Kuwait Times

6 yrs on, activists worry uprising ‘gone to waste’

- ‘Latent anger’ ‘Back to square one’

Six years after Hosni Mubarak was forced from power, the activists behind Egypt’s 2011 uprising are facing a new crackdown and struggling to see much reason for hope. Rights groups accuse President Abdel Fattah Al-Sisi of cracking down on freedoms won during the revolt, with many activists now facing prison, asset freezes and travel bans. Critics of the former army chief who was elected after he toppled Islamist president Mohamed Morsi in 2013 - say Sisi does not tolerate any dissent.

“The situation is miserable,” said Esraa Abdel Fattah, a 38-year-old activist now banned from travel, as she passed by Cairo’s Tahrir Square, the epicenter of the Jan 2011 uprising. Hundreds of thousands of Egyptians protested in the square for 18 days, setting up tents and makeshift hospitals, and demanding an end to Mubarak’s 30-year rule. “I’m sad for the blood that has gone to waste,” Abdel Fattah said, rememberin­g the hundreds killed in the streets as security forces tried to suppress the protests.

Ahmad, a 32-year-old pharmacist who only gave his first name, also took part in the 2011 demonstrat­ions. “Before, I was ready to die for this country, now I just want to leave,” he said. “I have transition­ed from struggling for democracy and human rights to fighting a daily battle to provide for my family’s basic needs,” Ahmad said. “It’s a daily struggle for survival,” he said.

Egyptians have faced shortages of basic goods such as medicine and sugar in past months, with prices soaring after the government floated the currency and slashed fuel subsidies in November. Those measures were part of economic reforms to meet conditions for a $12 billion loan from the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund, which was approved later the same month. “There is latent anger” because of the economic situation, political scientist Mai Mogib said. “But despite this, nobody wants another revolution. Egyptians are exhausted after a revolt that didn’t produce the results they were hoping for,” she said.

In the months after the ouster of Morsi, Egypt’s first democratic­ally elected civilian president, hundreds of his Islamist supporters were killed and thousands more jailed. The crackdown then expanded to leftist and secular activists, with scores in jail on accusation of participat­ing in unauthoriz­ed street protests. Egypt has also been investigat­ing civil society groups on suspicion of receiving illegal foreign funding in a controvers­ial probe criticized by the United Nations.

This month, a court ordered a freeze on the assets of Nazra for Feminist Studies and its founder Mozn Hassan, as well as of Mohamed Zaree and his Arab Penal Reform Organizati­on. It came after the assets of five other human rights defenders and three non-government­al organizati­ons were frozen in September over similar accusation­s. “The revolution is back to square one,” said Hassan, who was also issued a travel ban a few months ago. “We have to defend ourselves in court against accusation­s (of crimes) we didn’t commit,” the 37-year-old said. Amnesty Internatio­nal and Human Rights Watch have described the travel bans as “part of a larger campaign to suppress independen­t, critical voices inside the country”. The secular April 6 movement, one of the groups that called for the Jan 25 protests in 2011 and helped ignite the uprising, has been banned by the authoritie­s.

Ahmed Maher, 36, one of its founders and a leading figure in the 2011 revolt, was released earlier this month after spending three years in prison on accusation­s he organized an unauthoriz­ed protest. But for the next three years, he must spend 12 hours each night at a police station near his home. “I’m a half-prisoner,” Maher said. Journalist Ahmad Gamal Ziada, a photojourn­alist who spent two years in jail after his arrest at a protest he was covering, is just as disillusio­ned. “We’re exhausted,” he said.

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