9/30/19

Message to the Muslims by UCLA's Professor Khaled Abou El Fadl


An excerpt of the Friday khutba of Professor Khaled Abou El Fadl, Distinguished Professor of Law at the UCLA School of Law on September 30, 2019:

"Every imam - and this is a message to all out there - every imam that defends an unjust ruler, that defends unjust imprisonments, that defends torture. Torture! Torture! That apologizes and justifies governments that rape women in political prisons. Every imam that does that - you know what it is that they are effectively saying? - they are saying that there is no philosophical justification for the Prophet Muhammad SAWS to be the last prophet. Because the way it all works, is that I have perfected.. here is God's perfected message, the complete message. Now that the prophecy has ended, your ummah should carry the torch. But if the ummah doesn't carry the torch, then what happens to the torch of the Prophet SAWS?

Do you see why this is a disaster? Do you see why this is a mind-numbing thing? When the Prophet says, okay, in the final day, in the hereafter, I have perfected the message, finally human beings have been elevated through Ibrahim and Musa and Ismail and Yaqub.. and so on.. have been elevated to understand the difference between uboodiyah - submission - to God and the degradation of submission to a fellow human being. Alhamdulillah, I have taught - we prophets - through generations taught you the message. Now what did you do as the great inheritors of Islam?

And you say, you know what, as Muslims what we have instituted is dictatorship, destitution, and suffering. Shameful! Untenable! Miserable!

The reason I say this is because this is our fate. This is our responsibility, this is what we are about. But as I speak right now there are people in countries like Egypt who are trying to remove a fascist - FASCIST - dictator called Abdul Fattah El Sisi. A fascist dictator who has imprisoned over sixty thousand people. Who has executed - murdered - thousands of people. And - and this is my specialty - who has practiced the worst forms of torture, including raping women and political prisoners. Of course, he labels anyone that he arrests and persecutes ikhwan or terrorist, including people who have lived their lives being anti-ikhwan like Professor Hassan Nafa', who was recently arrested and charged as a terrorist in Egypt. 

I can't give this khutba without thinking of how many brave souls are going to the streets and are going to end up thrown in a political prison or murdered - killed by the security forces. If I was in Egypt, then it would become my moral obligation to go and try to remove one of the worst pharaohs Egypt has seen in its history, in its long history. One of the most corrupt and brutal pharaohs that Egypt has ever seen. 

But because I am in America, the part that concerns me is that my president calls this fascist "my favorite dictator" and sits there and says, "there used to be chaos in Egypt before Abdel Fattah El Sisi came, now Egypt is okay." And I know that my president doesn't care about democracy in the Muslims world. But even worst, doesn't care about justice in the Muslims world. I know that my president is happy when he sees Muslims unjust, backwards, retarded, barbaric. It fulfills his world view. It affirms... I handled cases with a lot of New York, high level attorneys - commercial cases. And high level commercial cases in London. and one of the things that struck me about this high level attorney culture that get paid hundreds and hundreds of dollars for each hour, and so on and so forth is how thoroughly racist they are. As they worked on cases with Saudi money, Emirati money, and Qatari money, they at the same time looked at their clients as barbaric people - as nothing - simply because they are Muslim. 

The world is not going to do it for us, as Muslims, if we Muslims accept the likes of Abdel Fattah El Sisi as representative of one of the largest Muslim countries on earth, Egypt, and we accept that our American president supports and aids a fascist dictator like El Sisi. 

Then what are we about as an Ummah?"

