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Posts Tagged ‘Ahmed Maher’

US Embassy Cables: in 2009 “APRIL 6″ Leader talks with US Congress about Maher ties to Freedom House

06/02/2012 Leave a comment

“APRIL 6″ LEADER PLANS U.S. TRAVEL; DESCRIBES MOVEMENT IN DISARRAY

Ref ID: 09CAIRO695
Date: 2009-04-23 15:45
Origin: Embassy Cairo
Classification: CONFIDENTIAL

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E.O. 12958: DECL: 04/23/2029
TAGS: PHUM KDEM EG
SUBJECT: “APRIL 6″ LEADER PLANS U.S. TRAVEL; DESCRIBES
MOVEMENT IN DISARRAY

REF: A. CAIRO 591
B. CAIRO 580
C. CAIRO 468
D. 08 CAIRO 2572

Classified By: Economic-Political Counselor
Catherine Hill-Herndon for reason 1.4 (d).

1. (C) On April 22, “April 6 Movement” leader Ahmed Saleh told us that he plans to travel to Washington from May 2 to May 9 to testify in a May 7 Congressional hearing on a draft resolution on human rights in Egypt sponsored by Rep. Frank Wolf (R-VA). Saleh said that Dina Guirgis of the Washington-based NGO “Voices for a Democratic Egypt (VDE)” is working to schedule meetings for him with Congress, and VDE will provide him with accommodation. Saleh believes that Egyptian activist Saad Eddin Ibrahim is “personally” funding Saleh’s plane travel to the U.S. Saleh requested assistance in setting up meetings with USG officials so he can “explain the importance of democracy in Egypt.”

2. (C) According to Saleh, the “April 6 Movement” is in increasing disarray. Saleh said that Islamist members, such as Labor Party activist Dia Isawi, are accusing him and secular “April 6″ leader Ahmed Maher of “treason” for their association with the U.S. NGO Freedom House, which Isawi views as a “Zionist organization.”

(Note: Saleh is secular and is allied with Ahmed Maher in advocating a secular orientation for “April 6.” End note.)

Saleh noted that the Islamist members held a mock trial of Ahmed Maher for ”treason” into the early morning hours of April 22 after obtaining Freedom House documents detailing planned funding of “April 6 activities.” Saleh said that as a result of this internal “April 6″ strife, programming with Freedom House is now “impossible.” Saleh speculated that Isawi might be working as an agent for State Security.

3. (C) Saleh noted that youth activists from the secular Ghad party are also accusing him and Ahmed Maher of “treason” because of their contacts with Freedom House. Saleh claimed that the prominent blogger Wael Abbas is working with Dia Isawi to undermine the secular “April 6″ leadership so that Abbas can claim the mantle of internet activism for himself. According to Saleh, Abbas has threatened to post information about Saleh and Maher’s links to Freedom House on his blog. Saleh told us he is still planning to establish an ”underground” secular wing of “April 6″ (ref C).

4. (C) In a separate meeting April 23, Wael Abbas criticized ”April 6″ leader Ahmed Maher as weak and the movement as disorganized, but did not voice any support for Isawi.

(Comment: We do not believe that Abbas wants to dominate other internet activists, as Saleh suggested. Abbas has worked closely with other activists in the past, and has expressed to us his hope that more internet activists will participate in political life. End comment.)

-SCOBEY

Source: WikiLeaks

The Academy of Change

02/01/2012 Leave a comment

The first mention of the Academy of Change (AOC) in relation to the Egyptian Revolution of 25 January, came in a Reuters report published on 13 April 2011, under the title of “Inside the Egyptian Revolution”.

In the report, Reuters stated that the Academy of Change was founded in London in 2005 by  Hisham Morsy, Wael Adel, and Adel’s cousin Ahmed Adel, and that the Academy moved to Qatar later on. Reuters claims that the AOC was involved in training Egyptian dissidents (Kefaya and April 6 Youth among others) ever since 2005. Reuters also claims that the Academy is one of those involved in the planning of the events that took place Tahrir, and the training of the revolutionaries, through a vague character with the name “Saad Bahaar“.

