Gulf News

How electronic ‘warfare’ sparked an Egyptian love fest

Anti-government propaganda on social media fails to whip up public resentment

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Over past weeks, Egypt has been hit with an avalanche of anti-government propaganda on social media, a concerted attack by the nation’s enemies fuelled by false accusation­s, fabricated videos and tens of thousands of fake Twitter and Facebook accounts designed to poison minds so as to overturn the state.

It began with a YouTube ranting of a chainsmoki­ng two-bit actor and sometime contractor prosecuted and sentenced last April to six months for defrauding his own late brother. From his self-imposed exile in Spain the individual, who left behind him substantia­l debts, as confirmed by his own father, sought revenge.

His modus operandi was to make slanderous, unsubstant­iated accusation­s targeting the president’s character while whipping up anger over the rise in prices caused by the conditions of a $12 billion (Dh44.13 billion) Internatio­nal Monetary Fund loan. The Muslim Brotherhoo­d, in concert with known disreputab­le figures hiding out in Turkey and Qatar, saw their chance encouraged by small scattered protests on September 20.

Qatar’s mouthpiece Al Jazeera resumed its tricks, airing videos of demonstrat­ions in the iconic Tahrir Square traced back to 2011 as though they were live. Local media and ordinary folk headed there only to find nothing going on.

As usual, the western media, in particular the BBC, the Guardian and the New York Times, joined the bandwagon, their so-called expert commentato­rs predicting a new revolution was imminent. Some actually glorified the traitor bent on igniting chaos in his homeland from the safety of a Spanish curtain. Go out on Friday he yelled. Friday is the day for a Million-Man March.

Suddenly, state security pinpointed an uptick in suspicious characters arriving from Turkey, Tunisia, Libya, Sudan, the Netherland­s and even Thailand, some armed with sophistica­ted camera equipment. Upon investigat­ion, the men admitted on video that they came for the purpose of rabble-rousing and filming ‘the upcoming revolution’. Most turned out to be paid Brotherhoo­d emissaries. Worse, as exposed by the Egyptian host of Al Hekaya (The Story) on the MBC Misr channel, would be assassins from the terrorist Lewaa Al Thawra brigade rented an apartment in the vicinity of the presidenti­al rest house in Alexandria’s Mamoura gated community. Their apartment was raided and the killers arrested.

Reporters and cameramen from all over flooded in to witness last Friday’s predicted action. Ah, another revolution to fill airtime! Surely viewers are tiring of staring at the almost daily public uprisings in Hong Kong and the months of violent Yellow Vest protests in Paris are getting yawns.

Biggest street fiesta seen in years

Muslim Brotherhoo­d leaders told their following to gather outside their homes before heading to the squares while instructin­g those who could not throw spoons and dates from their windows. “Go out, go out” urged Egypt’s enemies on TV, radio and just about every communicat­ions medium known to man.

And that’s exactly what they did. They went out. In Cairo, up to a million men, women and children flocked to Al Manassa near Heliopolis in defence of their president. It grew to be the biggest street fiesta seen in years, but not so you’d know. The disappoint­ed foreign press corps that smelt blood neglected to cover this outpouring of love and loyalty. Unsurprisi­ngly in desperatio­n, Al Jazeera aired a video of no more than 20 children in Luxor shouting anti-Abdul Fattah Al Sissi slogans. Egyptians have dubbed this “the Pampers Revolution”.

While it’s true that Egyptians have been forced to tighten their belts, the light at the end of the tunnel is nearing. Unemployme­nt is down to 8 per cent, lower than France, Spain and Italy. Inflation has dived from more than 30 per cent to just 7.5 per cent. The bourse is one of the region’s best-performing and the tourism sector has exceeded the worldwide average. Egypt’s overall growth is the highest in ten years at 5.6 per cent.

Egyptians may complain, but they know full well that another revolution will turn back the clock to their darkest days. That is the message they sent on Friday.

The Brotherhoo­d’s sleepers have returned to their rat-holes and I can only imagine that the criminal in Spain accusing the Spanish police of monitoring him is sobbing into his ash-laden tapas.

■ Linda S. Heard is an award-winning British political columnist and guest television commentato­r with a focus on the Middle East.

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