Protesters returned to Egypt’s streets on Friday, using slogans from the 2011 revolt to voice their discontent with President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi.
It is not a revolution, yet, but thousands of protesters returned to Egypt’s streets on Friday, using slogans from the 2011 uprising to voice their discontent with President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi. Most of the anger was focused on the president’s recent decision to give King Salman of Saudi Arabia two uninhabited islands, Tiran and Sanafir, as a gift.
As the New York Times correspondent Kareem Fahim reported, thousands of protesters rallied outside the journalists’ syndicate in Cairo.
Rare anti-Sisi protest at journalists' syndicate now. Riot police close by. pic.twitter.com/CgKPwCnpFV
— Kareem Fahim (@kfahim) April 15, 2016
Police move to cut off syndicate street with armored truck. New group of protesters start anti military chants. pic.twitter.com/vfrSjLrH5Q
— Kareem Fahim (@kfahim) April 15, 2016
Video recorded by other journalists and activists showed that the chants there included, “They sold our land to Saudi Arabia!” “Down with military rule!” and “The people want the fall of the regime!”
Woman outside Press Synd: "Those islands are just the tip of the iceberg, everything else is also wrong in Egypt" pic.twitter.com/J4juAOdj8M
— cecilia udden (@ceciliauddenm) April 15, 2016
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— Heba Farouk Mahfouz (@HebaFarooq) April 15, 2016
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— Nabil (@aNabbil) April 15, 2016
Thousands massed at #PressSyndicate chanting "The revolutionaries are back in the square." Security forces present. https://t.co/2znYD7kPH6
— ???? ??? (@MarwaFarag) April 15, 2016
EyeWitness at Press Syndicate: '' Im seeing faces I havent seen in many many years''#Tiran_Sanafir pic.twitter.com/isLIDOrxEG
— Amr No 2 CC (@Cairo67Unedited) April 15, 2016
Mada Masr reporter: Protesters raise flag bearing image of Mina Danial, activist killed in 2011 Maspero violence. pic.twitter.com/4H5wsfdfZx
— Mada Masr ??? ??? (@MadaMasr) April 15, 2016
Mina's flag flies again in front of the journo syndicate, Cairo, amidst revolutionary chants. pic.twitter.com/7prrEEP9oN
— Ahdaf Soueif (@asoueif) April 15, 2016
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— ???? ???????? (@HaleemElsharani) April 15, 2016
Marchers nearby also called for the president to simply “Leave!” a demand issued to former President Hosni Mubarak from Tahrir Square in 2011.
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— ???? ???????? (@HaleemElsharani) April 15, 2016
The BBC’s Arabic service shared video of tear gas being fired at marchers earlier on Friday on Mostafa Mahmoud Street in the Cairo district of Mohandiseen.
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— BBC Arabic ?? ?? ?? (@BBCArabic) April 15, 2016
One woman carried a poster dedicated to the memory of Giulio Regeni, an Italian researcher who was abducted and brutally murdered near Tahrir Square on Jan. 25, the fifth anniversary of the 2011 uprising.
protestor holds a sign: "Justice for #GiulioRegeni, the 5 [killed by police] & the all martyrs" At Cairo high court. pic.twitter.com/HvQyxAC0I5
— Amro Ali (@_amroali) April 15, 2016
An image shared by the April 6 Youth movement, one of the groups that helped mobilize support for the 2011 protests, showed a protester holding a placard that read: “#Egypt is not for sale.”
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— A6M???? ???? 6 ????? (@shabab6april) April 15, 2016
The same group — whose leaders have been jailed by Sisi’s government — also shared what it said was a photograph of a journalist being assaulted and detained by plainclothes police officers.
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— A6M???? ???? 6 ????? (@shabab6april) April 15, 2016
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Unsanctioned street protests, which helped bring Sisi to power, were banned after he took office, meaning that the demonstrators risked arrest and jail terms. Across Egypt, police arrested at least 100 protesters in nine different provinces, including 17 journalists, a security source told Aswat Masriya, a local news site supported by the Thomson Reuters Foundation.
After one of the Cairo protest leaders, Khaled Ali, called for a new rally on April 25, the police initially agreed to let the demonstrators at the journalists’ syndicate disperse, according to Ahdaf Soueif, a prominent writer.
Khaled Ali urging people to leave Press Syndicate and protest on April 25 pic.twitter.com/FjdsCn8qAB
— Sharif Kouddous (@sharifkouddous) April 15, 2016
It's over downtown for today. Safe passage negotiated with army. People on the move with promise to return on the 25th. #Egyrevolution
— Ahdaf Soueif (@asoueif) April 15, 2016
A short time later, however, Soueif reported via Twitter that tear gas was fired at the remaining protesters, and others were arrested as they left.
After 30 mins of amnesty police attacked. Gas now. One protestor made it into Journo syndicate then collapsed. pic.twitter.com/Ybpz8zNRXA
— Ahdaf Soueif (@asoueif) April 15, 2016
Now people who remained in syndicate to ensure safety of departing protestors are trapped. Shooting outside. pic.twitter.com/ZdkDIes5yY
— Ahdaf Soueif (@asoueif) April 15, 2016
We're out, but people being picked up in whole area surrounding downtown.
— Ahdaf Soueif (@asoueif) April 15, 2016
Lawyer's heading now for various police stations. Plus ca change. But the street is alive again.
