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Hossam el-Hamalawy

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Hossam el-Hamalawy

Category: Photos

Mubarak’s police brutalize March 2003 anti-war protesters

Posted on 11/03/200704/02/2021 By 3arabawy

Mathew uploaded to his flickr account some pictures he took of the violence that engulfed downtown Cairo on 21 March 2003, following the outbreak of the US-led war on Iraq. More than 40,000 took control of downtown, but the scene went down into chaos with the severe police brutality against demonstrators.

Several friends of mine were detained on that day, and tortured. I was arrested in the afternoon of the following day, 22 March, and taken to Gamaliya Police Station with dozens of detainees picked up randomly in Tahrir Square, then transferred to State Security HQ in Lazoughly, before I was released by 3am. One week later, the director of the Government Press Center Attiya Shakran revoked my official Press Card saying he was acting on “orders from State Security.” Since then, I applied three times for credentials only to be turned down.

These were the biggest demos the capital has witnessed since the January 1977 Bread Intifada.

Hersh in Cairo

Posted on 25/02/200727/12/2020 By 3arabawy
Seymour Hersh in Cairo

The New Yorker’s Seymour Hersh, in a public talk at the Ewart Hall.

Trials Day

Posted on 25/02/200727/12/2020 By 3arabawy

It was my first time to go to the New Cairo Court House Compound, in el-Tagammu el-Khames, on the outskirts of my neighborhood Nasr City, east of Cairo, to cover the trial of Muhammad el-Attar, the alleged Egyptian Canadian spy, coincidentally at the same time when Khairat el-Shatter and other MB leaders were appealing against the govt freeze on their funds. Central Security Forces were deployed in the morning, awaiting the arrival of the MB detainees, besieging the gates of the court house compound.

  • Central Security Forces deployed in front of the court house compound gates, awaiting the arrival of the MB detainees. New Cairo, 24 February 2007.
  • Central Security Forces deployed in front of the court house compound gates, awaiting the arrival of the MB detainees. New Cairo, 24 February 2007.
  • Central Security Forces deployed in front of the court house compound gates, awaiting the arrival of the MB detainees. New Cairo, 24 February 2007.
  • Central Security Forces deployed in front of the court house compound gates, awaiting the arrival of the MB detainees. New Cairo, 24 February 2007.
  • Central Security Forces deployed in front of the court house compound gates, awaiting the arrival of the MB detainees. New Cairo, 24 February 2007.
  • Central Security Forces deployed in front of the court house compound gates, awaiting the arrival of the MB detainees. New Cairo, 24 February 2007.
  • Central Security Forces deployed in front of the court house compound gates, awaiting the arrival of the MB detainees. New Cairo, 24 February 2007.
  • Central Security Forces deployed in front of the court house compound gates, awaiting the arrival of the MB detainees. New Cairo, 24 February 2007.
  • Central Security Forces deployed in front of the court house compound gates, awaiting the arrival of the MB detainees. New Cairo, 24 February 2007.
  • Central Security Forces deployed in front of the court house compound gates, awaiting the arrival of the MB detainees. New Cairo, 24 February 2007.

As with all trials I had attended (I never covered a military trial before though), the High State Security court was similar to a circus, with many standing on the bench seats, shouting every now and then, the TV cameramen pushing and shoving to get a good view, the judges whispering to themselves, to the lawyers and the prosecutors without us being able to hear a word.

Muhammad el-Attar denied the prosecutor’s charges, and shouted from his cage saying he was innocent, and that he “was pressured by the Mukhabarat into confessing” he was spying for the Israelis. “The charges are fabricated,” he said. The Judge did not give him the chance to speak, saying Muhammad should speak to his lawyer first, and then the lawyer would say whatever Muhammad wanted to convey to the court.

And speaking of the lawyer–the defendant’s former lawyer Ragab el-Assal, who withdrew few days before the start of the trial, showed up today to announce his resignation from the case officially in front of the judge. Another lawyer stepped in for Muhammad’s defence by the name Ibrahim Bassiouny. I asked Bassiouny outside the court later how he was assigned to the case, he said he was assigned today by “coincidence” as he had gone to the court for another case, when Muhammad’s family bumped into him and asked him whether he wanted to take up the case, after the Lawyers’ Syndicate, he said, failed to provide one.

Earlier, an army of TV crews and photographers had assembled outside the compound waiting for the prison truck that held the alleged spy into court. Hardly no one managed to see him, since the police, acting all cheeky, took the guy inside the court building via a garage tunnel.

Muhammad’s trial was postponed to Wednesday. So the new lawyer has to read the entire case file, prepare his defense in four days.

We were on the first floor. Every now and then, we could hear strong chants. The chants were coming from the ground floor, where the trial of the MB leaders was in process. The appeal was adjourned, also to Wednesday.

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