Revisiting the Beni Suef fire

Remember the Beni Suef fire scandal last September? Well a verdict has come out on who’s responsible:

CAIRO, May 22 (Reuters) – An Egyptian court sentenced eight government employees, including the head of a cultural body, to 10 years in jail each on Monday for negligence over a theatre fire last year that killed 46 people, a judicial official said.
The official said that Mostafa Elwy, head of the authority for cultural centres who was among those convicted, was also a member of the ruling National Democratic Party’s policies committee. The rest also worked for the Culture Ministry.
The official said the men were responsible for the running of the overall administration of state-run theatres throughout the country.

A lot of people were calling for Mostafa Elwy’s head back then. It was given to them instead of Minister of Culture Farouq Hosni’s. My question: what new fire safety procedures have been implemented?

See you at the next disaster.

US military aid to Egypt and Congress

For several years now, there has been a gathering storm in Congress over aid to Egypt. This used to be about the effectiveness of the aid and the supposed lack of gratefulness from Egypt, or its refusal to publicly back the US over certain goals like the Iraq war or Bush’s democratization agenda. Every year, this congressional initiative — led by both Republicans and Democrats close to the Israel lobby (but also including others) such as Tom Lantos, a veteran Egypt-basher — was defeated in Congress. The White House and State Dept. have always stood up to those Congressmen who wanted to change the aid program to Egypt, and the conventional wisdom has remained that while the Mubarak regime is no great shakes, it is overall useful and worth propping up.

Continue reading US military aid to Egypt and Congress

“Black Referendum Day” demo recap

Passing on the info:


In memory of the black referendum day

 
Thursday 25th of May
 
11.30:
Protest of university professors in front of main hall of Cairo University calling for the release of detained faculty and students.
 
1.30 p.m.
Protest rally in front of JUDGES CLUB in solidarity with the honorable judges of Egypt
 
3 p.m.
Protest rally in front of PRESS SYNDICATE where Egyptian security forces committed their crimes on the 25 th of May 2005.
 
 
More news to follow
 
The world demonstrates with us on the 24th, 25th and 26th of May
 
Wednesday 24 May
Paris: Demo in front of Egyptian embassy
 
Thursday 25 May
Athens: Demo, 7 p.m. in front of Egyptian embassy.
Chicago: Demo, 12 noon in front of Egyptian consulate
New York: Demo in front of Egyptian consulate
London: Demo, 5.30 p.m . in front of Egyptian embassy.
Montreal: Demo, 12 noon in front of Egyptian consulate.
Toronto: Demo, in front of Egypt Air Office.
 
Friday 26 May
Seoul: Demo in front of Egyptian embassy
 

Washington demo on 25 May confirmed

It’s official:

Egyptian-Americans and Supporters of Democracy in Egypt to Protest at Egyptian Embassy in Washington DC
Thursday May 25, 2006.

Demonstrate along with activists in cities worldwide against the Egyptian regime’s quashing of basic freedoms. We demand independence for the Egyptian judiciary and the release of all detained protesters and activists, and protest Washington’s silence on this count. May 25 is the first anniversary of “black Wednesday,” the date of a referendum on cosmetic changes to the Egyptian electoral system. On that day peaceful protesters and journalists were violently attacked and sexually assaulted by police and government thugs.

When?
Thursday, May 25, 2006 from 12 noon to 1 p.m.

Where?
In front of the Egyptian Embassy, 3521 International Court, NW, Washington DC 20008. (Metro: Van Ness/UDC)

Why?
We support Egyptian judges who are fighting for the freedom to uphold the rule of law and honest elections.
We call for the release of Egyptian political activists from jail – 700 of them, of all political and ideological stripes, have been arrested in the last month and treated brutally by Mubarak’s security services simply for protesting against the regime and calling for democracy.
We protest Washington’s silence towards the repression its closest Arab ally is conducting against peaceful dissent. We believe that the continuation of the status quo is harmful to the long term interests of both the United States and Egypt.
We demonstrate in solidarity with people around the world for the same cause on the same day, in Cairo, New York, London, Paris, Chicago, Seoul, Montreal and Athens.