Full video:

7/15/19

Egypt: Freedom for mothers imprisoned over political motivations



Since the 2013 military coup, Egypt has been holding more than 60,000 political prisoners in brutal conditions. Anyone, and seemingly everyone, who speaks openly about the military coup, and opposes the rampant injustice and oppression in the country is targeted for disappearance and imprisonment. Conditions were recently brought to international attention when former President Muhammad Morsi died in June due to medical neglect in an Egyptian courtroom.
Image may contain: 10 people, people smiling, text

One common trend of the Egyptian's security forces is to target Muslim women, particularly mothers. Three mothers recently imprisoned are Ola Al Qaradawi, Aya Alaa Hosni, and Reem El Desouky.
Ola Al Qaradawi, an Egyptian with permanent residency in the state of Washington in the USA, and the daughter of the popular Egyptian Sheikh Yusuf Al Qaradawi, has been held in torturous conditions of solitary confinement since June, 2017 without any conviction. She was ordered released on July 3rd, 2019, but then was sent back to solitary confinement the next day on new charges. She is currently on hunger strike.
Ayaa Alaa Hosni, an Egyptian journalist, was disappeared in June, 2019. She is currently in prison, and is being targeted because she spoke to the media about the imprisonment of her husband, Hassan Qabbani. After the coup, he was imprisoned for several years, and only recently released. The couple have two daughters.
Reem El Desouky, an Egyptian-American resident of Lancaster, Pennsylvania, was disappeared and imprisoned when she arrived in Egypt on July 8th, 2019. She has a strong reputation in the community in Pennsylvania, and wished to go visit family in Egypt, when, reportedly, her ex-husband reported her to the Egyptian authorities. The United States Embassy in Egypt refuses to support her release, despite her US citizenship.
Please share this information widely and speak up for the prisoners in Egypt. They have no other advocates besides you!

2/22/19

Feb 2019: An Egyptian Canadian citizen disappears in Egypt

There have been many cases of forced disappearances upon arrival to Egypt of Egyptians living abroad with no political activity, who haven't even been in the country for so long. Meanwhile, there is little to no reporting whatsoever in the countries where these people have immigrated, succeeded, and invested their lives and souls in.

The most recent case we came across is about Egyptian Canadian citizen Yasser Ahmed Albaz, an active leader in the Muslim community in Canada. We are sharing this message from his daughter's page, Amal Al Baz, a young woman poet.

https://www.facebook.com/amalahmedalbaz/

URGENT UPDATE ON YASSER AHMED (ALBAZ)
February 22, 2019


"Yasser Ahmed (Albaz) Detained By Egyptian Authorities

On Monday our family was horror-struck when our loved one, Yasser Albaz, disappeared in the Cairo International Airport by Egyptian authorities.

Yasser had traveled to Egypt in December for business purposes. However, while leaving Egypt to return home to Canada, as he was passing through passport control, he was pulled aside. Before losing communication he informed our family that he was pulled aside by passport control as his name was flagged for additional clearance. His last message was to a friend telling him that he was taken by Egypt’s state security.

The case has been reported to Global Affairs Canada and our family is in regular communication with consular authorities.

The Egyptian government denied detaining Yasser for days. It remains unclear why he is being unlawfully detained by Egyptian state security. It remains unknown when or if he will be released. And most critically, there is great concern around the condition of his detention and if he is being treated according to international human rights laws. Our family is gravely concerned for his safety and his life.

We hope our Canadian Minister of Foreign Affairs, Chrystia Freeland, will immediately contact the Egyptian government to resolve this matter and bring Yasser home to his wife, children, and grandchildren.

We are grateful to everyone who has reached out and offered support. Yasser is a well respected community leader and Canadian who has dedicated his life to serving his community and his country. 
Our family calls for community members to contact their Member of Parliament, express concern and request that the Minister of Foreign Affairs intervene and ensure his safe return home to Canada."
 
Nosayba Ahmed, an Egyptian woman in the US responded to the post saying: 

This happened to my parents too and they stayed under enforced disappearance for 22 days and now they are detained in different prisons on false charges, they took my sister who was dropping them off too and she stayed for 22 days under #enforceddisappearance too and they released her at 2 AM on the streets and told her to go home after they took her phone, car and money, I hope this doesn't happen to your brother and I'm praying that he is reunited with his family soon, we live a nightmare that we would never imagine happening in our life, my parents were coming to visit their daughters and grandchildren in the US where we live and they have visited many countries before, the sisi regime is criminal!

