Blogging the democratic revolution
Have you ever wanted to read the past six years’ of history in Venezuela? What really happened? What the role of people power is? And why it failed? (Hint: Jimmah Cotta). Have you ever wanted to read it in ace writing form? Then click here, it’s the best summary of Venezuela’s revolution I’ve ever read….
Evo Morales is at it again in Bolivia. Now that the president has been weakened by the fleeing of foreign investors, Morales and his dynamite-hurling coca-growers have grown emboldened. The whole city of La Paz seems to be under seige. ééThe protests have grown today,” Morales said in a phone interview from La Paz. ééWe…
As ‘The World’ —- otherwise known to us as self-centered eurotrash — solemnly intones about the depredations of the U.S. over the Saddam underwear photos and the importance of eradicating the US from the earth — by UN vote of course, or better still, EU bureaucratic fiat from Brussels —- Tim Blair advises us that…
It’s Cuba and it’s loaded with babes. Just as the Cuban revolution is launched, we start seeing the babes all right, and the Cuban girls are dazzling. Val’s got a choice girl from the Cuban nostalgia festival, his window on the world to Cubanismo which blogged away in conjunction with the Cuban democracy struggle in…
The people of the Americas have the right to democracy and the governments have a duty to generate conditions for governance and also to carry out their mandate in a democratic fashion. The guarantee of respect for the fundamental rights of the citizens, the Rule of Law, civil liberties, the respect for minorities and the…
Relations between the United States and Syria are sliding even further of late, though it seems that they may be the only party minding this. All of this revolves around intense pressure on Damascus about the insurgency in Iraq. Many of the terrorists have set up arms and drug smuggling routes along the Syrian border,…
Ordinarily we don’t cover events in the already-democratic world, but with many Canadians questioning to what degree their nation still holds on to that distinction, I direct you to this week’s two-part Red Ensign Standard, via an introduction at The London Fog. A few days ago I posted on the state of democracy in Canada.
Now that I’ve lured you in with a misleading, typical MSM headline, read on. In Iran, motives are never so genuine and kind. TEHRAN, Iran May 23, 2005 ???????? Iran’s supreme leader ordered the hard-line constitutional watchdog council to reconsider its decision to bar senior reformist candidates from running in next month’s presidential elections, state-run…
Georgia experienced the Rose Revolution in 2003, serving as an antecedent for Ukraine’s Orange Revolution (as well as democratic revolutions elsewhere). Georgia has since made nice progress, with U.S. President Bush visiting two weeks ago. Now a commission of the Georgian government, led by President Saakashvili, has prepared a draft document outlining the nation’s national…
Will Franklin is hosting this week’s carnival of revolutions, where you can catch up on the democracy movement over the past week. Next week it will be hosted by your favorite playboy, er, not me, I mean Nathan at Registan.net. I’ll be the week after.
The candidate of the ex-communist MPR has won Mongolia’s presidency, garnering over 50% of the vote and thus avoiding a runoff election. A former Communist prime minister of Mongolia has won Sunday’s presidential election, state media say. Nambaryn Enkhbayar beat three other contenders by polling more than 50% of the vote and thus avoiding the…
Don’t miss Gary Metz’s week in review over at Regime Change Iran, the essential blog on developments you know where.
The New York Times reports: In a stark reversal from earlier this year, when Sunni Arabs boycotted national elections here, a broad gathering of Sunni sheiks, clerics and political leaders formed a political alliance on Saturday, seeking to win back the political ground they had lost to Shiites. The meeting was the first wide-scale effort…
Last night I watched an episode of “Writers,” a program on Al-Jazeera. They were actually in London, speaking to two Arab writers, one an Egyptian novelist who lives in London, Ahdaf Soueif (see this article for an interview with her), and an editor with the London-based Arab newspaper Al-Quds Al-Arabi (whose full name I can’t…
With Lebanon’s elections near, sources at GeoStrategy Direct are saying that the recent flare up in violence, both the bombings in Beruit and the attacks on Israel in the south, have been a deliberate attempt by Iran and Hizbullah to derail the entire process. I have a rather longish post on my own blog focusing…
They’re heading to the polls right now to vote in their country’s presidential election. Actually, that started a few hours ago, but I bet the nomads still have a ways to go. So far, it looks like the now center-left ex-Communist Party is going to do well in the polls. The Democratic parties alliance has…
You know how it goes: as soon as your diplomats get expelled, its finally a humanitarian crisis! European lawmakers are finally urging their countries to get tough on Castro. This, of course, after they lifted sanctions on the regime earlier in the year. Two former Spanish senators, Isabel San Baldomero and Rosa Lopez Garnica, were…
The Venezuelan dictator has a way of finding it…based on who he is, a creature of chaos. It’s not the other way around, says Pedro Burelli, a razor-sharp analyst of Venezuelan affairs. He is an oil man, and one of those people who knows the deal. Every word he writes is worth pondering closely. Take…
Is that a great headline or what? I wish I had thought of it myself. Read the whole thing here.
As the November parliamentary race is unfolding in Azerbaijan, Aliyev’s government has decided to start early and wage a campaign of far among opposition supporters. A protest among several opposition and youth groups was planned over the last week for Saturday, but the police cracked down and arrested dozens of leaders and activists. All of…
Val Prieto has got a party and revolution going over at Babalu blog with the twin Cuban Nostalgia Festival and the Assembly for Civil Society simultaneously happening this weekend. It may sound farfetched but they are closely related. Val has a full blogging exhibit at the nostalgia festival, which is Cuban Americans’ defiant effort to…
Somewhat belatedly, this is the link to the Midweek Edition of my Biweekly News Bulletin, which I posted Wednesday night. While not bearing directly on democracy movements, I did come across an amazing article in an Arab newspaper which I have translated in full. The basic store is this: Two Saudi brothers hear about the…
Lovely Stefania in Sardinia, Italy has some truly awe-inspiring near-live photos from the ongoing Cuban Democracy Convention outside Havana right now. The power of these pictures is unbelievable. Only in the blogosphere can any revolution be so chronicled. I dare you to look at these photos without weeping. See them here.
The government of Canada yesterday survived a no confidence vote: The combination of the Liberals, the NDP, and Independent MP Carolyn Parrish resulted in 151 votes. Independent MP Chuck Cadman also voted with the yes side, bringing the vote to 152. But, after the Conservatives, the Bloc Quebecois and Independent MP David Kilgour voted, the…