Category: Blog
What can you do to help?
I receive emails every now and then from Egyptians (and non-Egyptians) abroad who’ve been following with disgust the actions of Mubarak’s police against the citizens, and ask me what they can do to help.
Here are few basic things you can do:
1) Stay updated. Familiarize yourself with the social struggle in the country and Mubarak’s police abuses by regularly checking the following websites:
Torture in Egypt
The Arabic Network for Human Rights Information (available in both Arabic and English)
Egyptian Blogs Aggregator
Human Rights Watch Egypt (available in both Arabic and English)
Amnesty International Egypt (available in both Arabic and English)
2) Circulate any information you come across about police abuses and the resistance against them to your network of contacts, activists, peers and family members
3) Whenever you hear or read of a torture case that happened in Egypt, try to get solidarity statements with the victims from the institutions you are affiliated with (for example: labor union, student union, community association, human rights organization, political party, etc). Forward the solidarity statement you managed to get to the following:
a) The Egyptian dictator asshole President Hosni Mubarak
b) The Egyptian Ministry of Torture and Pigs Interior
c) The Egyptian embassy or consulate in your town
4) It is always GREAT if you can pull together a protest, no matter how small (even one person with a banner!), in front of the Egyptian embassy or any of the consulates in your own country. Make sure you contact your local press and tell them in advance you are demonstrating, and invite them to attend the protest (even if small). And it would be also useful to take photos yourself of the protest, and upload them to Flickr, your own blog, or just send them to me or any other Egyptian blogger to circulate among the activist and journalist community in Egypt.
These are, as I said above, just few basic things you can do. More later…
Bulaq police sadists sentenced to 3 years in prison
The two sadist pigs from Bulaq el-Dakrour Police Station, Captain Islam Nabih and Corporal Reda Fathi, were sentenced yesterday to three years in prison for sodomizing driver Emad Kabeer and filming the abuse to further the humiliation.
There is a sense of joy in the blogosphere which broke the scandal as well as the independent press that carried on with the investigation.
One things we need to remember here, though: Our “War on Torture” is by no means over. These three-year prison sentences may be the “harshest” verdict produced by Videogate-related trial, but make no mistake, Islam and Reda, the two sadist animals, will receive a five-star treatment in jail like other police officers and influential figures receive when they get locked up. And that’s if they serve the whole sentence. The regime cronies for sure will also use the trial to claim they are “serious” in their commitment to “human rights.” But more importantly, HOW MANY OTHER ISLAM NABIHS ARE THERE in Mubarak’s Interior Ministry? AND HOW MANY EMAD KABEERS RIGHT NOW INSIDE THE POLICE STATIONS OF OUR COUNTRY’S 26 PROVINCES? Was Bulaq’s torture fiesta an “individual behavior” as the government mouthpieces claim whenever torture stories emerge? Of course not. Torture in Mubarak’s Egypt is a systematic practice by his security agencies, whether it’s State Security or the ordinary police. Has the Bulaq el-Dakrour Police Station’s “refrigerator” been closed down, or is still operating? [In case you don’t know, the Tallaga “Refrigerator” is what the police calls the room, which exists in virtually ever single police station, where interrogation of suspects occurs under torture. The walls of the room would be decorated by tools of torture, usually locally produced or personally improvised by Mubarak’s sick officers and corporals. Emad was sexually abused and whipped in Bulaq’s “refrigerator.”] The abuse and humiliation induced by the Egyptian police on the citizens are daily, and will continue as long as the current regime continues. The writings of retired Brigadier General Mahmoud Qutri, a self-described liberal, provides a great insight into how those monsters are created and shaped from the time they enroll in the police academy, till they join the force.
Putting away an officer or two behind bars means nothing, and don’t get fooled by those who tell you that other officers will take that as a warning not to torture. The only “warning” those officers will receive is to actually be more careful next time and refrain from filming the abuse. Even little kids in Egypt, who also fell on occasions victims to to Mubarak’s police monstrosity, understand well what it means to be “mabaheth” (investigations police).
Does that mean we stay at home and wait for change of regime to happen to see torture abolished? Hell No! We have to continue our anti-torture campaign in even more aggressive way… and the tactics are the same: “Naming and Shaming”. If we see abuse, we’ll photograph it. If we see a torturer, we’ll scandalize him among the public and the world.. We will continue to gather and document evidence about torturers, and collect the testimonies from victims and witnesses. BUT we will be doing that, without forgetting the bigger picture: as long as the current regime (and that includes any “smooth transition” expected to Jimmi or any of the other gangsters) exists, torturers will be enjoying a safe haven–one, whose scientists of pain have scored international reputation worthy of their brutality among their filthy colleagues in other security services around the world, turning Egypt into a part of the US-run global gulag.
I judge the success of the anti-torture campaign (or its failure) by observing generally how many people join the activist community, politicized by what they saw and read… and from there they develop a much sharper vision of the roots of the problem and how is this interrelated to other social, political and economic problems we have in our country, which I’m blaming in full those ruling jackboots for such a catastrophic era in the history of modern Egypt.
To make torture disappear. Mubarak’s regime has to be overthrown. And I see no other alternative but a general strike. If we stop the machine, it’s Game Over. Mahalla, Kafr el-Dawar, Helwan, Suez, Mansoura are the way forward. If anti-torture activists want to see this practice disappears, then they may want to start paying a bit more attention to and coordinate with the social force which, as we’ve seen repeatedly, when moves en masse, is unstoppable, to overthrow this system run by the dictator Mubarak.