2/6/19

Mohamed Abdelhafiz: Deported from Turkey to face death


The Egyptian social media has been buzzing with the haunting photo of a young Egyptian man handcuffed and seated on a flight from Turkey as he was being deported to Egypt, a country he had to run away from to safe his life. 


This is Mohamed Abdel Hafiz with his son who was born outside of Egypt and has no documentation because of his father's political history. The wife and son are still stranded in an African country while Mohamed is forcibly disappeared in Egypt since his deportation.

Before he got to Turkey in January 2019, Mohamed had to run away from Egypt into several African and Asian countries (Sudan, Somalia, Malaysia, and others) after he was framed in a political case with hundreds of other innocent young Egyptians.
Turkish authorities deported him back to Egypt while aware of his death sentence and the fact he will be tortured or killed upon returning to Egypt. Mohamed is a member of the Muslim Brotherhood and that shouldn't be a crime in itself as Sisi's government claims.
But mass executions in Egypt are a crime, and the Turkish authorities deporting a man whose life and safety are threatened is a crime.
According to the Egyptian state, Mohammed is considered a terrorist who is accused of participating with a hundred others in the assassination of an Egyptian official who received a death sentence in a mass trial along with all other defendants. However, anyone who is following and is aware of the tragic crisis in Egypt since the military coup in 2013 knows that fabricated accusations in unfair trials are far more common than anything otherwise.

it is very important to understand these verdicts in the light of the political atmosphere in Egypt after the military coup and the extremely harsh crackdown on dissent since then.
Mohamed's story is one of a thousand other stories for young Egyptian men victims of the bloody unjust military coup and corrupt judiciary system. On top of that very few countries open their doors to Egyptian runaways as refugees or asylum seekers. 

Abdurrahman Abu Elela maybe deported to Egypt from Turkey
Another victim who may face deportation from Turkey to Egypt soon whom we became acquainted with recently is Abdurrahman Abu Elela, a young Egyptian man who arrived to Turkey several months ago to seek asylum only to be detained inside the Turkish airport in Ankara but was sent to a border immigration prison in the past few days and is currently on a hunger-strike. 

These are just two examples with very limited reporting on Egyptian runaways who are seeking asylum and are being detained and deported instead of being supported.

Their stories are rarely told in other languages so we ask you to help us share them with the rest of the world.

1/5/19

Sisi denies holding 60,000 political prisoners, former prisoners respond



As a response to Abdel Fattah Al Sisi’s blatant lies on a promo from CBS’s 60 Minutes show which will air tomorrow Sunday where he said: We don’t have any political prisoners in Egypt, some Egyptian former political prisoners and families of current political prisoners have responded with stories of their suffering and the injustice caused by political imprisonment in Egypt. Here we will share some of these comments they left on the CBS’s video story as well as on the hashtag #iamapoliticalprisoner #CBS:

 All these accounts were posted as comments on CBS’s Facebook page and they maybe lost in the future that’s why we wanted to keep them here for the record. The words and experiences of those prisoners and their families should get as much attention as this liar dictator is getting. We need to help spread them at least.






أنا سارة مهني صحفية.. اعتقلت يوم ٢٠١٧/٠٦/٢٩ بسبب كوني صاحبة رأي معارض لسياسات النظام الحاكم.. ظللت رهينة الاعتقال لمدة ٧٦ يوم و استأنفت على استمرار حبسي و تم اخلاء سبيلي و بعد ذلك حكم عليّ بعامين من محكمة امن الدولة طوارئ حكم بات لا يقبل النقض و لا يسقط بالتقادم.
1- My name is sara mohani, I'm an Egyptian journalist, I had been arrested on 2017/6/29 because I have a dissenting opinion to the policies of the ruling regime. I remained in detention for 76 days and I appealed the detention decision and released temporary and later I have been sentenced for 2 years by the state security court, which is not subject to veto or prescription.
2- Hesham Nasser" was detained 5 years ago when he was only 17 years old! They deprived him of completing his education. He has been tortured until he suffered Epilepsy and periodic paralysis. At the end, he was sentenced to 7 years in jail.