Reuters report wrote: 

“Inspired by the way Serbian group Otpor had brought down Slobodan Milosevic through non-violent protests in 2000, the trio studied previous struggles. One of their favorite thinkers was Gene Sharp, a Boston-based academic who was heavily influenced by Mahatma Gandhi. The group had set up a webpage in 2004 to propagate civil disobedience ideas in Arabic.

At first, the three young Egyptians’ activities were purely theoretical. But in November 2005, Wael Adel came to Cairo to give a three-day training session on civil disobedience. In the audience were about 30 members of Kefaya, an anti-Mubarak protest group whose name means “enough” in Arabic. Kefaya had gained prominence during the September 2005 presidential elections which Mubarak won by a landslide. During these protests, they had been attacked by thugs and some women members had been stripped naked. Bahaar joined Adel on the course and his career as an underground trainer in non-violent activism was born. Read more…

US Embassy Cables: Response to El Baradei Return to Cairo in 2010

09/09/2011 Leave a comment

El Baradei Returns to Cairo

Ref ID: 10CAIRO237
Date: 2010-02-23 13:42
Origin: Embassy Cairo
Classification: CONFIDENTIAL

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C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 04 CAIRO 000237

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E.O. 12958: DECL: 2035/02/23
TAGS: PREL PGOV PHUM KDEM EG
SUBJECT: El Baradei Returns to Cairo

REF: 10 CAIRO 215

CLASSIFIED BY: Margaret Scobey, Ambassador; REASON: 1.4(B), (D)

1. (C) Key Points:

– Thousands of supporters greeted former IAEA Chairman Mohammed El Baradei upon his return to Cairo. Beleaguered leaders of the opposition seem relieved at their ability to muster a show of support for El Baradei and enthusiastic about his potential impact.

– El Baradei is seen as an “independent” and viable alternative to a corrupt regime and an ineffectual opposition.  However, the mainstream opposition appears reluctant to claim him as their own “consensus candidate.”

– In a television interview February 21, El Baradei criticized GOE corruption, election fraud, lack of political reform and failure to successfully address poverty and illiteracy.

– El Baradei met with Arab League Secretary Amre Moussa on February 22 and will begin to meet with political activists on February 23.”

– NDP reaction and government media reaction focused on El Baradei’s lack of political experience and doubts over his level of commitment.  Opinion makers in the independent media also see El Baradei as an outsider and appear wary to offer unqualified support.

Read more…

US embassy cables: April 6 activists discussed preparations for El Baradei’s Arrival with US embassy in 2010

01/09/2011 Leave a comment

ACTIVISTS PREPARE FOR EL-BARADEI’S ARRIVAL; DETAINEES RELEASED

Reference ID 10CAIRO215
Created 2010-02-18 16:04
Released 2011-01-28
Classification CONFIDENTIAL
Origin Embassy Cairo

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C O N F I D E N T I A L CAIRO 000215

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E.O. 12958: DECL: 2035/02/18
TAGS: PGOV PHUM KDEM EG
SUBJECT: ACTIVISTS PREPARE FOR EL-BARADEI’S ARRIVAL; DETAINEES
RELEASED

REF: 09 CAIRO 2279

CLASSIFIED BY: Donald A. Blome, Minister-Counselor, State, ECPO;
REASON: 1.4(B), (D)

1. KEY POINTS

– (SBU) Activists affiliated with the political opposition are planning to greet former IAEA Chairman Mohammed El-Baradei upon his scheduled February 19 arrival in Cairo from Vienna. In recent months, El-Baradei has spoken about a possible 2011 presidential run if the GOE (Government of Egypt) enacts political reforms to ensure free and fair elections (reftel).

– (U) El-Baradei’s scheduled arrival has generated interest among political activists and the independent press.

– (C) Early on February 17, the GOE detained two “April 6″activists and filed charges against them February 18 before releasing them later in the day.

2. (C) Comment: Discussion of El-Baradei’s potential candidacy and his planned February 19 arrival seems to have energized opposition political activists and the independent press, but El-Baradei’s broader public support remains unclear. Public reaction to El-Baradei’s actions once he arrives could be an indication of his potential political staying power. El-Baradei has recently said he does not intend to run for president, but wants to advance democracy in Egypt. End comment.  Read more…

CANVAS: Struggle Booklet Published 2006

09/08/2011 1 comment

We Just acquired The Arabic version of “The Struggle” booklet, published by CANVAS and USIP (United States Institute of Peace) in 2006, via one of our facebook page members.

