders about human rights and political plurality. It must be to move to respond positively to the aspiration of the kids with the rocks in the streets. It should not involve telling the Pakistanis how to price gas. BlackCommentator.com Editorial Board member
Carl Bloice is a writer in |
|||||
|
|
||||