Saturday, February 05, 2011

Scenes from the Egyptian Revolution; a Background

To an outsider it may seem puzzling why a revolution started now in Egypt, but as a keen observer I could see it coming all along, perhaps at a different timing.

Don't get me wrong though, the timing was perfect. Talk about accumulations ... tens of years of accumulations. If you take police brutality as one reason for protests, it has been practiced systematically ever since 1952 against political opponents, though in recent years it has also crushed to death innocent people, even those who have not been accused of any crime. Several high profile cases against policemen have been filed. Still, the source of the problem, the culture of state-induced violence and impunity as well as the emergency law imposed since Mubarak assumed power (not a coincidence), remains a culprit towards dignity for Egyptians.

Let's focus on the last five years. Hundreds of protests, sit-ins and marches were organised by thousands for various political and economic reasons. Because Mubarak and his regime do not have a hint of respect or care for "their" people, they dealt with most of these protests with violence alone instead of diplomacy or any concrete steps towards development. Inevitably this attitude has created vendetta among tens of thousands, mainly downtrodden workers and government employees.

Then the Khaled Said tragedy began. Within a few hours, Facebook pages were created in his memory. At the same time, various political movements organised marches and protests calling for punishing his killers. Through time, the page, created by anonymous, started to shed more light on similar abuses and other regime failures. It has been a haven of debates and most of its fans bitterly criticised this regime. Have you noticed the momentum? Are you watching the snowball rolling? A man gets killed at the hands of policemen, thousands know and are angered, more people get killed the same way, fuelling more anger and frustration, the emergency law which is accused of letting loose policemen on innocent people does not get cancelled still.

A few months after Khaled Said, thousands of kilometres away, a vegetables vendour gets his cart confiscated and a policewoman slaps him when he objects. Hurt and frustrated, he sets himself ablaze, dying a few days later. The self-immolation sparks ever-growing protests calling for basic human rights; bread, dignity, social justice, freedom. No amount of government promises, then sniper shootings and police brutality could quell them. Almost a month later a regime topples and a president flees. This is the Tunisian Revolution.

The Egyptians watched the fall of a repressive regime wistfully. They congratulated the brave Tunisian people and showed solidarity. The Egyptians saw a live and practical example of how to get rid of dictatorship. And it wasn't in the Western "brave new world", but in a country which shares the same language, history, culture and Arab identity. Now was the time to emulate them and let the domino effect work.

Again, within a few hours, the anonymous Khaled Said Facebook page creator called for a "revolution of anger". He succeeded at gathering thousands in "silent protests" before, but this was the first time he actually called upon people to GET ANGRY. This day was the 25th of January, strategically on the government-chosen Police Day, only 11 days after Tunisia's dictator fled. No one expected the response to be very huge. "When you want to slap someone, do you tell him beforehand or do you do it suddenly?" a shop vendour remarked. Luckily, everyone was proven wrong.

In a striking real "remake" of V for Vendetta, then, this anonymous V has been addressing thousands of people via Facebook for months on their rights and sharing with them dreams of prosperity and dignity. Blend all of the effects you may and you can now find the mouth-watering aroma of the revolution. The butterfly effect, the domino effect, the snowball effect.

At one point I said to myself, if Khaled Said hadn't been killed, and his horrific postmortem photos hadn't been published, who knows, maybe this revolution wouldn't be happening. How insane, how ironic, how delicious could it get?

Friday, February 04, 2011

Scenes from the Egyptian Revolution - 1

Egyptians are brilliant heroes ... on Friday the 28th when the police deliberately disappeared and prisoners were released/fleed/were forced to flee the prisons, we had some moments of terror. We heard gunshots in the empty streets and in many areas armed thugs were roaming freely and vandalising shops. It was another brutal step from the Egyptian police which serves two purposes at least: to scare people from joining the massive, unprecedented protests, and to imply to some gullible people that the protesters brought about this violence and chaos. Totally not true. The police started the violence by shooting live ammunition at armless protesters, as expected. They thought they could suppress the people's will, obviously enraging them instead.

On Saturday, even before night fell, we found the neighbourhood mosque sending an urgent message through its minaret. The Mu'ezin urged young people to protect the neighbourhood a la Tunisia and immediately many young men organised themselves quickly and stood holding sticks at the entrances of the neighbourhood and checking cars and everyone going in or out. It was amazing ... Yes! The minarets which Switzerland banned! The minarets which "causes sound pollution"! It was used to protect the neighbourhood and immediately gather people for safety measures. I called my friends to check on them and all of the mosques and young men in their neighbourhoods had the exact same tactics.

