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Hossam el-Hamalawy

Year: 2008

Das Kapital sales are up by 300%

Posted on 16/10/200808/01/2021 By 3arabawy

Rock on Karl!

Karl Marx is back. That, at least, is the verdict of publishers and bookshops in Germany who say that his works are flying off the shelves.
The rise in his popularity has of course, been put down to the current economic crisis. “Marx is in fashion again,” said Jörn Schütrumpf, manager of the Berlin publishing house Karl- Dietz which publishes the works of Marx and Engels in German. “We’re seeing a very distinct increase in demand for his books, a demand which we expect to rise even more steeply before the year’s end.”
Most popular is the first volume of his signature work, Das Kapital. According to Schütrumpf, readers are typically “those of a young academic generation, who have come to recognize that the neoliberal promises of happiness have not proved to be true.”
Bookshops around the country are reporting similar findings, saying that sales are up by 300%. (Though the fact that they are not prepared to quote actual figures suggests the sales were never that high).
Literature comes and goes and it is nice to see that trends are not always driven by slick marketing campaigns. Just as Rudyard Kipling would have been delighted that his poem The Gods of the Copybook Headings which contains the apt lines: “Then the Gods of the Market tumbled, and their smooth-tongued wizards withdrew.” is modish once more, so Marx would have reveled in the idea that an economic crisis had reignited interest in his works. (Not, you understand, because of the increased royalties that would be coming his way over the next few months were he still alive.)
Increasing numbers of Germans appear ready to out themselves as Marx fans in a time when it is fashionable to repeat the philosopher’s belief that excessive capitalism with all its greed finally ends up destroying itself. When Oskar Lafontaine, the head of Germany’s rising left-wing party Die Linke, said he would include Marxist theory in the party’s manifesto, in the outline of his plans to partially nationalise the nation’s finance and energy sectors, he was labeled as a “mad leftie” who had “lost the plot” by the tabloid Bild. But even Germany’s finance minister, Peer Steinbrück, who must have had some sleepless nights over the past few weeks, has now declared himself something of a fan. “Generally one has to admit that certain parts of Marx’s theory are really not so bad,” he cautiously told Der Spiegel.

Karl Marx

Enough!

Posted on 16/10/200805/03/2021 By 3arabawy

30 May 2007: A woman from Qale’t el-Kabsh slum screaming at the police, outside the parliament in Qasr el-Eini Street, where citizens clashed with troops several times demanding alternative housing and compensations after the slum was burnt down.

A Woman from Qale't el-Kabsh Slum إمرأة من قلعة الكبش تندد بالشرطة والحكومة

Police fear the people, says former officer

Posted on 15/10/200803/01/2021 By 3arabawy

From the Daily News Egypt:

The recent death of a pregnant woman allegedly at the hands of a police officer in the town of Samalut has again brought to the fore the transgressions of officers from the police force in Egypt.
And while the transgression is just one in a long line of reported cases, what was more of a rarity was the reaction the incident propelled: more than a hundred people attacked policemen with rocks and sticks in retaliation.
That change in the dynamic between the police force and the general public is attributable to a fear of what citizen unrest might result in, according to former police officer Omar Afifi.
“Don’t underestimate us. The security apparatus is terrified of the youth of Egypt right now,” he said.
“You ask how can we affect change when the police are everywhere, activists and journalists are in prison, and [the regime] has a stranglehold on the country as if you’re afraid [but the truth is] they’re afraid.
“We’re making them afraid, not the other way round. Look at the Shura Council fire [last August]; that is the police. This failure [to put out the fire] extends to all other departments of the security apparatus,” he added.
Afifi, a police officer for 20 years, authored a book which was swiftly pulled as soon as it hit the bookstores, titled “Alashan Matederebsh Ala Affak” (So You Don’t Get Slapped on the Nape of the Neck). In Egypt, being hit on the nape of the neck signifies dishonor and having the wool pulled over your eyes.
“If we abide by the law and constitution in Egypt, many things will change.”
The book reads like a treatise on the law governing the interaction between the police and the people, and is written in the same question and answer format used in police interrogations. Afifi wrote it to raise public awareness about citizen rights when dealing with the police; and what the police can legally do and not do, laws that the police flaunt according to the former officer.
“The policeman should serve his people, not what we see now where they stomp on people’s necks. It has turned into a tool of oppression. We imagine the police to be this ogre that is controlling people, but they depend on peoples’ ignorance of the law to do what they want,” he said.
Afifi, who fled to the United States in the aftermath of the furor surrounding the book (it was the only country he had a visa for), managed to talk via videoconference at the Heliopolis chapter of the Democratic Front party last month.
He stated that he fled due to fear of what might happen to him had he been arrested, and duly highlighted several different methods of torture carried out here.
Amongst the methods of torture used in Egyptian police stations, according to Afifi, is electrical shocks, urination in the mouth and covering prisoners in sugar and leaving them for the ants.

In related news, the Torture in Egypt blog is reporting that a police informer kidnapped and sexually abused three children in Wadi el-Natron as a favor for a friend! The informer also fabricated charges against the kids, keeping them in custody for 38 days.

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