The Booklet is written by Serbian Otpor’s Leaders Srdja Popovic & Slobodan Djinovic and is possibly one of the documents used in the training of April 6 Youth.

كتيب “الكفاح السلمي” المنشور في 2006 بواسطة كانفس، ألفه ثلاثة من مؤسسي حركة أتبور الصربية و هم: سيردجا بوبافيتش، و أندريج مولافجتش، و سلوبودان دينوجونفيتش، و من المرجح أنه أستخدم في تدريب شباب 6 أبريل على كيفية قلب الأنظمة.

April 6 and the lead up to the 25th of Jan Revolution

25/07/2011 3 comments

Under the title “A Tunisian-Egyptian Link That Shook Arab History” the New York Times ran a report about links between the Tunisian revolt, the Egyptian Revolution, Otpor, April 6 & Wael Ghonim.

By DAVID D. KIRKPATRICK and DAVID E. SANGER
Published: February 13, 2011

The Egyptian revolt was years in the making. Ahmed Maher, a 30-year-old civil engineer and a leading organizer of the April 6 Youth Movement, first became engaged in a political movement known as Kefaya, or Enough, in about 2005. Mr. Maher and others organized their own brigade, Youth for Change. But they could not muster enough followers; arrests decimated their leadership ranks, and many of those left became mired in the timid, legally recognized opposition parties. “What destroyed the movement was the old parties,” said Mr. Maher, who has since been arrested four times.

By 2008, many of the young organizers had retreated to their computer keyboards and turned into bloggers, attempting to raise support for a wave of isolated labor strikes set off by government privatizations and runaway inflation.

After a strike that March in the city of Mahalla, Egypt, Mr. Maher and his friends called for a nationwide general strike for April 6. To promote it, they set up a Facebook group that became the nexus of their movement, which they were determined to keep independent from any of the established political groups. Bad weather turned the strike into a nonevent in most places, but in Mahalla a demonstration by the workers’ families led to a violent police crackdown — the first major labor confrontation in years. Read more…

Saad Bahaar

27/04/2011 3 comments

In a report titled “Inside the Egyptian revolution” published on 13 April 2011, Reuters wrote of a character that was never mentioned before in the media in relation to the January 25th Revolution, and whom Reuters claim was involved in the planning process, this candid character is; Saad Bahaar – سعد بحار.

Reuters wrote:

In early 2005, Cairo-based computer engineer Saad Bahaar was trawling the internet when he came across a trio of Egyptian expatriates who advocated the use of non-violent techniques to overthrow strongman Hosni Mubarak. Bahaar, then 32 and interested in politics and how Egypt might change, was intrigued by the idea. He contacted the group, lighting one of the fuses that would end in freedom in Tahrir Square six years later.

The report goes on to detail how Saad and three of his friends have setup the “Academy of Change”: أكاديمية التغيير

In the meantime, the trio of thinkers had morphed into an organization called the Academy of Change — based in London and ultimately moving to Qatar. The Academy became a window for Egypt’s activists into civil disobedience movements outside the Arab world. To disseminate the new methods of resistance, it wrote books about nonviolent activism with a focus on the Arab world: “Civil Disobedience,” “Nonviolent War the 3rd Choice” and “AOC MindQuake” that were published in 2007.

A year later the Academy published “Shields to Protect Against Fear”, a manual on techniques to protect one’s body against attacks by security services during a protest. “The idea of non-violent protest is not martyrdom,” Adel said. “We knew to get ordinary Egyptians, and Arabs, to face their governments and security, they have to have tools to protect themselves. This boosts the morale and enthusiasm to go to the street.”

The ideas espoused by the Academy spread through Egypt. 

Reuters’ report continues to reveal Saad’s Academy relation to Kefaya, Ahmed Maher, & April 6 Youth, but then Reuters details another very worrying aspect, which is: “Saad Bahaar’s relation with Mohamed ElBaradei!!! Read more…

The Great Deception Addendum English Version Released

27/04/2011 Leave a comment

The Great Deception Addendum: Inside the Egyptian Revolution

TGD Addendum, is a short documentary, following up on TGD 2011 الخداع الأكبر, and expanding on the questions raised about the Arab Uprising and the Middle East [Democracy] Project.