That night, I slept most peacefully and deeply. Throughout the night I saw young men relentlessly patrolling the streets and guarding me and my family just because we are neighbours. I saw young men prove they are capable of rebuilding this country which Mubarak's regime has systematically been ruining for long.


Friday, January 28, 2011

Third Day of Revolts in Egypt - 3

Facebook got blocked today ... violent clashes in elharam street, Giza, with ppl flooding from poor areas to protest.

Friday is expected to be a day of mass protests ... I hope the media focuses on other cities besides Cairo, especially Suez where live ammunition was used against demonstrators leaving at least 4 dead.

Thursday, January 27, 2011

Third Day of Revolts in Egypt

According to AlJazeera, protests also spread to Ismailia.

Third Day of Revolts in Egypt

This is an excellent video from almasryalyoum from Tahrir Square on Tuesday. It shows the day turning from peaceful protests to police violence. Towards the end you can hear injured protesters saying: this is terrorism. They are killing us.

Second day of revolts

The second day was yesterday of course, but the internet connection was down and I couldn't access blogger or youtube. I took some photos yesterday, the rest of the time I was watching attacks and abductions in distress.

I arrived in the early morning in downtown, and even from my room I could feel the awful business as usual with cars honking incessantly, as if the 25th of January hasn't been only the day before. I wandered a heavily policed Tahrir Square, a few hours after thousands were spending their night in hopes for the regime to topple. Trying to gather any info on marches. I kept chasing them down until I found a group of around 200 journalists in front of the syndicate as you can see from my recent feed. The numbers increased and there was heavy media presence, so I reckoned it was the only gathering so far. How sad that we're back on the excluded steps of the syndicate, Cairo's Hyde Park. Luckily, I proved to be wrong. Within minutes another group was chanting outside the cordon and the police closed the street to cars and pedestrians. They started to abduct people from the other protest, with the help of thugs. It was awful. We saw people dragged, journalists or not, old and young, including prominent journalist Mohammad Abdul Quddos. We could only scream, cry, or watch in horror. Apparently more people were gathering in nearby areas and soon enough we saw scores of trucks and soldiers in the distance. All our attempts to break security cordon failed and up to the point where I left 10 people were abducted.

On the main street it was chaotic, people rushed from Boulaq abul Ela choking on tear gas and I could see black smoke. Later it was revealed violent clashes took place in the poor neighbourhood and continued throughout the night, resulting in two more deaths, one of them a policeman, which leaves six dead officially so far. In Suez, they opened fire on protesters, that's how they died.

The Tunisian revolution has made it clear to Egyptians that only massive waves of anger will bring down an oppressive regime. We have all seen a dictator fall down who has actually provided better pay and education to his people than has ours. We have a thousand reasons to revolt; poverty, brutality, persecution, oppression, high unemployment rates, low wages, poor health services to name a few.

Twitter remains blocked but those who have access through other applications are spreading the word on protests in Abbassia and Helwan now. Tomorrow is also expected to be a bloody day after Friday prayers...by 40% of the Egyptian population who are below poverty line and have nothing to lose.

Wednesday, January 26, 2011

لقيت حمامة,‏ ‏6‏ تقريبا معتقلين.‏ ماحدش ييجي عشان مجهزين بلطجية برة‏ الكردون
2‏ كمان اتاخدوا
شالوا إحسان عبد القدوس
الوضع أمام النقابة سئ للغاية اعتقال ‏3‏ منهم رجل مسن وضرب متظاهرين
some scuffles and abdelkhalik tharwat st closed. Hundreds of passersby watchhng
we tried 2 break cordon twice ihsan abdul qudoos on the ground

URGENT: PLEASE FIND HAMAMA

Update: Found safe
---
mohamad ahmad hamama was on the phone with me fearing abduction from mansnura univ now can't reach him
we received news that facebook got blocked. Number now may be 300
numbers increasing in front of press syndiate and heavy press coverage
protest now of almost 200 journalists in front of press syndicate
i'm in downtown. Will look for anyone still protesting and try to update. If u know a place pls tell me in a comment. Can't access twitter

Second Day of Revolts in Egypt - 1

According to Rassd network on Facebook, people are regrouping in Tahrir. I cannot confirm whether this is true or not, but I urge everyone to head to downtown now, preferably in groups.

Egypt revolts update - 9

According to @monasosh on blocked Twitter, police fired tear gas, rubber bullets and stunt grenades (?). There are at least three injuries. However, protesters are not backing down.

Urgent Egypt Revolts Update - 8

POLICE STARTED TO DISPERSE TAHRIR SIT-IN. Follow Justicentric, one of the few who seems to be able to acces twitter http://proxite.eu/browse.php?u=Oi8vdHdpdHRlci5jb20vanVzdGljZW50cmlj&b=5