— Ahdaf Soueif (@asoueif) April 15, 2016
To quote a movie, “’Oooh! Ahhh!’ that’s how it always starts. Then later there’s running and um, screaming.”
The last popular regime, as recounted at http://www.ibtimes.com/why-middle-easts-largest-christian-community-fleeing-egypt-2288395 , led to a vast exodus of Coptic Christians. They elected a guy Morsi who did away with the constitution and ruled by decree. What will be different this time?
I wouldn’t get my hopes up because some nationalists are furious over a couple of disputed islands.
This is the kind of time when we need to take what we’ve learned and realize that murder, misery, kidnapping for ransom, stupid prohibitions and corruption are inherent to Islam and we’re not going to make the country any better whatever we do. Hope and Islam are not native to the same place. We just need to stay *out* of it and, for a change, not get blamed for what happens.
Last time around, they were saying that these sorts of things were inherent to Judaism.
Sisi and the deep regime in Egypt require complete obedience and are ready to unleash violence at slightest suspicion. As long as the victims of his violence are ex-President Morsi and his group nobody cares. However, when he starts violating the rights of his erstwhile secular supporters, then people start to take notice and speak up. The mantra that all the human rights are for all the people all the time unfortunately doesn’t work for non-secular victims of his violence. If he is wise, he can prolong his stay by limiting mass violations, killing and issuance of mass death sentences only against the Muslim Brotherhood.
It is difficult for some to understand the human need to live in a democracy that respects you enough to allow you to determine how to live your life. So many on the right want to live in a society that is totally ordered by the will of very strong and protecting others, while many do not want to be told what to think and do at every turn. and society has to overcome this in order for all to have a decent life. It cannot just be all one way! el-Sisi is a dictator. That is why he should be overthrown!
I have great respect for the Intercept, but I am frankly baffled as to why you want to overthrow el-Sisi. What he has done with Egypt’s economy, particularly the building of a new Suez canal without crawling to the loan sharks, offers real hope to Egypt as a nation. Your campaign to topple him, using the usual neo-con “human rights” rationale, makes no sense to me, and seems to be right in sync with the general Blair/Cameron/Bush/Obama policy of “regime change” against secular Arab governments that insist on the right to national sovereignty .
“particularly the building of a new Suez canal without crawling to the loan sharks”
I am always amazed at how often people invoke the “rightful abuser” argument after the so-called winner murders the victim. It’s almost like saying the the murder of JFK saved the country.
The falacy of this argument is that one has to pretend that things would not be better had they turned out differently. In this particular instance, one has to pretend that the democratically elected Mohammed Morsi could not or would not have done far more than the current dictator who murdered him.
But this is how victims think, in those terms, to support abuser types that have them praise their captor. Sisi is just another unleaderly military monster like all the other leader-monsters on the planet.
Presumably you mean he is like Saddam Hussein, Muammar Gaddafi and all the other secular leaders targeted for “regime change” by the UK and the US. Can you cite one example of “regime change” where it actually improved life for the citizens of the targeted nation?
No,just the opposite.Sisi is the favored son of Zion,and by extension,US.
The MB and Morsi were the legitimate elected people in Egypt,overthrown by this puppet of Zion.
Your too examples were once malleable friends of empire,who went off the reservation,and were eliminated.
It is not your,or my call who should run any nation other than our own on this earth,but the citizens of those nations.
If that then leads to implosion,as Israel is doing to itself,they will have to live with it,which btw is the problem with Israel,they don’t have consequences for their bad decisions,as uncle schmuel is always there for cover.
Yes,the Zionists love sisi,their Egyptian boy toy.
We ain t seen nothing yet in Egypt.It’s gonna blow!
First, thousands is gross over estimation.
Second, there is no “gifting” of the islands, it is very well documented that the islands never belonged to Egypt, Egypt at the request of Saudi took on an administrative role on the islands, administration and ownership are two very different things. The return of the islands has been in the works since 1990, documents filed at the UN. It is an absolute shame that Mr. Mackey didn’t do any research.
The Zionists approved the sale,btw.How does that make you feel?
More independent?
@JK Radwan[1]: ‘there is no “gifting” of the islands’
Agreed. Juan Cole has a better discussion of the Straits of Tiran issue embedded in a better discussion of Egyptian politics in his 11 Apr 2016 article in The Nation[2], which links to a more detailed discussion of the ‘Egypt-Saudi Arabia accord concerning the islands of Tiran and Sanafir and the question of sovereignty thereover’ by Ali Hakim[3].
@dahoit[4]: ‘The Zionists approved the sale’
Non sequitur and ad hominem.
[1]: https://theintercept.com/2016/04/15/protesters-return-egypts-streets-denouncing-sisi-giving-islands-saudi-arabia/?comments=1#comment-221388
[2]: http://www.thenation.com/article/egypts-sisi-ridiculed-for-selling-islands-to-saudi-arabia/
[3]: https://books.google.com/books?id=sn67AAAAIAAJ&pg=PA136&lpg=PA136&dq=Sanafir&source=bl&ots=npXd8qo43-&sig=hckStU_isH5HQgvvisePg5SMP70&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjMjJO_-ITMAhVJDJoKHUDgCTI4FBDoAQg5MAY#v=onepage&q=Sanafir&f=false
[4]: https://theintercept.com/2016/04/15/protesters-return-egypts-streets-denouncing-sisi-giving-islands-saudi-arabia/?comments=1#comment-221583