M!ddle Easterners - The ICSR Bloghttp://www.icsr.info/me_blog.rss.phpThe latest M!ddle Easterners blog news from ICSREnglishDo we really need a leader? http://www.icsr.info/blog/Do-we-really-need-a-leader-2012-05-22Dr Amany Soliman “A leader is wanted… to a people that was always great...A people that once was effective but now became dead… now the people revolted...with the hands of the young and the old… a people felt like an object to be divided and spread all over ..They used to tear us apart ...they wanted us to die or finish.. a leader then is wanted for that people which was betrayed by its rulers…the rulers who made us lost and unable to understand..even those who understood their mouths were quantified and their hands were tied then detained.. and thrown to hungry dogs.. however, this people stood up and screamed.. within two weeks this people could topple that regime and fall the prison over the heads of the jailers. This is why a leader is wanted to bring our rights back and bring justices to each and every one of us...”
These are lyrics from the song A leader is Wanted by the Egyptian band Cairokee. recipient of his letter, “have no need of knowing who I am or where I am from”. Apparently Nikita is a hit man who was paid by a “friend” of mine (not much of a friend then) to “terminate” me. But Nikita is a good (hit) man as he “took pity” on me (thanks mate) and has made up his mind “to help you if you are willing to help yourself” - by which he means that I should pay him $12,000 (Hey Nikita, isn’t that blackmail?).   

Nikita does not want me to tell the police about his letter as this might "push him”, but he makes no mention of the I]]>Arab world views Israeli unity government as precursor to Iran strikehttp://www.icsr.info/blog/Arab-world-views-Israeli-unity-government-as-precursor-to-Iran-strike2012-05-08Elhanan Millerplease click here.]]>Egyptian pacifist: Time to take a stand against the militaryhttp://www.icsr.info/blog/Egyptian-pacifist-Time-to-take-a-stand-against-the-military2012-05-02Elhanan Millerplease click here.
]]>
The Middle East’s Phony Warhttp://www.icsr.info/blog/The-Middle-Easts-Phony-War2012-05-02Manar Rachwani On March 11, 2011, Khaled al-Johany, a Saudi religious teacher in Riyadh, was the only citizen to show up in response to a call to protest and demand reform in Saudi Arabia. Many of those who saw al-Johany on TV thought that this public appearance before the foreign media would protect him from reprisals from the authorities, especially that he defied them by raising the slogan: “The people want to go to prison.”

Unfortunately, “the bravest man in Saudi Arabia”, as many refer to him now, was arrested within few minutes of talking to the media. On February 22 2012, almost a year after his detention, he “stood trial before the Specialized Criminal Court in Riyadh, a tribunal set up in 2008 to try detainees held on terrorism-related charges,” according to Amnesty International, his case was adjourned until early April.

But if Saudi Arabia can’t bear, or even ‘tolerate!’ a call to reform from a single person,]]>The Atkin Fellowship for Arab-Israeli Dialogue -- NOW RECRUITINGhttp://www.icsr.info/blog/The-Atkin-Fellowship-for-Arab-Israeli-Dialogue----NOW-RECRUITING2012-04-30ICSR ]]>and now onto migrant workers....http://www.icsr.info/blog/and-now-onto-migrant-workers2012-04-24Sarah KilanyMy recent blog post on modern-day slavery and human trafficking brushed upon the subject of the abuse of migrant workers in the region. However, this topic alone is worthy of a blog post.
On March 14 2012, Dechasa Desisa a young Ethiopian woman committed suicide after being publically abused and humiliated by her employer. News about her unfortunate death filled international and local media outlets, as human rights organisation rushed to condemn the Lebanese government and call for reform of national laws. However, this young woman is one of many migrant workers who are physically and verbally exploited in Lebanon, and this has been going on for too long. There are almost 200,000 migrant workers –from mainly Asian and African countries -and they are not subject to Lebanese labour laws but instead to special immigration laws. Modern day slavery has taken a new and different]]>
Iran and the need for escalationhttp://www.icsr.info/blog/Iran-and-the-need-for-escalation2012-04-23Manar Rachwani The statements and actions of Iranian clerics and political figures continue to escalate tensions with Gulf States.  This has been followed by President Ahmadinejad visiting one of the Emirate Islands which Iran has occupied, further straining these already fragile relationships.

But why is Iran behaving like this? Especially at a time when it is under international pressure and its enemies are numerous! Would it not at the very least not want to antagonise what could be neutral elements in its “cold war” with its traditional enemies?

The current Iranian regime, in attempt to unify its divided people and assert its grip on power, is creating the impression that the Shia population is a target, and is continuously marginalised in the Arab world. This would also explain Iran’s support of the Syrian regime during the uprising and the explicit antagonising of the Bahraini regime - Iran was the first to give the Bahraini uprising a religious]]>As the presidential field narrows, Amr Moussa riseshttp://www.icsr.info/blog/As-the-presidential-field-narrows-Amr-Moussa-rises2012-04-20Elhanan Millerplease click here.
]]>
Turning information into action...http://www.icsr.info/blog/Turning-information-into-action2012-04-19Mohammad Al Azraqplease click here and here.

]]>