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Sunday, May 19 2013
Pinning Down Hollande
IT was one of those rare political moments when the campaign- screech and repetitive mumbling stopped. Last week, a French television interviewer asked Francois Hollande, the favourite to win France's presidential election on Sunday, if he thought there were too many foreigners ...
FAREWELL TO ARMS
AND so it came to pass that in 2012 - a year after the Arab awakening erupted - the US made two financial commitments to the Arab world that each began with the Nos. 1 and 3. It gave Egypt's military $1.3 billion worth of tanks and fighter jets, and ...
Al Watan - Arabic Newspaper
Jamila - Monthly Women Magazine
Nation Business Sports Chill Out
Political uncertainty spells chaos in Cairo streets

AP

CAIRO THE streets and sidewalks of Cairo have always been rather chaotic. But they’ve only gotten worse in the political turmoil as Egypt stumbles toward a new system following the fall of President Hosni Mubarak.

Street vendors selling clothes, food or household goods take over sidewalks and sometimes invade half the street, blocking vehicles.

Garbage piles up on curbs. In some places, water sewage backs up and fills a street and is left for days without being repaired.

Traffic rules are often unenforced.

It’s normal to see cars driving the wrong way down streets. Three-wheeled motorized rickshaws known as “tok-toks,” which used to be restricted to small back roads, now trundle down main thoroughfares, further jamming the flow.

The cause, residents of the capital say, is that public services – from inspections to maintenance to building code enforcement – have largely been put on hold in the political uncertainty.

Police who once kept a degree of order now only sporadically chase away street peddlers and ticket drivers.

Things are so lax that some Egyptians have become convinced it is intentional, an attempt by supporters of Mubarak still in authority to show that his ouster only brought chaos.

It’s a stark contrast to the early days of Egypt’s “revolution,” when protesters first took to the streets in January last year demanding Mubarak’s ouster. Heady with a feeling of civic duty, activists went on street cleaning campaigns. Volunteers directed traffic and even fixed potholes.

After Mubarak’s fall on February 11, 2011, the military took power. The plan it set for transition to civilian rule has been mired in troubles.

Police fled the streets during the 18-day uprising against Mubarak and have only slowly been returning.

There have been several temporary, military-appointed governments over the past year, and the various Cabinets are criticized for providing no leadership or direction. The Islamist-led parliament is demanding the ouster of the current government.

An elected president is supposed to take the reins from the military, but the lead-up to next month’s planned election has been tumultuous.

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