3- I’m Hoda Abdelmonem, 60 years old, a human rights defender and a former member of the National Council for Human Rights. I’m a mother and a grandmother. I was pulled off of my house at dawn two moths ago and taken to an unknown place. I couldn’t see my lawyer or my family for a long time. My place of detention is still unknown. I provide legal assistance to the victims in Egypt and now I’m with these victims inside. There’s 70 women politically detained in Egypt. I demand the release of all political detainees.

4- I’m Eid Dahroug, 70 years old. I was detained on 14/5/2014 along with my son Dr. Abdul-Rahman who was sent to Burj Al-Arab Prison where he spent two years of detention and suffered from all sorts of torture. As for me, I was put in a cell in Scorpion Prison since nearly 5 years and I’ve been deprived of my family visits for 9 months until now. Moreover, I suffer from medical negligence not to mention that I am 70 years old and I suffer from renal failure—that needs an urgent “nephrectomy of kidney” surgery—chronic eye fly, left hand paralysis, herniated disk in the neck vertebrae, and diaphragmatic rupture. Nevertheless, I’ve been deprived of medication and doctor visits. However, Sissi hadn’t been satisfied with that yet, so my second son, 17, was detained two months after my detention and then was sent to Wady Al-Natroun Prison where he is still confined for more than 4 years and a half during which he faced all sorts of torture and couldn’t complete his education until now.

5- I'm Ahmed Zakaria 23 years old I have been detained for 5 years since 15/8/2013 till 16/8/2018 i was 18 y.o when i detained .. I lost my dream to be a doctor cuz i cannot complete my education like i wanted and uptill now I still want to achieve my goal to be a doctor 😕😕

6- Attia: From the wife of a friend of mine who got arrested and in enforced disappearance: “This is the eleventh day of the enforced disappearance of my husband, "Mohammed Ezzeldin Malek" after his arrest while traveling Sunday December 23, 2018, from Cairo airport, Egypt. Three years ago he tried to travel with his family to USA, but he was prevented from travel at the airport. We were informed then that the reason for the ban is solely that he is the brother of "Hassan Malek." There were no charges against him but he was just prevented from travel. I was forced to take the children to USA out of fear of further persecution to the family, so my husband was separated from his wife and children for the past 3 years. Our daughter was severely ill and one of his friends told him that the illegal travel ban on travel was removed so he tried to book a flight and travel to USA to be reunited with his family.

My husband had completed his travel procedures legally at the airport and his papers and passport were all official and legal. Without any lawful reason the commercial aircraft was brought back after take-off, and shortly before arriving to its destination. My husband was taken off the plane without any legal charges. My husband has disappeared since that time and we are terrified that he is being subjected to torture or that he may be assassinated. 

We were dreaming as a family that we could have a safe and quiet life. We would be together to deal with the medical hardships that our daughter has. Instead, I have to keep hiding the bad news from my children while waiting for the unknown. I have to deal with the pain, anxiety, and inability to do anything to help my husband. I don't know for how long I will have to make up excuses to answer the constant question from my children "Why doesn’t my father call" O God, Please save my husband...”

7- Sayed Abdelgawad: The son of my friend , 14 years old is hold in Sisi' prison since 2013.

8- I have my brother now political prisoner his name is Mohamed abdelsalm aboserya.

9- Khadeja Ahmed: I am an Egyptian woman, I was arrested by Egyption forces from my home and still in the prison for 6 months. I am evidance for many children under age 18 were arrested and stay untill now in Sisi's prisons #I_am_a_political_prisoner

10- #Mohamed_Ali_Bishr 68 years old , arrested from 4 years without any crime at scorpion jail .. I couldn’t see my lawyer or my family since #march 2018.

