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Egypt is in flames, with protests going on for 7 days now. Crowds are defying curfews and tanks, calling for the removal of Hosni Mubarak, virtual king of the country for the last 30 years, and his cronies.
Mubarak has been propped up by US aid that was a promise to Sadat for the Camp David Accords, brokered by Jimmy Carter. The past ten years have brought a vast improvements in the economic environment throughout Egypt (I lived through lots of it.) but that development has benefitted the few more than the many. Political development has lagged terribly as police brutality is commonplace and disappearances a fact of life, especially for the members of the Muslim Brotherhood, a fundamentalist movement that is officially outlawed, but somehow tolerated. Unemployment - especially for the young - is very high and discontent rules.
Usually that discontent expresses itself in despair, but somehow it has become a mixture of anger and hope and the gauntlet has been thrown down. Mubarak has to go.
But if he goes - who takes over?
Mubarak has been propped up by US aid that was a promise to Sadat for the Camp David Accords, brokered by Jimmy Carter. The past ten years have brought a vast improvements in the economic environment throughout Egypt (I lived through lots of it.) but that development has benefitted the few more than the many. Political development has lagged terribly as police brutality is commonplace and disappearances a fact of life, especially for the members of the Muslim Brotherhood, a fundamentalist movement that is officially outlawed, but somehow tolerated. Unemployment - especially for the young - is very high and discontent rules.
Usually that discontent expresses itself in despair, but somehow it has become a mixture of anger and hope and the gauntlet has been thrown down. Mubarak has to go.
But if he goes - who takes over?