Arab activists using Web to crowdsource dissent (JERUSALEM POST) By JOANNA PARASZCZUK 08/06/12)
Source: http://www.jpost.com/MiddleEast/Article.aspx?id=280191
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As electricity shortages reach crisis levels in Lebanon and Egypt,
citizens turn to social media platforms to vent their anger against
government failures, and to organize peaceful protests.
Egyptians are experiencing an increasing number of power cuts and
water outages, and popular anger against the situation is also
growing, resulting in protests in Upper Egypt this weekend, Egyptian
daily Al-Ahram reported.
Al-Ahram said some angry citizens blame members of the old Mubarak
regime who they say are still in the Electricity Ministry and are
faking the crisis to cause dissent.
In response to the crisis, Egyptians have set up several Facebook
pages to voice their anger at the blackouts and to organize peaceful
protests.
Young activists Heba Nemr, Mostafa Zanaty and Hadeer Elsharkawy used
the social network to organize a silent candlelit march last week in
Damanhour – 70 km. southeast of Alexandria – to voice their anger
against the electricity crisis.
“Please bring a candle and a placard to protest the power cuts,” the
Facebook page instructed, adding that demonstrators shouldn’t wave
unrelated slogans at the march.
At last week’s march, Elsharkawy, who also coordinates a group called
Egyptian Women for Change, told Masrawy news that the situation
was “inhumane.”
“It’s getting worse, day by day,” she said.
On Sunday, days after Elsharkawy warned the situation was
deteriorating, the Egyptian National Council for Human Rights slammed
the blackouts that have interrupted electricity supplies to to
hospitals.
The council’s remarks came a day after Egyptian presidential
spokesman Yasser Ali said President Mohammed Morsy had issued a
directive to the Electricity Ministry – saying the crisis should be
addressed by opening two new power plants, and that the country would
invest in solar power.
“I expect self-sufficiency in electric power production, as well as
export of the same, during the next few years,” Ali said. His
comments also came after Morsy apologized for the outages in a speech
after Friday prayers, asking citizens to give the new government a
chance to address the issues.
As the newly elected president apologized, some Egyptians used dark
humor to cope with the situation.
One Facebook page, Vote To Prevent Electricity Shortages in Egypt,
features cynical cartoons about the problems, including one in which
a man confides in his friend that during the power shortages it’s too
dark for him to be able to see if the woman he’s with is his wife.
Meanwhile, over on the United Against Egyptian Power Outages Facebook
page, a woman demanded Morsy commit to promises that he would address
the issue of electricity shortages during his first 100 days in
office.
Morsy has also faced criticism over his decision to ship fuel to Gaza
while discontent over electricity shortages grows at home.
Meanwhile, in Lebanon, power shortages have led to violent
demonstrations at power stations. Lebanese citizens have also taken
to social media and the Internet to voice their anger and to use dark
humor to mock the situation.
The Lebanese power shortages, which grew worse over the summer
particularly in Beirut’s southern suburbs, have threatened the
country’s stability.
The situation was exacerbated after contract workers at Electricite
du Liban, Lebanon’s state electric company, organized a sit-in at the
company’s Beirut headquarters in a row over conditions.
The 95-day sit-in was finally called off at the weekend, opening the
door for emergency repairs that will end the shortages.
In response to the situation, Lebanese social media users started a
campaign against the country’s Energy Minister, Gebran Bassil, who
belongs to the Christian Free Patriotic Movement.
Twitter users created a Twitter hashtag, #blamebassil, blaming the
energy minister for just about all the country’s ills – from the
power cuts to mundane everyday problems.
The idea spread rapidly and has become a countrywide joke, leading to
the creation of a website, blamebassil.com, which collects the tweets
and displays them in realtime.
To add to the atmosphere, every few seconds the site also
experiences “blackouts.”
Some of the tweets are funny – like that by marketing student
@laratage who said Sunday that “Once upon a time there was light in
my life now there’s only love in the dark #BlameBassil for this total
eclipse of the heart.”
However, others are more serious.
Beirut-based architect Naji Mabsout tweeted Sunday that although the
EDL contract workers issue has been resolved, power cuts in the
capital continue.
In both Egypt and Lebanon, activists are harnessing the power of the
internet, including social media, not just to protest and vent, but
also to crowdsource information to help keep their politicians and
government services accountable.
Egyptian Amr Sobhy and others have set up the Morsy Meter – an
internet service that examines to what extent the Egyptian president
is keeping his preelection pledges.
So far, Morsy has achieved just one of the 64 promises he made – a
media awareness campaign and speeches in Friday prayers about the sin
of public littering.
Sobhy and his friends also set up Zabatak (Gotcha!), an anti-
corruption website that invites Egyptians to confidentially report on
corruption.
Meanwhile, over in Lebanon, activist Hussein M. Dajani has recently
set up Allo Fail, a Facebook and Twitter campaign to increase public
pressure on official mobile operators Alfa and Touch as well as on
the Lebanese Telecom Ministry, which has been criticized for its slow
internet services.
On Sunday, Allo Fail spokesman Malek Takieddine told news outlet Now
Lebanon that the group would continue to pressure the ministry
for “transparent information” on internet speed issues. (© 1995-2011,
The Jerusalem Post 08/06/12)
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