From the Washington Post… (Thanx Laurie)

Tall and gangly, his hairline edging toward the back of his head, the man on stage in khakis and shirt sleeves spoke woodenly despite the energy and friendliness evident in his audience of well-off Egyptian college students and recent graduates.
The speaker’s hand gestures lagged behind his words. Passion flowed into his voice only when he talked about trade liberalization and market reform. His listeners at the youth forum applauded, but not as much as they had for some other speakers.
Gamal Mubarak, son of Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak and the man most widely expected to succeed him, had not made much of an impression. Then again, Egyptians say, Gamal Mubarak probably doesn’t have to.
Egyptians have never experienced a democratic transfer of presidential power. As Hosni Mubarak, 79, begins the 27th year of his rule this month, many say they expect Mubarak’s family and ruling party, military officers and security officials to decide on his successor.
Egypt’s National Democratic Party is now the only party legally eligible to field a presidential candidate; an independent candidate would need to secure approval to run from commissions dominated by ruling party members.
If power passes to Gamal Mubarak, Egypt would join Syria, Jordan and Morocco — the latter two officially kingdoms — on the growing list of modern Middle East dynasties in which sons have taken over from fathers in governments of elites backed by the military and security services. In Libya and Yemen, sons are also seen as the leading candidates to succeed their fathers.
In Egypt, “we didn’t choose Sadat, we didn’t choose Mubarak, and we’re not choosing the next one,” Zakaria Nahla, a 52-year-old salesman of cheap furniture, said in a Cairo market crowded with beeping scooters and veiled women picking through racks of clothes.
Asked if they expected to have any say about Mubarak’s succession, a group of men with their arms full of round loaves of bread answered in unison, “No, no, no.” One underscored the point by wagging a finger and shaking his head.
“We take it as a given” that it will be Gamal Mubarak, said Sayida Amin, 46, a nanny who works for a family in one of Cairo’s wealthier districts. “People don’t know who he is. We only know he’s the president’s son, and he’s imposed on us.”
“We should give him the benefit of the doubt,” Amin added, and laughed. “Because he’s going to come anyway.”
Hosni Mubarak, who rose from the vice presidency when Islamic radicals assassinated President Anwar Sadat in 1981, has never appointed a vice president or announced his preference for a successor. Under the constitution, elections for a new president must follow within 60 days if the president yields power.
While authorities have never confirmed any ailments more serious than back problems for Mubarak, his age has helped fuel cycles of rumors that he is dying or dead.
Gamal Mubarak denies any interest in the presidency, but he is accumulating power in the ruling party and as his father’s economic adviser.
Most Egyptians call Gamal “Jimmy.” Educated in Egypt, Gamal, 43, left a job as an investment banker in London in 2000 to return home, and took a post as head of the ruling party’s policy committee. He married for the first time this year.
Acquaintances of the family say that his shyness makes him appear reserved and that he is a devoted uncle who films his older brother’s children at school events. Young members of the ruling party call him funny and relaxed in private.
Gamal Mubarak is credited with putting his wonky inclinations to work by helping build a team of savvy, energetic officials around his father, including Prime Minister Ahmed Nazif, to overhaul the socialist-oriented economic policies inherited from President Gamal Abdel Nasser.
Cautious but business-friendly changes such as cutting the overvalued Egyptian pound have helped the country achieve a 7 percent growth rate this year and attract $11 billion in direct foreign investment. That’s up from less than $500 million three or four years ago, said Simon Kitchen, a private economist in Cairo.
“I think with Gamal, maybe, his influence is in . . . explaining or advocating the ideas of economic reform to his father because, obviously, he has that access,” Kitchen said.
Gamal Mubarak and his economic engineering seem remote to many Egyptians.
Forty percent of the country’s people live in poverty, according to U.S. development figures, and 80 percent are labeled low-income by the Egyptian government. Inflation, caused in part by the policy changes, has eaten away at buying power, especially for those with low salaries. Teachers, for example, generally earn much less than $100 a month.
“Gamal has never taken a bus, never stopped at a red light, never met anyone who wasn’t cleared by security services,” said Ibrahim Eissa, editor of Cairo’s al-Dustor newspaper. The government filed criminal charges against Eissa for reporting on rumors about the president’s health, but Eissa said he suspects he actually is being targeted for an article in which he alleged that first lady Suzanne Mubarak was prodding her husband to yield power to their son.

Click on Fathi Abul Ezz’s cartoon below to read the full report…

Down with Mubarak





3arabawy on Twitter


Protestors call for Mubarak's burial in Washington or Tel Aviv 2008-09-29


) ?>

Related Entries