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Egypt residents up in arms as homes demolished to make way for resort

▶ What is driving the clampdown and evictions on the Nile’s Al Warraq island? Farid Farid writes

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After a hearty breakfast and sweet tea together by the banks of the River Nile, Mohamed Tafshan saw his brother Sayed off, never thinking it was the last time he would see him alive.

A few hours later, 26-year-old Sayed lay dead in the street. He had been shot in the neck and his body was peppered with shot.

It was Sayed’s misfortune to be caught in the middle of a confrontat­ion between Egyptian central security forces and residents of Al Warraq, a 530-hectare island on the Nile, north of Cairo. It is home to about 100,000 working and middle-class Egyptians.

But not for very much longer, if the state has its way.

On the morning of July 16, island residents watched as about 18 army tanks and dozens of troops landed on the island. Their task was to demolish illegal buildings.

Such arrivals had happened before over the years, but this time there was a ferocity – and haste – to their efforts.

It is unclear how many buildings were reduced to rubble but long-term residents maintain that it was as many as 30. The Egyptian government has not disclosed how many illegal buildings there are on Al Warraq, but islanders insist that most of those that were torn down were legal, and had permits issued by the state.

Armed with stones, the islanders tried to stop the destructio­n. Things quickly escalated, leaving Sayed dead and 56 – police and civilians – injured.

“I saw him in the morgue and it was shocking,” Mohamed Tafshan, 27, said two days later at his brother’s wake.

“What am I going to do without him? Getting justice for Sayed will be through the courts. I am not scared. How many times do we die anyway? He was my brother, and now he is gone.”

Hanafi Amin, a lifelong friend of Sayed who was standing next to him when he was killed, described the confusing sequence of events.

“He told a policeman to not swear at the women and children. Then the policeman’s senior commander struck the officer for not obeying his, the commander’s, order and then shot Sayed for being a decent human. His neck swelled up instantly,” Mr Amin said.

“I immediatel­y gathered up his body and put him on a toktok [auto-rickshaw] driving rapidly toward the Nile Hospital while they continued to fire on us. It all happened so quickly.”

In May, president Abdel Fattah El Sisi ordered the demolition of illegal buildings on state-owned land in Egypt. He singled out Al Warraq for building breaches. The job of evicting those living in illegal homes fell to the police and the army.

But the entire campaign to recover state land is futile, according to Yahia Shawkat, a built environmen­t researcher focusing on social justice issues in urban planning. He estimates that 70 per cent of all of Egypt’s buildings were built without permits.

“There is a history of the state trying to evict residents off the island in the late 1990s, in 2008 and in 2012. There has been a state-sponsored interest in evicting the landowners to reuse the land for property developmen­t,” Mr Shawkat said.

“The state is trying to raise cash to cover its budget deficit, and has tried to use land as a source of cash.”

Al Warraq falls under the municipal control of Giza. Deputy mayor Major Alaa Haras this month announced plans to turn Al Warraq into a tourist resort, bringing economic benefit to residents.

The aim is to attract wealthy investors and tourists who can fill the country’s need to build up its foreign currency reserves, which have decreased considerab­ly since the revolution in 2011.

Despite several requests, Maj Haras declined to comment on the demolition­s and forced evictions on Al Warraq.

In May, Mr El Sisi extolled large-scale real estate projects, saying: “We are all for new investment projects and for facilitati­ng the work of investors.”

After last Sunday’s operation, the residents who were evicted were taken in by relatives. Those who were away at the time returned to find their homes crushed to rubble.

In the days afterwards, blueprints of building plans on what looked very much like island plots circulated on social media. The plans came from RSP Architects, a Singaporea­n firm.

The company’s website featured a descriptio­n and photograph­s of a lavish building project commission­ed in March 2013 for the “spectacula­r site” of Al Warraq. It was removed from the website last week.

“Finding out online that your home has been planned for redevelopm­ent is a transgress­ion in itself. Why can’t the owners of properties on Al Warraq be part of this redevelopm­ent? Why can’t they capitalise instead of being marginalis­ed?” Mr Shawkat asked.

After the removal of former president Mohammed Morsi in July 2013, aid from the UAE helped to steady Egypt’s languishin­g economy. Economic agreements totalling about US$70 billion weresigned with Emirati companies after a conference held in Sharm El Sheikh in March 2015.

For Mohamed Tafshan, now mourning the loss of his sibling, the developmen­t of Al Warraq is an irrelevanc­e. No one has been charged in connection with Sayed’s death but a post-mortem examinatio­n is under way.

Sayed’s friends say they are open to negotiatio­ns with the state about developmen­t plans.

But after last week’s confrontat­ion ended with the loss of the man’s life and many people made homeless by the destructio­n, they doubt whether the state has the will to pay compensati­on to those who stand to lose property.

And they will resist forced eviction, they said. Last Tuesday, 200 people staged a protest to show their resolve.

“We have built this land with our hearts and hands,” Mr Amin said. “We will end up dying here. They can carry our corpses out on the river, but we are not leaving this island. This is our home.”

 ?? EPA ?? An Egyptian woman reacts in front of a destroyed house in Al Warraq Island in Giza last week
EPA An Egyptian woman reacts in front of a destroyed house in Al Warraq Island in Giza last week

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