11- My name is Zeinab Hassan. I was arrested on 4/11/2013 and suffered from numerous verbal, physical and psychological abuses. Furthermore, I was faced with many fabricated accusations that no girl can ever commit, like: bearing a machine gun, assaulting security forces, public security threat, and spreading terror among citizens. All of that was because I oppose the regime’s policies. This, I was detained for 45 days, made an appeal while in jail then I was released. After that I was sentenced to 2 years in jail and now I’ve fled Egypt.

12- I’m Sohaib Emad, 20 years old. I’ve been arrested when I was 15 among my mum and family. I’ve faced fabricated accuses that never suit my age, like setting fire in police cars and targeting cops! I was sentenced to 3 years in jail, all of which I spent in the brutal inhumane prison. 1 year later after I’ve been released, however, I was detained again for 1 week. My friends are still suffering in jail. I demand the release of all political prisoners in Egypt.

13- I’m Abdul-Rahman Atef, an Egyptian attorney who has been detained many times in several governorates for lawsuits that have nothing to do with me. Recently, some sentences was pronounced against me, and I was accused of other new political cases. The only reason for all of this nonsense is that I’m a human rights advocate in Egypt.
The following is a translated blog post from 2 years ago written by a political prisoner after being released from prison.

11/30/18

إخفاء الحقوقية هدى عبد المنعم Disappeared human rights lawyer Hoda


 IMPORTANT: A statement from the family of Egyptian human right advocate Hoda Abdelmoniem

After 21 days of enforced disappearance by the Egyptian authorities, our family was surprised to find out yesterday, November 21, that Hoda Abdelmonem appeared in the state security prosecution office in cairo. This happened without informing the family or lawyers.

As soon as the family knew, members of the family alongside our lawyers went to the prosecution office. It was a few hours until the lawyers were able to attend the interrogations with her. After four hours of interrogations, Hoda's daughters were able to see her At 2:30 am and were shocked to find that Hoda, the 60-year old mother and grandmother, was in a dire health condition with clear signs of loss weight, psychological trauma, severe signs of instability and shock. She couldn't give a reason for her condition to her family members.

The appearance of our mother, the former member of the National Council for Human Rights, after weeks of disappearance makes us very worried especially with her remaining in detention. Hoda Abdelmonem is a public figure with well known character, her activities are all practiced in public and her work and home addresses are known to the authorities.
We can see no reason to first abduct and hide her, then keep her in detention but as a sense of revenge by the Egyptian authorities because of her activism and advocacy.
The Ministry of Interior has the full responsibility for her safety and wellbeing.

The Family of Hoda Abdelmonem
22 Novemebr 2018

#WhereisHoda #FreeHoda

8/17/18

Rabaa: The massacre that ended the Arab Spring


This article appeared originally on Middle East Eye:


We are publishing this as a 101 guide for those who don't know all about the massacres and the military coup. Most of the English articles we come across are reductive, biased, or and inaccurate but this article was closer to the truth and to what we have experienced and what our friends and family members have seen. 

*********************
Five years ago, Egypt witnessed the Rabaa massacre, often described as the end of the Arab Spring.
On 14 August, 2013, Egyptian security forces conducted a brutal operation to clear thousands of protesters, killing at least 1,000.
Many call it the worst mass killing of demonstrators in modern history, with its death toll surpassing the Tiananmen Square massacre in China in 1989 and the Andijan massacre in Uzbekistan in 2005.

What led to Rabaa?

On 30 June 2012, in the aftermath of the pro-democracy 2011 Egyptian revolution, Mohamed Morsi, the chairman of the Freedom and Justice Party and high-ranking Muslim Brotherhood member, became the first freely-elected civilian president in Egypt’s modern history.
Morsi’s tenure was short-lived, however. Exactly a year after his election victory, Morsi's opponents staged nationwide protests, blaming him and his party for the deteriorating economic and political situation the country was in.
The protests were backed by the army, and on 3 July, 2013 Morsi was deposed by a military coup by his defence minister, Abdel Fattah el-Sisi, who is now president.
In response, Morsi's supporters and critics of the coup, including Muslim Brotherhood members and pro-democracy civilians, staged nationwide protests demanding he be reinstated and a return to democracy.
The largest sit-in was held in Rabaa al-Adaweya Square in the northern Cairo district of Nasr City. Some 85,000 protesters camped there for six weeks until they were violently dispersed, in what became known as the Rabaa massacre.

