Gulf News

Egyptians mourn death of ‘icon of police’

Al Nouamani lost his sight and had his face disfigured in a clash with Mursi loyalists in 2013

- BY RAMADAN AL SHERBINI Correspond­ent

Condolence­s have poured in for a senior Egyptian policeman who died in London this week, more than five years after he was seriously injured in an attack by loyalists of deposed Islamist president Mohammad Mursi.

Col Sa’tae Al Nouamani lost his sight and had his face disfigured when he suffered gunfire injuries on July 2, 2013 during a police clash with Mursi’s followers, who were staging a sit-in protest at a major square in Giza near Cairo in his support. Some 27 policemen and civilians were killed in the fight, which also injured 28 others including Al Noaumani, who was serving as a deputy chief of a local police station at the time.

Mursi was removed by the army the following day after enormous street protests against his one-year rule. Al Nouamani’s injuries were so critical that he went into a coma for 60 days. He died aged 48 at a London hospital on Wednesday after suffering an unspecifie­d health problem, according to his family.

He was in London to undergo face surgery, the last in a series of medical procedures he had over the past five years in Switzerlan­d and Britain.

His death has triggered an outpouring of grief in Egypt. President Abdul Fattah Al Sissi ordered renaming the Al Nahda Square, where the officer was injured in 2013, after Al Nouamani, state media reported yesterday.

The Foreign Ministry praised the late officer, saying he will remain a “symbol of sacrifice and steadfastn­ess” for the nation and Egyptians.

Hosts of night-time talk shows on Egyptian TV mourned him, calling him a “martyr of the nation”.

“He was a fighter in the full sense of the word even when he fell into a coma,” Al Nouamani’s brother Sameh who is a doctor, said.

“Sa’tae’s injuries were fatal. He was attacked with an internatio­nally banned weapon,” he told a local TV station, without elaboratin­g.

Users of social media also paid tribute to Al Nouamani.

“You’ll remain Sa’tae for us,” tweeted a person named Jamal Al Arabi, playing on the late officer’s name, which is Arabic for light.

“Rest in God’s mercy, you martyr,” wrote another called Habeeb Misr (A lover of Egypt). Other mourners described him as an “icon of the Egyptian police”.

In 2015, Al Sissi officially feted Al Nouamani at a televised police ceremony, kissing his head in a gesture of esteem. Giza authoritie­s named a school in the pyramid-famous city after Al Nouamani.

During the interval in his long medical trip, Al Nouamani frequently attended political and social events in the homeland where he appeared in high spirits. He also campaigned in support for families of security forces killed or injured in a spate of post-Mursi militant attacks. He also campaigned for the welfare of the physically and mentally challenged, frequently saying: “I’m handicappe­d and proud of this.”

The government said that arrangemen­ts are under way for the body of Al Nouamani to be flown home for burial.

He was a fighter in the full sense of the word even when he fell into a coma. Sa’tae’s injuries were fatal. He was attacked with an internatio­nally banned weapon.”

Al Nouamani’s brother

 ?? Courtesy: Twitter ?? Abdul Fattah Al Sissi (left) officially feted Col Sa’atae Al Nouamani at a televised police ceremony in Cairo in 2015, kissing his head in a gesture of esteem. Giza authoritie­s also named a school in the pyramid-famous city after him.
Courtesy: Twitter Abdul Fattah Al Sissi (left) officially feted Col Sa’atae Al Nouamani at a televised police ceremony in Cairo in 2015, kissing his head in a gesture of esteem. Giza authoritie­s also named a school in the pyramid-famous city after him.

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