The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Arab Spring’s long lost dream of Egyptian freedom

- Emmanuel Parisse

CAIRO: A decade a er Egypt’s mass protests briefly unlocked new freedoms, human rights groups say it is back to square one as President Abdel Fa ah al-Sisi has stamped out all opposition.

The iconic demonstrat­ions in Cairo’s Tahrir Square, which broke out on Jan 25, 2011, toppled autocrat Hosni Mubarak just a couple of weeks later in one of the most momentous changes of the Arab Spring wave of revolts.

They ushered in a heady period of free speech and free elections that propelled Islamist Mohamed Morsi to power, followed by mass protests against Morsi and then his overthrow – all within two and a half years.

Spearheadi­ng the second regime change in 2013, former army chief Sisi has since presided over a crackdown against Islamists, secular opponents, journalist­s, lawyers, artists and intellectu­als.

“The Arab Spring in Egypt was short-lived. The regime has learnt the worst lesson – to nip any hint of freedom in the bud,” Agnes Callamard, a special rapporteur on extrajudic­ial killings to the UN, told AFP.

In early December, Amnesty Internatio­nal deplored a ‘frenzy’ of executions in Egypt, the Arab world’s most populous country.

Faced with such internatio­nal criticism, the response of Egyptian authoritie­s has invariably been the same – to reject outside interferen­ce.

Human rights questions in Egypt are ‘the responsibi­lity of the society concerned and not of external parties’, Foreign Minister Sameh Shoukry told a recent press conference.

His ministry, in a statement to AFP, denied the use of arbitrary arrests or torture in Egypt, said there are ‘no political prisoners’ and stressed that the government ‘a aches great importance to the freedom of opinion and expression’.

Structural violence

The wave of repression began in the summer of 2013, when hundreds of Islamists protesting against Morsi’s overthrow were killed by security forces in Cairo, according to various rights groups.

Arbitrary detentions, mass trials and death sentences followed for members of the Muslim Brotherhoo­d, which was banned once more from 2013.

The power of Sisi – who was elected president a year a er bringing down Morsi and reelected in 2018 with more than 97 per cent of the official vote – has only grown stronger.

In April 2019, a constituti­onal amendment prolonged his presidency and tightened his control of the judiciary.

Rights groups say around 60,000 political dissidents now languish behind bars, despite the government’s insistence there are no political prisoners in Egypt.

In September 2019, hundreds of protesters demanding Sisi’s departure again tried to mobilise in Tahrir Square, but this initiative only provoked a wave of arrests.

The judicial system, at the heart of the repressive apparatus, is o en deplored by rights groups for resorting to charges of ‘terrorism’ and ‘disseminat­ing’ false news – offences that carry prolonged sentences.

“The judiciary is supposed to be a castle... that protects rights and freedom,” said Mohamed Lotfy, director of the Egyptian Commission for Rights and Freedoms.

But in Egypt it ‘is rarely able to hold to account any officers’ from the security forces, and even in cases with damning evidence, sentences are lenient, he added.

Authoritie­s o en cite the threat of ‘terrorism” when faced with accusation­s of rights abuses, in a country grappling since 2013 with a jihadist insurrecti­on in North Sinai.

Sherif Mohyeldeen, a scholar on Egypt and North Africa at the Carnegie Middle East Center in Beirut, said the reported abuses contribute to ‘fuelling the structural violence and partly cultivate extremism’.

It will take time

Egypt’s media has also been repressed, with hundreds of internet news sites shut down since 2017.

Twenty-eight journalist­s are currently imprisoned in the country, says watchdog group Reporters Without Borders.

Few independen­t media organisati­ons are le for those journalist­s “who are not already behind bars,” said Lina A alah, editor in chief of Cairo-based online newspaper Mada Masr.

“Mada is really an exception,” added A alah, who has herself been arrested several times.

Some media outlets have been acquired by entities close to the powerful military, which controls swathes of the economy.

A state of emergency, in place since 2017 and reinforced in May 2020 during the initial wave of the coronaviru­s pandemic, is seen as a covert tool for

The Arab Spring in Egypt was short-lived. The regime has learnt the worst lesson – to nip any hint of freedom in the bud.

Agnes Callamard

exercising new repressive powers.

That repression took a new and spectacula­r turn in November, with the arrest of three activists belonging to a local rights organisati­on a er a meeting with Western ambassador­s.

It was only a er a rare outcry by a plethora of powers that the three were released.

The authoritie­s have also targeted women. Around a dozen social media influencer­s have been detained in recent months for sharing content on TikTok deemed to debase moral standards in the conservati­ve country.

Mokhles Kotb, secretary general of Egypt’s National Council for Human Rights, told AFP it will ‘take time to institute the rule of law’.

 ?? — AFP photos ?? In this file photo taken on Sept 22, 2019, Egyptian protesters shout slogans as they take part in a demonstrat­ion calling for the removal of President Abdel Fa ah al-Sisi, along the October 6 bridge linking Cairo with its twin city of Giza (background). A decade has passed since Egyptians took to the streets to end Hosni Mubarak’s 30 years as president, following Tunisia in what would become a wave of Arab Spring uprisings.
— AFP photos In this file photo taken on Sept 22, 2019, Egyptian protesters shout slogans as they take part in a demonstrat­ion calling for the removal of President Abdel Fa ah al-Sisi, along the October 6 bridge linking Cairo with its twin city of Giza (background). A decade has passed since Egyptians took to the streets to end Hosni Mubarak’s 30 years as president, following Tunisia in what would become a wave of Arab Spring uprisings.
 ?? — AFP photo ?? Mohamed Lotfy browses images of detained activists on his laptop in the capital Cairo.
— AFP photo Mohamed Lotfy browses images of detained activists on his laptop in the capital Cairo.
 ??  ?? Callamard delivers a report during the United Nations Human Rights Council in Geneva on June 26, 2019.
Callamard delivers a report during the United Nations Human Rights Council in Geneva on June 26, 2019.
 ??  ?? Mohamed Lotfy
Mohamed Lotfy
 ??  ?? Lina A alah
Lina A alah

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