/l- Photo by Jorja Smith - Staff Photographer A crowd gathered to hear Samer Traboulsi, UNCA associate professor of history, discuss the changing climate in Egypt following the resignation of their presi dent two years ago. Academic addresses political landscape of post-revolution Egypt ShaneeSimhoni_ ssimhoni@unca.edu - Staff Writer Although Monday marked the second anniversary of the official resignation of former Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, Egypt remains in a state of turmoil, with many opposing parties claiming a role in its con- changing political scene, according to Samer SouS associate professor of history at UNC ^¥rln flux like many places in the Middle East right now,” said Linda Cornett, chair of the political Sence department at UNCA. “It’s a changing time, and it creates lots of opportunities and lots of anxieties ‘^Traboulsi who conducts research on the history of nre modem Middle East, spoke about post-revolution Pavnt on Feb 5 at UNCA’s Osher Lifelong Learning Site at the Reuter Center. The Western North Car dona World Affairs Council, OLLI and the department of political science co-sponsored a series of talks that wta"'"ou,.~ com... ..id “I.-a a lively audience with a lot of experience, and it keeps *TrabOTlTiiold the audience about Egyptian police of- ficTik who beat young Khaled Saeed to death on June f 2010 after he filmed a police officer engaging m a drug dil Wael Ghonim, another Egyptmn, created a Facebook page to bring attention to the situation. is really unique,” said George Peery, president of the Western North Carolina World Affairs Council. “™ilmvTnTlhrv^oknTp“S Sacks in 2010 an am Photo by Jorja Smith - Staff Photographer Samer Traboulsi talks about the state of knowl edge of the Middle East within the last two years at the Reuter Center last Wednesday. to which police forces retaliated violently, Traboulsi said. “Youth movements are important often as instigators to political change, but they have less staying power than some more established institutions that also are often in the forefront of these movements but then stay there,” said Cornett, a board member of the World Af fairs Council. Responding to the protests in Cairo, Mubarak gave the first of three speeches on Jan. 28, 2011, to which citizens angrily showed the bottom of their shoes, a sign of disrespect. In an attempt to regain control following his second unsuccessful speech on Feb. 1, police offi cials riding on camels and horses attacked protestors in Tahrir Square in what became the Battle of the Camel on Feb. 2, until Mubarak officially resigned on Mon day, following the third speech, Traboulsi said. “Since then, of course, there’s been this whole kind of Arab Spring, Arab Awakening,” said Peery, a for mer political science professor at Mars Hill College. “What it will take is some kind of recognition that op position voices are OK, but that somebody has to have enough power and enough agency and enough support to make decisions.” After Mubarak’s resignation, a series of the first un rigged democratic votes in decades occurred. Voters passed constitutional amendments limiting presiden tial authority, including a ban on declaring a state of emergency, and participated in parliamentary elec tions. The Muslim Brotherhood, Egypt’s well-orga nized non-radical Islamists, took 47 percent of the par liamentary seats. The Al-Nur, or Light Party, Egypt’s radical Islamists, took 25 percent, and the remaining seats went to independents, as dictated by Egyptian law, Traboulsi said. “There is more support for seculars in the cities, but outside the city, there’s a lot more support for the Mus lim Brotherhood,” said Calvin Oppenheim,a resident of Weaverville who attended TVaboulsi’s speech. Although the secular youths instigated the protests that led to Mubarak’s resignation, they only won two see EGYPT on page 5