But actually TGD Addendum Tackles the bigger questions, which are:

What is Color Revolutions?
What is International Crisis Group?
Who is George Soros???
What is his relationship with ElBraradei & April 6 Youth?
Does he have role in the Egyptian Revolution?
Who is Saad Bahaar???
What is his relationship with ElBraradei & April 6 Youth?
Does he have role in the Egyptian Revolution?

All these questions and many more must be answered before embracing those who lecture us about freedom and democracy in post revolution Egypt.

However, this video is not an attack on any particular person of the ones mentioned, nor is it an attack on Egypt Freedom Revolution, whom we are most proud that we were part of it, since the first days.

But this video is an invitation to open your mind to broader ideas, to research and to question and not to be a follower to any one person or one entity.

“Question Authority, Think for yourself”

The Links:

Mohamed ElBaradei
ElBaradei & Soros
Saad Bahaar

George Soros:
NS Profile: George Soros
Meet George Soros
What is a “Color” Revolution???

April 6th Movement:
WikiLeaks: APRIL 6 Activist met with US officials in 2008 & discussed Regime Change “Plan” in EGYPT by 2011
US Department of State: Press Release on Alliance of Youth Movements Summit
NY Times: U.S. Groups Helped Nurture Arab Uprisings
Reuters Special Report: Inside the Egyptian revolution

Disclaimer about “The Great Deception 2011″

To make one thing clear:

Anarchitext is not Pro Mubarak,

Anarchitext is not Pro NDP,

Anarchitext is not Pro Dictatorship in anyway shape or form…

Quite the opposite, Anarchitext is against Mubarak, his corrupt faction, his corrupt government, his corrupt parliament, his corrupt election and his 30 years rule of torture and oppression…

We are with the calls for his prosecution and trial…

AND we are proud that we have taken part of the glorious Egyptian Revolution…

“The Great Deception 2011″ is not about defending Mubarak, and those who understand it that way are ill-advised and misinformed.

The Great Deception Addendum Arabic Version Released

27/04/2011 2 comments

إضافات الخداع الأكبر: داخل الثورة المصرية

إضافات الخداع الأكبر هو فيديو وثائقي، يتبع الخداع الأكبر 2011 و يناقش المزيد من الأسئلة المتعلقة بأحداث الثورة المصرية و ثورات العرب، و مخططات نشر (الديمقراطية) في الشرق الأوسط.

و لكن الأسئلة المطروحة في إضافات الخداع الأكبر هي الأسئلة الأهم و الأخطر من حيث الوقع، هذه الأسئلة بإختصار هي:

ما علاقة البرادعي بوائل غنيم و شباب 6 أبريل؟
ما هي نظرية الثورات الملونة؟
ما هي المنظمة الدولية للإزمات؟
من هو جورج سوروس؟
ما علاقته بالبرادعي و شباب 6 أبريل؟
هل له يد في ثورة مصر؟
من هو سعد بحار؟
ما علاقته بالبرادعي و شباب 6 أبريل؟
هل له يد في ثورة مصر؟

و أسئلة أخري كثيرة يجب أن نجيب عنها، قبل أن نثق في الكثير ممن يتكلمون على الساحة السياسية في مصر بعد ثورة 25 يناير…

هذا الفيديو ليس هجوماً على شخص بعينه، و هو بالطبع ليس هجوماً على ثوار مصر الأحرار، الذين نفخر بأننا كنا ضمن صفوفهم من اليوم الأول..

و لكن هذا الفيديو هو دعوة للبحث و المعرفة، و عدم الأنسياق وراء شخص أو جهه بذاتها

The Links:

د. محمد البردعي
Mohamed ElBaradei

ElBaradei & Soros

جورج سوروس
NS Profile: George Soros
Meet George Soros
What is a “Color” Revolution???

حركة 6 أبريل
WikiLeaks: APRIL 6 Activist met with US officials in 2008 & discussed Regime Change “Plan” in EGYPT by 2011
US Department of State: Press Release on Alliance of Youth Movements Summit
NY Times: U.S. Groups Helped Nurture Arab Uprisings
Reuters Special Report: Inside the Egyptian revolution

تنوية 1

هذا الفيديو ليس هجوماً على شخص بعينه، و هو بالطبع ليس هجوماً على ثوار مصر الأحرار، الذين نفخر بأننا كنا ضمن صفوفهم من اليوم الأول..

