Since the
uprising against Mubarak began there have been regular solidarity protests,
forums and other activities in the U.S. In New York, this support coalesced in the
formation of the Coalition to Defend the Egyptian Revolution. In April, leading
members of that Coalition were among the lawyers, activists, and scholars who
organized and participated in a National Lawyers Guild Delegation to Egypt. Their primary mission was to
investigate the role and responsibility of the U.S. government and corporations in
human rights abuses, and to document how decades of U.S. military and economic intervention
has violated Egypt's popular sovereignty and locked
the country in a web of debt.
The
delegation met with a broad range of activists, including human rights
advocates, youth leaders, Islamists, leftist intellectuals, and trade
unionists, as well as with civil society organizations that provide vital legal
and social services to poor and working-class Egyptians who have been targeted
by the state for their activism.
The
delegation’s press statement upon release of its initial findings noted that “the
U.S. government has been complicit in these gross violations by providing
direct military and financial aid to the current Egyptian regime, by
maneuvering politically to help the regime cling to power in the days after
Jan. 25, 2011, and by delaying for almost 15 years the passage of the Small
Arms Trade Treaty, which could prevent the regime from using American weapons
against the Egyptian people.
“During the
people's uprising, U.S. corporations continued to ship tear
gas and other weaponry to the very government that was shooting at unarmed men,
women, and children in the streets of Egypt. … Furthermore, the U.S. government and private corporations
have supported the economic policies of the International Monetary Fund and
World Bank, which have resulted in long-term job insecurity, increased poverty,
and drastic concentration of wealth.”
In a media
briefing conference call to release the statement, Delegation member Corinna
Mullin reminded listeners that the main demands of the revolution have been
“Bread, Freedom and Social Justice,” and that U.S. and IMF/World Bank economic
intervention stand in the way of realizing those demands.
She
described the web of aid and loans in which Egypt is enmeshed, a web drawing tighter
all the time. What’s more, the $1.3 billion in U.S. military aid each year
subsidizes both the U.S. and Egyptian military-industrial complexes (in the
latter case that means subsidizing businesses owned directly by the military
representing about 40% of the economy).
The U.S.
Agency for International Development also sends $815 million a year to promote
“market freedom,” which reinforces the neoliberal policies encouraged by
imperialist governments, banks, and agencies, and which are enforced through
austerity-imposing Structural Adjustment Programs, as well as by mandating
opening markets and ownership to foreign firms, ending food and other
subsidies, and privatization. These policies, said Mullin, are responsible for
the conditions that gave rise to the revolution’s core grievances. What’s more,
under USAID’s “Food for Peace” program, Egypt has gone from being an exporter to
an importer of grain.
The most
recent proof of what Mullin said is contained in a July 2 Reuters report
quoting Morsi’s top economics adviser as saying that Egypt will soon approach
the IMF and other financial institutions for loans. Since Mubarak’s departure
last February, says Reuters, SCAF has swelled the country’s budget deficit by borrowing
short-term from local banks at high interest rates and by draining the
country’s foreign reserves.
Mullin’s
conclusion was that these policies taken together are a form of
neo-imperialism, and are intended to restrict the ability of any post-revolution
government to be able to address the demands of revolutionaries. As a result,
the Delegation demands an end to US economic intervention through the
provision of economic aid with neoliberal conditions and other forms of
coercion.”
Delegation member
Lamis Deek—who is also the founder of the NLG’s Muslim Defense Project—then
detailed the varied forms of repression that allow such policies to continue.
She emphasized strongly that such U.S.-financed repression, and the secrecy
with which it is planned, funded, and carried out, is “a violation of the
democratic rights of American people too: how can we decide freely when we’re
denied the basic facts by our government?” Deek announced the Delegation’s call
for transparency regarding all actions of the U.S. government and corporations,
calling for disclosure of all information regarding aid, training, cooperation,
etc. between US and Egypt.
On this
point the Delegation’s briefing noted, “To date, the people of Egypt have had no access to information
about the extent of military-private ownership of their country's industry and
resources. That is because the military, with the support of the U.S., has made it illegal to access that
information.
“Egyptian
people must be protected in their efforts to take back their country. However,
any efforts to deconstruct the economic and state structures built by and for
the benefit of a small elite will fail unless the current government allows
full transparency into its domestic operations.”
Therefore,
the delegation said it supports the call of Egyptian activists “for
transparency and freedom to access information relating to the complicity of
the U.S. government and corporations in the
activities of the repressive military regime. This should include disclosure of
all information relating to the provision of U.S. economic and military aid, to
military and intelligence training and cooperation, and to the sale of military
equipment.”
Emphasizing
once again the link between the revolution and the liberation of Palestine, Deek also noted that among the top
demands of the Egyptian people is the opening of the Rafah crossing between Egypt and Gaza.
Other
Delegation demands include the immediate and unequivocal end to arbitrary
detention, torture, disappearances and the general criminalization of dissent;
an end to military trials, and prosecution of old regime figures; an immediate
end to U.S. military aid and provision of weapons; the full disclosure of all
aid and arms sales, and the prohibition of all arms sales and financing,
including tear gas and small arms; amnesty for all political prisoners; an end
to all military tribunals and for the prosecution of all members of the former
regime, army, and police who orchestrated and/or engaged in any acts of
violence against civilians; the upholding of domestic and international human
rights law; full disclosure and accounting of all financial and military aid
given to the Egyptian government since the 1979 Camp David Accords; full
disclosure of all arms sales agreements between U.S. corporations and the
Egyptian military; and passage of the Arms Responsibility Act (HR 5749) which
would prohibit the "transfer of defense articles and defense services to
the governments of foreign countries that are engaging in gross violations of
internationally-recognized human rights."
The
Delegation insisted “that the U.S. government refrain from any action
that compromises the right of the Egyptian people to self-determination, and
that it refrain from obstructing the immediate transition to civilian
government.
They
concluded: “We stand in solidarity with all Egyptians who continue to confront
the forces of state repression and work for the establishment of a legal system
that will protect dignity, freedom, and basic human rights. These demands are
embodied and expressed in the broadly unified revolutionary chant for
"bread, freedom, and social justice."
The
delegation is working on a full report of its findings due out later this
summer. In the meantime, delegation members are working with organizations and
activists to organize around its demands. The first event in this campaign is a
public report-back by Delegation members in New York City on July 10. Delegation members are
also seeking speaking engagements in other cities, as part of building a
nationwide, indeed global, movement in solidarity with the Egyptian Revolution.
For more information on these activities, see defendegyptianrevolution.org.
> The
article above was written by Andrew Pollack, and is reprinted from the July
2012 print edition of Socialist Action newspaper.
No comments:
Post a Comment