News -> INDReporter MON, FEB 7 4:32PM by Wynce Nolley

Egyptian UL prof weighs in on revolt

bayoumi2
                                Dr. Magdy Bayoumi

Magdy Bayoumi, Ph.D., director of University of Louisiana at Lafayette's Center for Advanced Computer Studies and an Egyptian citizen, addressed a group of communication students at the Burke-Hawthorne building on Thursday, Feb. 3, about his perspective on the civil unrest currently befalling his home country.

“Personally, I don’t think Mubarak should step down now,” says Bayoumi, who also heads UL's computer science department. “I like very much the plan that Mubarak stay to finish his term [in September] and, while he is waiting, work on the constitution, have reforms and then go for a new election, but I am supportive also of dissolving the parliament and replacing it with a new one.”

Bayoumi mentions that coverage of the demonstrations and what’s happening all around the country is being misrepresented by the mainstream media – something he refers to as a “media dictatorship.”

“CNN one day will have all of it about Egypt, but the focus is the protestors,” says Bayoumi. “There were some protests for Mubarak, not the same size, but they never showed that because it’s not news and suddenly Mubarak became a bad guy. The American government, the Western government, if you read between the lines, asking him to leave, to leave, to leave and this is a guy who really helped the U.S. for 30 years – if he didn’t help them directly he kept the stability there in that region.”

Dr. Isa Camyar, a Turkish native and an associate professor of comparative politics and international relations at UL, also weighed in on Egypt’s plight. “The events in Egypt reflect Egyptians' demand for a more democratic and effective government in Egypt,” says Camyar. “Protesters are convinced that Mubarak's regime has failed on both accounts. The regime has a very poor democratic credential with an almost continuous life under an emergency rule, which has been in place for decades, and grants a significant degree of power to the government to crack down on opposition. Also, the regime has not addressed key social problems like deep poverty, unemployment and income inequality. In particular, the youth, frustrated with a lack of voice in government and deep socioeconomic problems that hit them most, said enough is enough.”

Bayoumi says he wasn’t surprised with the uprising because Egypt enjoyed a 6 percent growth in its economy that didn’t trickle down to the common people, but he does advocate the orderly transition of power from the constitution to a new government and says if there isn’t a process of transition there will be more chaos in the country.

“People who are protesting that square, Liberty Square, they play for the media, but they don’t know what the impact of this is,” says Bayoumi. “They think the impact is that it is like a magic button and when you push that magic button you will have paradise. So, they think that if Mubarak would step down now Egypt will be another country and everybody would be rich, which is not true. As a matter of fact, these people who are on the square, they are hurting the country.”

 


Comments (6)add
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written by NORTHSIDIAN SHOTGUN , February 08, 2011 - 02:57 am
I would say Bayoumi is an elitist, and Camyar is a Turkish elitist. " Also the regime, has not adressed key social problems like deep poverty, unemployment and income inequality",
I am going to say, it seems that these professors have described the United States, with inequality, and the tax breaks for the wealthy who become wealthier with each change of government, whether it be Republican or Democratic, for they are one and the same, and that is why we will never have a third party, and thank God for that, how much and how many more selfish greedy couillions could we possibly endure ?
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written by cous-cous , February 09, 2011 - 01:16 pm
So, place this guy squarely in the Mubarak camp The recent history of UL professors and their outside enterprises begs the question, how does Bayoumi benefit from maintaining the status quo?
The real question is which side of this issue is Chris Williams on!

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written by LAFAYETTE NATIVE RESIDING IN CA , February 09, 2011 - 02:30 pm
written by NORTHSIDIAN SHOTGUN , February 07, 2011
I am going to say, it seems that these professors have described the United States, with inequality, and the tax breaks for the wealthy who become wealthier with each change of government,

It is people like you who side with the likes of palin,bachman,vitter,jindal,boehner,mcconnel,boustany,a
nd landry. These are the people who fooled you into voting for them to give tax breaks to the rich.

Obama has cut taxes consistently since he's been in office. So, get over your hate and see the forest for the trees.

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written by nola_rationality , February 09, 2011 - 09:47 pm
I can assure you all that Dr. Bayoumi is not pro-Mubarak. He is simply thinking rationally and doesn't want his country to fall into anarchy due to a lack of authority or order. I also do not see him as an elitist. When people are highly educated they tend to think with their minds before they think with their hearts. It would be great if we could instantly change regimes, but that is not practical and would only lead to more hardship for the Egyptian people. Revolutions do not happen over night, they are long, bloody, and tedious process.
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written by NORTHSIDIAN SHOTGUN , February 10, 2011 - 03:45 am
OK Pancho Villa nola, tell us what wins a change in regimes.
People have lost their will to fight for their way of life, to make a stance in America, and this is why corruption and malfeasance in political office is shrugged off as customary, business as usual. Today the Egyptians are demonstration, taking a stance, saying enough of a U.S. backed regime that is a shadow of the U.S. Government's pseudo-democratic regime, explain the difference between the Egyptian's Dictator Billionaire, and The U. S. Government, with Obama's Tax Breaks for the WEALTHY. The fact that every U.S. President leaves the White House Mega-Nouveau-Riche, is no different than Mubarak's, Billionaire Status, gained from his years as "Dictator Of Egypt.
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written by Lafayette Native in NY , April 18, 2011 - 02:41 pm
Of course, Bayoumi would defend the dictator. He had long benefitted from the regime and he has no interest in change. He is happy with the status quo. But how selfish is that? I wonder if he is that happy with the dictator and his version of democracy, why Bayoumi is living in the US? If it's not for our way of life, freedom and liberty. Of course, this is a elitist, who long had been served by the regime, he careses less about the people's struggle, the score number of jobless, and the deplorable conditions in which people are living in his country...Who cares? after all he moved here where he could enjoy his freedom....Hell with the rest of Egyptians...
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