Revolutionary Socialists الاشتراكيون الثوريون al-ištirākiyyūn aṯ-ṯawriyyūn |
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Leader | Collective leadership (including Kamal Khalil and Sameh Naguib) |
Founded | 1995 |
Headquarters | Center for Socialist Studies, 7 Mourad Street, Giza Square, Giza, Egypt |
Newspaper | The Socialist |
Ideology | Revolutionary socialism Marxism Leninism Trotskyism Anti-Zionism |
Political position | Far-left |
National affiliation | Workers Democratic Party Coalition of Socialist Forces |
International affiliation | International Socialist Tendency |
Website | |
http://www.e-socialists.net/ | |
Politics of Egypt Political parties Elections |
The Revolutionary Socialists (Arabic: الاشتراكيون الثوريون; Egyptian Arabic: [elʔeʃteɾˤɑkejˈjiːn essæwɾejˈjiːn]) (RS) are a Trotskyist organisation in Egypt aligned with the International Socialist Tendency.[1] According to Mark LeVine, a professor of history at the University of California, the RS "played a crucial role organising Tahrir (during the Egyptian Revolution of 2011) and now in the workers movement" post-President Hosni Mubarak.[2] They are currently involved in establishing the Workers Democratic Party[3] and the Coalition of Socialist Forces.[4] Leading RS members include engineer and labour activist Kamal Khalil[3] and sociologist Sameh Naguib.[5] Other prominent members include journalists Hossam el-Hamalawy[6] and Gigi Ibrahim.[7][8] The organisation produces a newspaper called The Socialist.[1]
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The group began in the late 1980s among small circles of students influenced by Trotskyism. Adopting the current name by April 1995, the RS grew from a few active members, when the Egyptian left was very much underground,[9] to a couple of hundred by the Second Palestinian Intifada. Despite not being able to freely organise under President Hosni Mubarak,[10][11] the group's membership still increased due to their participation in the Palestinian solidarity movement. The intifada was seen to have a radicalising effect on Egyptian youth, which in turn helped to re-establish grass roots activism, which had long been repressed under the Mubarak regime.[1]
The RS' relationship with the outlawed Muslim Brotherhood is also distinct from earlier leftist organisations in Egypt which held similar positions to that of the Egyptian Communist Party, which generally equated Islamism with fascism. The RS however, advanced the slogan "Sometimes with the Islamists, never with the state". The slogan was coined by Chris Harman of the Socialist Workers Party of Britain, in his book, The Prophet and the Proletariat,[12] which was translated into Arabic, and widely distributed by the RS in 1997. The RS has thus been able to campaign alongside the Brotherhood at times, for example, during the pro-intifada and anti-war movements.[13]
The RS, along with the rest of the Egyptian far left and the April 6 Youth Movement, played a key role in mobilising for January 25, 2011, marking the first day of the Egyptian Revolution. The various forces previously met and developed strategies, such as demonstrating in different parts of Cairo simultaneously, before marching on Tahrir Square, to avoid a concentration of security forces.[5]
The RS later issued a statement calling on Egyptian workers to instigate a general strike in the hope of finally ousting Mubarak:
Gigi Ibrahim, an RS activist, claimed the revolution had been brewing since the Second Intifada of 2000.[7]
In the aftermath of Mubarak's resignation as President, the RS is calling for permanent revolution.[16] On May Day 2011, they chanted "A workers’ revolution against the capitalist government", while marching to Tahrir Square.[17] They argue that the working class, particularly of Cairo, Alexandria and Mansoura were the key players in ousting Mubarak, rather than the Egyptian youths' use of social networking sites, such as Facebook and Twitter, as has been widely reported.[18] The RS sees the role of the Muslim Brotherhood post-Mubarak as "counter-revolutionary".[19]
In March 2011, RS activist and journalist Hossam el-Hamalawy was among many protesters who stormed and seized offices of the State Security Investigations Service in Nasr City. The building had been used prior to the revolution to detain and torture many activists. El-Hamalawy was able to visit the cell where he had been imprisoned, later writing on his Twitter feed that he could not stop crying.[20] "Entered the small compound where I was locked. Man, I can't believe it still... Many are literally crying. We can't find the interrogation rooms. This is a citadel."[21]
The RS calls for the dismantling of the ruling Military Council, the army and police force, and for Mubarak and his former regime, including Mohamed Hussein Tantawi and Sami Hafez Anan, (who currently form part of the Military Council) to stand trial.[22] They oppose the decree-law that criminalises strikes, protests, demonstrations and sit-ins imposed by the Council on March 24, 2011.[23]
The RS along with many other Egyptian leftist organisations are also seeking to establish a new workers party in the wake of Mubarak's downfall.[5][24] The party, named the Workers Democratic Party, aims to have "workers as the main players and leaders of the party joined by a number of intellectuals".[25] The establishment of such a party in Egypt is still illegal under the current government with the new Political Parties Law issued on March 29, 2011, where the establishment of class-based parties is strictly prohibited. Kamal Khalil - a leading RS member - responded by saying they are not concerned of the legality of the party: "We don't want a party based on paper, we want a party based in factories and workplaces".[3]
On May 10th, 2011, the RS along with four other left-wing Egyptian groups united to form a "socialist front" called the Coalition of Socialist Forces, which includes the Popular Democratic Alliance Party, The Socialist Party of Egypt, the Egyptian Communist Party and the Workers Democratic Party.[26]
In 2006, Sameh Naguib - a leading RS member - labeled Hezbollah's defeat of the Israeli Defence Forces in the Lebanon War "a very important victory for the anti-war movement worldwide", claiming it prevented or delayed US and Israeli plans to attack Iran and Syria.[27]
On March 2, 2011, during the US Wisconsin budget protests, the RS sent a message of solidarity to the US International Socialist Organization, urging them to build "a revolutionary socialist alternative" against "Zionism and imperialism".[28]
The RS were amongst many socialists who condemned the Robert Mugabe regime of Zimbabwe for arresting and torturing militants, amongst who were members of Zimbabwe's International Socialist Organisation, for hosting a meeting discussing the revolutions in Tunisia and Egypt. They said "[t]he masses in Tunisia and Egypt have proven that no matter how long autocratic regimes last, the revolution's earthquake can break the walls and dams. Be sure that the earthquake is coming and that Mugabe will fall--".[29]
On March 20, 2011, during the Libyan uprising, the RS condemned the UN Security Council, the European Union and the Obama Administration on their decision to implement a No-Fly Zone and foreign military intervention in Libya as "part of the counter-revolution." They accused them of remaining silent "for decades while Gaddafi, and his like among the Arab regimes, suppressed their people with the utmost brutality and piled up wealth... so long as these regimes implemented the recommendations of the International Monetary Fund for the abolition of any social support for the poor... as long as companies kept open their doors to global capitalism...".[30]
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