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On #ArabAprilFools, Middle East Tweets Hope And Despair

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Ivan Plis Reporter, Daily Caller News Foundation
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Twitter users across the Arab world and its observers outside the region took advantage of Wednesday’s April Fools’ Day festivities to air their exasperation with the hashtag #ArabAprilFools.

Between Arab states’ bombing campaign against Iranian-aligned rebels in Yemen, ongoing nuclear negotiations between the U.S. and Iran and a climate of pessimism over the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, the region abounds with stress and annoyance.

So users turned the holiday, which in Western online news has become a time for blatantly satirical headlines, into a pressure valve for airing their discontent and their hope for the future.

Many of the tweets expressed frustration with corrupt or hypocritical leaders in the region, including those who profess solidarity with the Palestinian people:

Others simply acknowledged the absurdity of Arab politics:

Lebanon’s bitterly divided parliament was supposed to elect a president in April 2014, but no candidate could win the required two-thirds vote. The country has continued with an incomplete political system since then.

Some tweets poked fun at the Islamic State terror group’s shadowy leader, turning him into a laughable comic book villain:

And some criticized the Egyptian government’s perceived heavy-handedness in the interest of stability:

Shaimaa al-Sabbagh, a peaceful secular protester killed by police gunfire in January, has become the latest sign of Egyptian police overreach. Authorities recently announced that eyewitnesses to her death will also face criminal charges. (RELATED: Egypt Fires Spokesman Who Said Dead Protester Was Too Thin To Survive Police Gunfire)

A Libyan-American grumbled about the ongoing Saudi-led coalition of bombings in Yemen:

(RELATED: Nearly 100 Children Caught In Yemen Cross Fire This Week)

And as the bombs fell in Yemen with Pakistani support, one user suggested that Saudi Arabia could adjust its notoriously harsh policy toward South Asian migrant workers:

Domestic servants and manual laborers from Pakistan, Sri Lanka and other countries receive minimum legal protection in Saudi Arabia, where some employers treat them as virtual slaves by taking away their passports and withholding wages.

Not all tweets focused on political gloom in the region. Some were more lighthearted, poking fun at Arab customs and the Arabic language.

… as well as stereotypes about Arabs’ quarrelsomeness and punctuality:

When the hashtag’s popularity inevitably spread, it eventually attracted racist content against both Arabs and Jews, as well as a jab at American journalists. But as the region’s inhabitants face a bleak 2015, Twitter may prove to be the most fruitful platform for the Middle East’s future.

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