و لكن هذا الفيديو هو دعوة للبحث و المعرفة، و عدم الأنسياق وراء شخص أو جهه بذاتها

تنوية 2

وجدنا أن أحد المعلومات الواردة بالفيديو مغلوطة: وصلنا نسخة عربية من تقرير رويترز عن الثورة المصرية و فيه الأسم الصحيح لمؤسس أكاديمية التغيير و هو “سعد بحار” و ليس بهار كما ترجمناها في الفيديو

تنوية 3: هام جداً

تبين أننا أخطائنا في الترجمة و الفهم، حيث نشرت النيويورك تايمز في دراسة منقولة عن فريدوم هاوس، ملحقة بالمقال، هذه المعلومة هي:
في السنوات الست الماضية ، خصصت الولايات المتحدة التمويل صغير لكنه هام لحملات بناء الديمقراطية في الشرق الأوسط. من برنامج الدعم العسكر الأكبر بكثير، حصلت مصر على النصيب الأكبر – حوالي 1.3 مليار دولار سنويا.
و قد فهمنا خطأ هنا أن المبلغ المذكور يعود على تمويل حملات بناء الديمقراطية، بينما وضح لنا بعد إعادة البحث أن المبلغ يعود على الدعم العسكري.
و تبين أن إجمالي التمويل الأمريكي المخصص لدعم الديمقراطية في الشرق الأوسط في الستة أعوام الماضية بلغ حوالي 3 مليار دولار، حصلت مصر على النصيب الأكبر منهم (لم نعثر على أرقام دقيقة، و نرجو إذا توافرت لديكم أي معلومات بهذا الصدد ، موافتنا بها).

NY Times: U.S. Groups Helped Nurture Arab Uprisings

17/04/2011 3 comments

New York Times,  April 14, 2011

By RON NIXON

WASHINGTON — Even as the United States poured billions of dollars into foreign military programs and anti-terrorism campaigns, a small core of American government-financed organizations were promoting democracy in authoritarian Arab states.

The money spent on these programs was minute compared with efforts led by the Pentagon. But as American officials and others look back at the uprisings of the Arab Spring, they are seeing that the United States’ democracy-building campaigns played a bigger role in fomenting protests than was previously known, with key leaders of the movements having been trained by the Americans in campaigning, organizing through new media tools and monitoring elections.

A number of the groups and individuals directly involved in the revolts and reforms sweeping the region, including the April 6 Youth Movement in Egypt, the Bahrain Center for Human Rights and grass-roots activists like Entsar Qadhi, a youth leader in Yemen, received training and financing from groups like the International Republican Institute, the National Democratic Institute and Freedom House, a nonprofit human rights organization based in Washington, according to interviews in recent weeks and American diplomatic cables obtained by WikiLeaks.

The work of these groups often provoked tensions between the United States and many Middle Eastern leaders, who frequently complained that their leadership was being undermined, according to the cables.

The Republican and Democratic institutes are loosely affiliated with the Republican and Democratic Parties. They were created by Congress and are financed through the National Endowment for Democracy, which was set up in 1983 to channel grants for promoting democracy in developing nations. The National Endowment receives about $100 million annually from Congress. Freedom House also gets the bulk of its money from the American government, mainly from the State Department.

No one doubts that the Arab uprisings are home grown, rather than resulting from “foreign influence,” as alleged by some Middle Eastern leaders.

“We didn’t fund them to start protests, but we did help support their development of skills and networking,” said Stephen McInerney, executive director of the Project on Middle East Democracy, a Washington-based advocacy and research group. “That training did play a role in what ultimately happened, but it was their revolution. We didn’t start it.”

Some Egyptian youth leaders attended a 2008 technology meeting in New York, where they were taught to use social networking and mobile technologies to promote democracy. Among those sponsoring the meeting were Facebook, Google, MTV, Columbia Law School and the State Department.