Was Rabaa the only massacre?

All major protests demanding Morsi's reinstatement were crushed by brutal force.
In July and August 2013, five separate mass killings took place, as Egyptian security forces killed at least 1,150 protesters in what were widely considered crimes against humanity. Investigations by independent rights groups reported that the killings were intentional and systematic.

 Who were the protesters?

Estimated to be nearly 85,000 people strong, protesters at the Rabaa sit-in were overwhelmingly peaceful, middle-class Egyptians. Many were said to be members of the Muslim Brotherhood, but many others were non-partisan civilians opposed to the coup. They included women, children and elderly people.

What happened in Rabaa?

Egyptian authorities promised a gradual dispersal of the protest, and said they would provide safe exits for people to leave the square.
The actual dispersal, however, was the opposite of that. In the span of 12 hours, from sunrise to sunset, security forces fired live ammunition on large crowds of protesters in intense fusillades.
The security forces used armoured personnel carriers (APCs), bulldozers, ground forces and snipers. They were covered by army tanks deployed outside the square.
Then-Interior Minister Mohamed Ibrahim later admitted in a TV interview that he had anticipated at least 2,000 fatalities among the protesters during the dispersal. This was echoed by then-Prime Minister Hazem Beblawi, who also said in an interview with the press that “the final outcome was less that we expected”.
The square was besieged for most of the day. Attacks were carried out from all the five entrances to the square, making it lethal for trapped protesters to try and leave the square or for the wounded to be transported to hospitals. Many of those who tried to escape were shot dead.
Most of the casualties were shot in the head, neck or chest.
Towards the end of the operation, security forces advanced towards the mosque and hospital in the centre of the square and asked the volunteer medics present to leave the wounded behind and exit the square. Then they set fire to the mosque and hospital, including the corpses of those killed and the wounded protesters who were still alive.
Evidence documented by independent rights groups suggests that most of the security forces' fire targeted crowds of unarmed protesters, which led to the high number of casualties.

Who were the victims?

Around 1,000 protesters are estimated to have been killed on that day. They included at least 30 children and 19 women, most killed by bullets to the head or chest.
Security forces detained 800 protesters over the course of the day, and summarily executed many of them.
Several journalists were killed while covering the event, including British Sky News cameraman Mick Deane, and two Al Jazeera cameramen.
Although the protesters were largely peaceful, the official Forensic Medical Authority said eight police officers were killed on that day.

Who was behind the operation?

The Rabaa operation was carried out by the interior ministry, then led by Ibrahim, and supervised by Sisi, who was defence minister and deputy prime minister for security affairs. The commander of police forces on that day was General Medhat Menshawy.

Was anyone prosecuted?

Yes, the surviving protesters. Not a single official was held accountable for Rabaa massacre. Menshawy, who was in charge of carrying out the operation, was later promoted to assistant minister of interior for central security. All officers who participated in the sit-in were given a bonus in recognition of their efforts. Sisi became president in June 2014.
On 3 July 2018, marking the fifth anniversary of the coup, the Egyptian parliament approved a law that exempts senior army officers from prosecution for any acts committed since July 2013. That includes Rabaa and seven other mass killings.
Nearly 1,000 protesters were prosecuted and many of them received life sentences and death sentences for their role in the demonstrations that followed the 2013 coup.

How did the world react?

The European Union and the United States condemned the killings, but later carried on business as usual with the Sisi government. The EU suspended its export of military equipment to Egypt after the massacre, but allowed individual states to continue to supply Egypt with weapons.
The US withheld part of its military aid in 2013 and 2017 but then released it, triggering accusations that it gave Sisi a "green light for repression”. Similarly, the UK, Egypt’s largest trade partner, revoked some arms export licences after the massacre, but arms sales later resumed.

