Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

As Egypt crushes dissent, cracks seen in revolution

- By Amro Hassan and Alexandra Zavis Tribune Newspapers alexandra.zavis@tribpub.com Special correspond­ent Amro Hassan reported from Cairo and Tribune Newspapers’ Alexandra Zavis from Los Angeles.

CAIRO — Many of those who took part in the 2011 uprising against former Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak hoped that the strongman’s fall would herald the beginning of a new era of free expression.

But those hopes have long been dashed. This week alone, Egyptian authoritie­s shut down a respected art gallery and theater, arrested political activists and raided an independen­t publishing house in what critics described as another worrying crackdown on dissent as the country approaches the fifth anniversar­y of the revolt.

Nearly 70 public figures, including popular political satirist Bassem Youssef and former presidenti­al candidates Hamdeen Sabahi and Khaled Ali, condemned such moves in a statement posted Wednesday on Facebook.

“The Egyptian regime is deploying the same practices that led to the Jan. 25 glorious revolution,” the statement said. “Freedoms are seized, pluralism is barred and security authoritie­s rule and control everything.”

The same day, Facebook announced that a new program that had been providing free basic Internet service to over 3 million Egyptians had been shut down.

The country’s communicat­ions authority did not immediatel­y explain the decision to halt the service launched with Etisalat Egypt. In a statement to The Associated Press, Facebook said it was disappoint­ed and hoped to “resolve this situation soon.”

Thousands of protesters have been detained and put on trial since President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi came to power in a 2013 military coup amid massive protests against the country’s elected leader, President Mohammed Morsi.

What began as a crackdown against Morsi’s Islamist supporters has expanded to include secular activists and apparently cultural spaces popular with the government’s critics.

On Monday, officials from the state Censorship Authority, Tax Authority, National Security and Ministry of Manpower raided the Townhouse art gallery and its affiliated theater in downtown Cairo before shutting down the venue. No explanatio­n was provided.

On Tuesday, it was the turn of Merit publishing house. Officials from the Censorship Authority raided the premises and arrested a staff member who was questioned about his employer’s political interests before being released later in the day.

Merit’s owner, Mohamed Hashem, suggested that the move was in response to an upcoming event to show solidarity with poet Ashraf Fayadh, who has been sentenced to death by a Saudi court.

“We will expose the corrupt and hold the event as scheduled,” Hashem wrote on his Facebook page. “You won’t terrorize us.”

Other examples of the expanding crackdown include the decision this week to refer Khaled Sayed, of the Revolution Youth Coalition that represente­d a number of youth groups during the 2011 uprising, to a military trial on charges of belonging to a terrorist group, inciting murder and spreading false informatio­n.

The April 6 Youth Movement, which played an active role in the revolt, also reported that four of its members had been arrested without being told of the charges. The group’s founder and leader, Ahmed Maher, is one of many dissidents serving jail terms on charges of organizing a demonstrat­ion without permission from authoritie­s, as required under a 2013 law.

George Ishak, of the National Front for Change, said such arrests show that the 2011 uprising did not achieve its goals.

Calls for fresh protests on Jan. 25 have been spreading online in recent weeks. More than 50,000 people have signed up for updates from a Facebook page titled “We’ll bring down autocracy on Jan. 25.”

Zyad Elelaimy, a former member of parliament, accused the government of trying to contain dissent by goading activists into a showdown.

 ?? LOUISA GOULIAMAKI/GETTY-AFP ?? Thousands of protesters have been put on trial since President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi came to power in 2013.
LOUISA GOULIAMAKI/GETTY-AFP Thousands of protesters have been put on trial since President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi came to power in 2013.

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