Revolution has come!

Two perspectives on news from North Africa

by Kiilu Nyasha

Hallelujah! Revolution has come! The political miracle spreads as the power of the people manifests all over North Africa, particularly Tunisia and Egypt.

Egypt-man-attacks-robocops-0126111, Revolution has come!, World News & Views Ben Ali, Tunisian fascist dictator, is gone!

Egypt’s 30-year fascist dictator (and U.S. puppet) Hosni Mubarak is about to go!

We are seeing with our own eyes – at last – real people’s power in action. We are seeing the working class joining hands, the police and security forces included. It’s so exciting, exhilarating!

Nevertheless, the world’s peoples must register their support and make this a world revolution so that the imperialists won’t be able to fuck it up – i.e., reverse the revolution with their guns and butter.

This could very possibly be the beginning of a global revolution that would free the people of the world from the tyranny of the 1 percent who own 80 percent of the world’s resources – and initiate real democratic self-determination.

We – the children, women, men of the world who comprise the overwhelming majority of the global population – WE must demand our human rights NOW. Our right to live. Our right to land, bread, housing, health care, child care for working parents, education, justice and peace.

As Frederick Douglass noted: “Power concedes nothing without a demand.” We must collectively and globally demand our human rights, human equality.

All power to the people! People of the world, unite!

Long live the Egyptian revolution!

U.S. hands off North Africa and the Middle East!

by Workers World Party

Egypt-protesters-012711, Revolution has come!, World News & Views Tunisia’s people have shaken North Africa. Yemen’s people have shaken the Arabian Peninsula. Egypt’s people are shaking the world. From Jordan and Palestine to Algeria, the peoples of the Arab world have been the first to rise up during the most severe economic crisis since the 1930s, targeting their governments whose only “gift” to their people has been repression.

Grievances that may have started with students and unemployed youth have spread to the entire working class and to all of society except those beholden to or part of a corrupt, brutal regime. As if by magic, the populations crossed a threshold where they lost all fear. The fear was then in the hearts of their rulers – and in the hearts and pocketbooks of theses rulers’ imperialist overlords in Western Europe and especially in the United States.

This wonderful and unexpected explosion of popular power has its most direct impact on the 360 million people living in the countries known as the Arab world, stretching from Mauritania in Northwest Africa to Oman on the Arabian Peninsula. But it is also an enormous encouragement for all oppressed peoples and all workers worldwide who have seen their rights and their living standards eroded over the past decades and especially since the outbreak of the capitalist economic crisis.

Workers in the United States along with all the African-American, Latino/a and Native people, immigrants and all progressive people have a special responsibility to the revolutions taking place in North Africa and the Middle East. The U.S. government has been the biggest supporter for the dictatorship of Hosni Mubarak in Egypt and a major if not the biggest supporter of all the repressive regimes in the region. When, in his State of the Union message, President Barack Obama spoke of the U.S.’ alleged role spreading “democracy,” he pointedly avoided mentioning Egypt.

Washington supplies the guns, the ammunition, the tear gas and the military vehicles that Mubarak has ordered used against the people. It plays the dominant military, diplomatic and economic role in the region, both directly and with its client, the Israeli settler state. The U.S. government has made hypocritical statements verbally supporting the rights of the Egyptian people to protest, but it has for decades supported the autocratic rule of its ally.

Thus it is the responsibility of people in the U.S. to be ready to march, demonstrate, protest in whatever way they can in solidarity with the people of Egypt, Tunisia, Yemen, Jordan and other countries of the region where they are rising up to struggle for an end to dictatorship, for freedom from domination by the imperialists, for jobs and for rights. Workers World Party will build this solidarity and will demand that U.S. imperialism keep its hands off Egypt and the Arab world.

© 2011 Workers World. This story was originally published Jan. 29, 2011, by Workers World, 55 W. 17th St., New York NY 10011, ww@workers.org, http://www.workers.org/, at http://www.workers.org/2011/world/wwp_statement_0203/.