Wednesday, March 16, 2011

Arabic News Channels: Which One To Watch??

With the advent of the Arab spring, one feels a certain amount of hunger for news, news and more news. Of course we mostly turn to Al-Jazeera news, but, is this always the wise choice??
Reliability of any news channel coverage depends on which country is being covered. For in depth coverage of the country of your choice, you may find the following guide useful:

Country
Useful
Useless
Algeria
Al-Jazeera
Algerian TV
Libya
NBN and all else
Libya TV, New TV
Jordan
Al-Jazeera
Al-Arabia, JTV
Syria
Al-Arabia
Al-Jazeera, STV, Al-Manar
Yemen
Al-Jazeera, Al-Arabia
YTV
Bahrain
Al-Manar, New TV
Al-Jazeera, Al-Arabia, Bahrain TV
Oman
None
ALL
Iran
Al-Arabia
Al-Jazeera, Al-Manar

      
I hope you find the guide useful. Kick back and enjoy the next revolution coming soon to a country near you.
Note: I cannot give advice on Tunisia and Egypt as leaders and alliances are not clear yet.
           No mention of Al-Hurra as nobody is watching it. Watch it on your own risk.

Tuesday, March 15, 2011

National Dialogue Committee....Another No

http://www.7iber.com/2011/03/have-your-say-national-dialogue/#disqus_thread
Another attempt at riding the wave..to come out with as little concessions as possible. The National Dialogue Committee has been established..nobody knows how the members of these committee were selected - Anyway, I have my reservations:
My reservations are two fold.
 1- The mandate of the committee.
 2- The composition of the committee.
The mandate: To draw a new electoral law and political party law is defenitely not enough. The laws no matter how progressive, will not be enough to deal with the rot thats engulfing Jordan. Nor does it meet the minimum of demands expressed daily by the people of Jordan. A mandate that does not include ,as its ultimate goal, a constitutional monarchy is not even worth the time or the energy. As for the 3 month deadline, the above laws can be fromulated within weeks not months if the political will is there, however, it is still better than 3-9 months envisioned by the PM.
The Composition: I don't know how the members of the committee can be trusted by the people to accomplish the task of drafting modern laws, when they are themselves are ancient. I am quite sure that the average age of the committee mmebers are just under 60 years.
It is safe to say that members of the committee are people of the regime that the people have major problem with and are the same people who got us where we are now.
Members of the committee are not representative of the people.
Youths and women, safe to say, represent the vast majority of Jordanians, yet they are conspicously absent from the committee. The four women who are in the committee, I suppose, are there for cosmetic reasons.
With a mandate that is below expectation and members that are not representative, this excercise in reform is same old same old. So its either our voice has not been heard yet or there is ni intention to reform anything.

Thursday, March 3, 2011

الشاعر: نزار قبانى


 زميل أرسل لي هذه القصيدة, فرأيت مشاركتها وإياكم
كلما فكرت أن أعتزل السلطة..
ينهاني ضميري.................
من ترى يحكم بعدي هؤلاء الطيبين ؟
من سيشفي بعدي الأعرج..
والأبرص.....
والأعمى......
ومن يحيي عظام الميتين ؟
من ترى يخرج من معطفه ضوء القمر ؟
من ترى يرسل للناس المطر ؟
من ترى يجلدهم تسعين جلدة ؟
من ترى يصلبهم فوق الشجر ؟
من ترى يرغمهم أن يعيشوا كالبقر ؟
ويموتوا كالبقر ؟......................
كلما فكرت أن أتركهم.....
فاضت دموعي كغمــــامة ...
وتوكلت على الله ..
وقررت أن أركب الشعب....
من الآن الى يوم القيامة....


Wednesday, March 2, 2011

A Sexy Movement

Let’s face it. It’s not that bad in Jordan, after all it’s not a police state. We have a royal family that, for the most part, is decent. They do their best with the little resources that is available. We are the envy of peoples of the  Middle East as far as our leadership is concerned. We are relatively free, we don’t worry about a knock at the door in the middle of the night, and in the few instances when that happens, at least, our family and loved ones will definitely know where we are, eventually. But, I am afraid we are falling down in the rankings, as Tunisia and Egypt have overtaken us and Libya soon will, very soon I hope. And so that we don’t fall back in the ranking any further, I propose that we keep the protests going, and increase the number of protesters to at least a million.
But how can we get to this magical number, you may ask?? Easy, make the protest movement a sexy one. Just like the Cedar Revolution was.
First, I propose to move the focal point of the protests away from the Husseini Mosque area to a venue that is more reflective of modern Jordan and Jordanians. The area was perfect in the fifties and sixties, but it’s not in 2011 .  In addition the area is very small and it doesn’t fit large enough number of people to force change. You must agree that the protests did not look good on TV. And did not motivate me to participate, at least, physically.
Second, we need to think about a name for the movement(Freedom 2011)(Freedom1.0)(Freedom2.0)if a higher level of action is needed, a color(orange), a logo(a fist) and a slogan((اسمع صوتي . They must be stark, hip, modern and sleek. Yes , branding the movement is a very important factor to attract the attention of the people the  media and the one “ who shall not be named”. ( any suggestions).
Third, Define the goal(s). Personally a (Constitutional Monarchy) as a goal is enough but (Social Justice) ,(Fighting Corruption) are catchy and legitimate.(any suggestions). Up to five goals are Ok more than that would be pushing it a bit.
Fourth, a parallel internet campaign to document all the actions being taken and publish it on facebook/twitter/YouTube..etc.,  Of course, let’s not forget that Social Media is a great organizational and recruitment tool, so start networking if you haven’t done already.
Fifth,  women must be encouraged to participate. We encourage them by being respectful and not use the protest to rendezvous. Ladies, your presence will avert or reduce violence, if anyone is thinking of it. So we need your protection.  Your presence will register well with the international media, will reflect good on Jordanian women and will create further interest in the goal.  
Finally, we need to start thinking about the use of pins, stickers, posters, flyers, banners, wallpaper for mobiles and desktops, t-shirts and baseball caps with the logo on, (orange) ribbons on  windows, cars, trees or a lamb posts and encourage people to do the same, because, as the syaing goes, out of sight, out of mind.
The effort that has been invested so far is admirable, but the goals cannot be achieved by doing it one day a week. We need to be visible to everyone, 24/7, not only on Fridays. Let’s make it sexy and get to a million, that's when the change we want becomes inevitable.