7/21/18

A response to the celebrated Egyptian elite "activists'

A group of Egyptian activists and ordinary citizens who are never mentioned in English media coverage

For some reason Middle East Eye decided to interview only a handful of famous activists who are not only known to have very liberal positions, but also are very open about having supported and rallied people in Egypt and abroad for #June30. 

While they have all by a way or another paid a price from their personal freedoms due to the crackdown of the Egyptian military dictatorship on all opponents, they all clearly insist on stating that they "don't regret supporting #June30", a movement recognized as undemocratic, irrational, and catastrophic by all those who care or don't care about the prosperity of Egypt.   

It is shocking and disappointing to see how Middle East Eye is shifting more and more towards giving a platform only to liberal and secular celebrity voices in Egypt, a trend that has been apparent in the majority of western media outlets since protests erupted in Egypt in 2011.

If Middle East Eye is seriously concerned with the Egyptian turmoil they need to do a better job than this. You can hire an Arabic-English translator or try to find more people to interview other than the 10 upper-middle-class Egyptians who supported the coup whom everyone in the world interviews since 2011.

We are writing this blog however because we were delighted to see a wonderfully written response from a commentator on the silly article. The comment breaks down the issue of Egyptian liberal elites contributing to the crisis in Egypt. To our surprise, the comment was by Jim Toth, an anthropologist who studies Egypt, the Arab world, and the wider Islamic community. He has taught at the American University of Cairo and at Northeastern University, and since 2011, has worked at New York University in Abu Dhabi. He is the author of Rural Labor Movements in Egypt and Their Impact in the State, 1961-1992. 

Here is a link to the Middle East Eye article:



http://www.middleeasteye.net/in-depth/A-revolution-betrayed-living-in-Egypt-s-worst-era-1003870706
 
Here is Jim Toth's brilliant response:

Abdel Fatah and her friends are hypocrites. Democracy is when all the people voice their choice and opinion. She and her friends may have their own opinion – support Sisi and oppose Morsi – and so let them vote their choice along with all the millions of other voters in Egypt by holding honest elections. 

But to support an anti-democrat such as Sisi and to support the anti-democratic forces that removed Morsi without due process of an election – this is hypocritical. Don’t say Abdel Fatah was a “co-founder” of April 6. She and her friends are still hypocrites because in the last election
prior to July 3, Morsi had won, and they should, if they are true democrats, respect the people’s decision. 


It is not up to them and their elitist friends (the National Salvation Front) to use their social position, their access to the media, and their westernized demeanor to then remove a democratically-elected president, or support his illegal removal, whether or not he made serious mistakes (mistakes that were amplified and exaggerated by an anti-Brotherhood media). 

Nobel prize? Perhaps she ought to stand in line behind Trump. Both are so preposterously unqualified for a Nobel prize that to consider them seriously degrades the value of the prize itself.

For good reason or bad, the majority of ordinary Egyptians had voted in Morsi, and thus, Abdel
Fatah, along with her elitist friends, along with Sisi and the military, have no right in a democracy to overturn the election, unless they are willing to admit it is anti-democratic act and, therefore, the first step on the road to an authoritarian regime. To then pat themselves on the back and say “what good liberals we are” is the height of hypocrisy.


Is this a conflict between “east Cairo” (old Islamic Cairo) (along with Giza) against European Cairo (the nationalists) and the “wings” of New Cairo and October 6 (the neo-liberals)? Abdel Fatah and her crowd are so willing to dismiss the values and principles of the majority of her country-men and -women in those areas who wanted, and voted for, an uncorrupted (naïve?) candidate as president, one that did not have all the un-Egyptian trappings of ibn al-zayyat. In the last presidential elections, many more Egyptians supported a Muslim Brotherhood government than they supported a secular, westernized elitist government. 

She and her friends ought to recognize that, show some humility, some respect, and in democratic fashion, work within the system rather than support and commit extra-legal, unconstitutional acts.

