Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Activist’s art offers rare glimpse inside Egypt’s prisons

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CAIRO >> In Yassin Mohammed’s sketches and paintings, he and other Egyptian prisoners are crammed into tiny cells, feet in each other’s faces and their few belongings hanging from the walls.

The cramped scenes, defined by bars and closed cell doors, capture the claustroph­obic reality of Egypt’s prisons, where tens of thousands have been locked away, often for months or years without charge, in the heaviest crackdown on dissent in the country’s modern history.

“One day, all this pain will go away,” one watercolor proclaims.

Mohammed, who walked free last month after serving a two-year sentence for taking part in a protest, chronicled daily life in his cellblock in dozens of sketches and paintings, offering a rare and intimate look inside Egypt’s sprawling prison network.

He has been in and out of prison since 2013, when the military overthrew a freely elected but divisive Islamist president. Since then, thousands of Islamists have been jailed, as well as a number of secular, prodemocra­cy activists, some of whom played a key role in the 2011 uprising that toppled longtime autocrat Hosni Mubarak.

Under President Abdel-Fattah elSissi, who as defense minister led the 2013 military takeover, authoritie­s view even mild dissent as a threat. Protests have been outlawed, hundreds of websites have been blocked, and vague laws criminaliz­e the spreading of “false news.”

For most of the two years he was in prison, Mohammed shared a 6- by 15-meter (yard) cell with nearly 30 other inmates — Islamists, jihadis, liberal leftists and, he said, people who were simply at the wrong place at the wrong time.

Rights groups say abuse of political detainees is widespread in Egypt, but Mohammed says he wasn’t physically abused, other than occasional­ly being pushed or slapped by guards. He says the real torment came from the unending boredom and the total lack of privacy. His only escape was through art. He managed to paint in a corner of his cell where the guards could not see him. Fearing that the guards would destroy the art if they found it, he smuggled the paintings out.

One piece that landed him in trouble was an unflatteri­ng caricature of el-Sissi, which guards seized in a surprise raid on his cell. Prison authoritie­s chose not to press charges, instead sending him to solitary confinemen­t, a light punishment for a man who says he yearned for privacy so much he spent time in the toilet just to avoid the other inmates.

A self-portrait inspired by that experience shows him sitting in the corner of a gray and black cell, slumped in resignatio­n as a solitary ray of sunlight shines through the barred window.

Others show rare signs of normality or even beauty. A depiction of a prison bathroom — including garbage pails used by the inmates to store water because of frequent outages — has signs on the wall reading: “Please, leave the bathroom as you would like to see it!”

A bouquet of brightly colored flowers hangs above the bathroom — a wedding anniversar­y gift from the wife of one of the inmates.

 ?? NARIMAN EL-MOFTY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this Thursday photo, Yassin Mohammed sits with a cat in an apartment he shares, in Cairo, Egypt.
NARIMAN EL-MOFTY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In this Thursday photo, Yassin Mohammed sits with a cat in an apartment he shares, in Cairo, Egypt.

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