“We learned how to organize and build coalitions,” said Bashem Fathy, a founder of the youth movement that ultimately drove the Egyptian uprisings. Mr. Fathy, who attended training with Freedom House, said, “This certainly helped during the revolution.”

Ms. Qadhi, the Yemeni youth activist, attended American training sessions in Yemen.

“It helped me very much because I used to think that change only takes place by force and by weapons,” she said.

But now, she said, it is clear that results can be achieved with peaceful protests and other nonviolent means.

But some members of the activist groups complained in interviews that the United States was hypocritical for helping them at the same time that it was supporting the governments they sought to change.

“While we appreciated the training we received through the NGOs sponsored by the U.S. government, and it did help us in our struggles, we are also aware that the same government also trained the state security investigative service, which was responsible for the harassment and jailing of many of us,” said Mr. Fathy, the Egyptian activist.

Interviews with officials of the nongovernmental groups and a review of diplomatic cables obtained by WikiLeaks show that the democracy programs were constant sources of tension between the United States and many Arab governments.

The cables, in particular, show how leaders in the Middle East and North Africa viewed these groups with deep suspicion, and tried to weaken them. Today the work of these groups is among the reasons that governments in turmoil claim that Western meddling was behind the uprisings, with some officials noting that leaders like Ms. Qadhi were trained and financed by the United States.

Diplomatic cables report how American officials frequently assured skeptical governments that the training was aimed at reform, not promoting revolutions.

Last year, for example, a few months before national elections in Bahrain, officials there barred a representative of the National Democratic Institute from entering the country.

In Bahrain, officials worried that the group’s political training “disproportionately benefited the opposition,” according to a January 2010 cable.

In Yemen, where the United States has been spending millions on an anti-terrorism program, officials complained that American efforts to promote democracy amounted to “interference in internal Yemeni affairs.”

But nowhere was the opposition to the American groups stronger than in Egypt.

Egypt, whose government receives $1.5 billion annually in military and economic aid from the United States, viewed efforts to promote political change with deep suspicion, even outrage.

Hosni Mubarak, then Egypt’s president, was “deeply skeptical of the U.S. role in democracy promotion,” said a diplomatic cable from the United States Embassy in Cairo dated Oct. 9, 2007.

At one time the United States financed political reform groups by channeling money through the Egyptian government.

But in 2005, under a Bush administration initiative, local groups were given direct grants, much to the chagrin of Egyptian officials.

According to a September 2006 cable, Mahmoud Nayel, an official with the Egyptian Ministry of Foreign Affairs, complained to American Embassy officials about the United States government’s “arrogant tactics in promoting reform in Egypt.”

The main targets of the Egyptian complaints were the Republican and Democratic institutes. Diplomatic cables show that Egyptian officials complained that the United States was providing support for “illegal organizations.”

Gamal Mubarak, the former president’s son, is described in an Oct. 20, 2008, cable as “irritable about direct U.S. democracy and governance funding of Egyptian NGOs.”

The Egyptian government even appealed to groups like Freedom House to stop working with local political activists and human rights groups.

“They were constantly saying: ‘Why are you working with those groups, they are nothing. All they have are slogans,’ ” said Sherif Mansour, an Egyptian activist and a senior program officer for the Middle East and North Africa at Freedom House.

When their appeals to the United States government failed, the Egyptian authorities reacted by restricting the activities of the American nonprofit organizations.

Hotels that were to host training sessions were closed for renovations. Staff members of the groups were followed, and local activists were intimidated and jailed. State-owned newspapers accused activists of receiving money from American intelligence agencies.

Affiliating themselves with the American organizations may have tainted leaders within their own groups. According to one diplomatic cable, leaders of the April 6 Youth Movement in Egypt told the American Embassy in 2009 that some members of the group had accused Ahmed Maher, a leader of the January uprising, and other leaders of “treason” in a mock trial related to their association with Freedom House, which more militant members of the movement described as a “Zionist organization.”

A prominent blogger, according to a cable, threatened to post the information about the movement leaders’ links to Freedom House on his blog.

There is no evidence that this ever happened, and a later cable shows that the group ousted the members who were complaining about Mr. Maher and other leaders.

In the face of government opposition, some groups moved their training sessions to friendlier countries like Jordan or Morocco. They also sent activists to the United States for training.

 

Source: New York Times

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