For all her deeds, and those of her friends, they got Sisi, a 100-fold worse than Morsi. Had they been patient, respectful, and lawful, or had insisted on respect, legitimacy, and real democracy, they would not be stuck with Egypt’s worst dictator.

Perhaps they got what they deserved, but, of course, they are not going to be the ones who really hurt for it. But it is the Egyptian people, those unable to make it through the dismal economy and those jailed for belonging to the Brotherhood, who do not deserve this calamity. 

This crime lies squarely on the shoulders of the secular liberals who ought to have known better, but made a pact with the devil in order to assure themselves that their beliefs and way of life are better than those of the majority of Egyptian.

4/1/18

Our Egypt vs. Egypt in the Western mind

The only images known about Egypt in the western mind are of magic and Pharaohs
One of the most frustrating things about being an Egyptian living in a western society, or talking with westerners about where you come from, and sometimes even just being able to read English alone is that you are constantly reminded that westerners care more about ancient Egyptian mythology and orientalist images of Egyptian kings and queens than they care about your own story and reality of where contemporary Egypt is at today.

Westerners have zero interest in wanting to know about pretty much anything that's not pyramids and Pharaohs related. They have zero interest in today's Egyptians, including yourself.

They don't care that Egypt also has an Arab and Islamic heritage in addition to its ancient Pharaonic cizilization, or that it has been an Arab and Muslim land for the past 1400 years, or that it is a post-colony which fought fiercely against the French and the British colonization efforts, and today against other forms of oppression.


 They don't care about how Egyptians who live in Egypt today look like, think, dream, live, suffer, thrive, and continue to struggle for their quest towards a better and more dignified life in their beloved country Egypt. They don't care about the massive disparity between the rich and the poor, the political turmoil, the deteriorating health and education, the crazy rates of unemployment and the complete lack of opportunity for the youth.

Will Smith Posts on His Facebook About Egypt and the ...

The western media doesn't cover stories on Egypt but every once in a while you will see tons of stories on major news outlets about finding an Egyptian king's head in Cairo, and Will Smith posing with the Sphinx to promote tourism everywhere on the internet. 
 
They might wake up and cover the electoral processes some but their reporting will be very reserved and won't touch on any serious issues because they don't want to upset their governments which support the Egyptian military regime with money and weapons. 

3/26/18

Egyptian Presidential Elections: 2012 and now

Today is the beginning of the farce elections where General Abdul Fattah Al Sisi is the only candidate running. You don't hear much anywhere in the world that this is taking place because it's a shameful joke that nobody is going to take seriously. 

I remember how things were completely different 6 years ago during the elections in 2012. Although I decided not to vote to any of the candidates, I can't deny that the atmosphere and the accomplishments we made were a source of pride and hope for us Egyptians and everyone else who was following us around the world.

Egypt experienced 1 genuine historical round of elections in 2012 after the blessed Egyptian revolution of January 25th, 2011. While it wasn't 'perfect', it was the closest experience to a democratic process Egypt could have dreamed of at that time.

After the revolution, Egypt was trying to recover long decades of military dictatorship, oppression, lack of political space, and tons of social and political illnesses.

The 2012 round came as a result of the efforts and sacrifices of the Egyptian revolutionary when their expectations and dreams were the strongest voice in the whole country.

The Supreme Council of the Armed Forces (SCAF) didn't want ANY elections held but the people at that time were pushing hard and made it possible.

Egypt had dozens of presidential candidates, Egyptians were discussing politics openly everywhere, electoral campaigns were active all over the country, freedom, excitement, and aspirations were all in the air. There was no way you could miss all of this or take it lightly. This was literally the very first time Egyptians were given the choice of choosing their ruler in a very very long time.

The overthrow of Muhammad Morsi, the first democratically elected president of Egypt who is now suffering medical negligence in prison, destroyed all of this. That's why June 30th, 2013 was a cheap military coup and if you think otherwise and claim to be a 'revolutionary' you are either deluded or fooling yourself. We will continue to speak up.