Who?
The Alliance of Egyptian Americans, DC area student groups, the International Socialist Organization and individual supporters of democracy in Egypt.

Contact:
Dr. Ibrahim M. Hussein
Alliance of Egyptian Americans
(301) 613 7337

Sumita Pahwa
spahwa@jhu.edu

London calling on 25 May

Reminder about another London demo. The word is that there’s been quite successful activist meetings there and the movement is growing.

Thursday 25 MAY 5.30pm

Protest at Egyptian Embassy

South Street (off Park Lane, nearest tubes: Hyde Park Corner, Marble Arch and Green Park) Called by the Committee in Support of the Egyptian Judges [CSEJ] (UK), Cairo Conference Globalise Resistance and Stop the War Coalition, Supported by Haldane Society of Lawyers.

Toronto demo on 25 May

25 May demos — now in Toronto:

Cairo – London – Paris – Seol – Athens – Chicago – New York – Montreal

and now…..

Toronto

Hand off our Judges!
Free our Detainees!!
Democracy & Justice Now!!!

The demo will be in front of the Egypt Air Office on the 25th of May (apparently this is the only official office there)

For more information please contact the Toronto Egyptian Solidarity Campaign at torontoesc@yahoo.ca

Al Jazeera to air documentary on Egyptian bloggers

Wael Abbas writes that Al Jazeera is airing a documentary on Egyptian bloggers on Thursday 25 May (rather appropriately considering all the blogactivism lately!). It’s on a 9pm GMT, and Wael is featured on it! Let’s hope they did it recently enough to also include some coverage of Alaa and the other bloggers who were recently arrested.

 Img57 3445 Modawenoon3506Kg

Between this and the events of the 25th, Al Jazeera is going to have a heavy anti-Mubarak day!

Some questions about WEF Sharm Al Sheikh

Why weren’t the governments of Syria, Iran and Palestine invited? Abbas of Palestine was invited and came, but not Hamas. Does this mean that the WEF follows State Dept. guidelines? Just asking.

Why do people still take Ahmed Nazif seriously? I’ve interviewed him several times and even did a long profile of him when he was a very competent minister of Comms and IT, but the statements he has been making since he’s become PM are just offensive:

“It doesn’t take a month or two or six. It will take years… We have the time. We are not in a hurry,” he told reporters before the opening of a World Economic Forum meeting in the Red Sea resort of Sharm el-Sheikh.

. . .

“Once the process starts, things happen. You see Islamists for example gaining in parliament here, in Palestine, in Iraq, so we start recalculating what’s going on,” he said.

“You need to recalculate, you need to revisit some of your assumptions, to make sure you are really on the right track but in the end I don’t think there is any way to go back on this.”

He played down the recent demonstrations in Cairo and other towns as the work of “special interest groups.”

Incidentally, does Nazif really mean it when he says he wants to stop the Muslim Brotherhood’s elected MPs to form a block in parliament?

Nazif told Reuters in an interview: “Islamists who say they belong to an illegal organisation have been able to go into parliament and act in a format that would make them seem like a political party… We need to think clearly about how to prevent this from happening.”

He said the government could not take way the right of individual citizens from running for parliament but members of the Brotherhood were different. “We have a secret organisation represented in parliament. They are not individuals,” he said.

The prime minister’s remarks were another indication the Egyptian government is having second thoughts about some of the concessions it made to the political opposition last year when it was under U.S. pressure to loosen up the political system.

I was talking to Hisham Kassem, the publisher of Al Masri Al Youm, the other day about how so many of these super-duper “reformist” ministers have had their field of actions greatly narrowed by the presidency, and in some cases have gone from being quite respected figures to yet another set of regime sycophants. He said, “After Mubarak is gone, people will look at them and say, ‘he was one of Mubarak’s men.'” The time is running out on the present regime, super-duper reformist ministers. You better start thinking about your future careers and how history will remember you.