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Hossam el-Hamalawy

Tag: 6 april 2008

Labor blogger freed after weeks of torture

Posted on 02/06/200806/02/2021 By 3arabawy

AFP interviews Kareem el-Beheiri:

A blogger released after weeks behind bars over deadly protests at Egypt’s biggest textile plant for higher pay and controls on prices, said Monday he and his fellow detainees suffered weeks of “torture”.
“We were subjected to electric shocks, to beatings and there was no food and or drink for the first few days,” blogger Karim el-Beheiri told AFP a day after his release. “We went through weeks of torture and humiliation.”
Beheiri, Tarek Amin and Kamal al-Fayoumy, three worker activists, were arrested on April 6 at the Misr Spinning and Weaving company in the Nile Delta industrial city of Mahalla after riots which left three people dead and hundreds detained.
An interior ministry official confirmed the three had been released but denied they had been mistreated.
“These are false accusations,” the official told AFP on condition of anonymity. “Everything took place within a framework of human rights.”
They were accused of “inciting unrest, damage to property and demonstrating,” a security official told AFP, adding that of the hundreds detained in connection with the Mahalla riots, eight remain in custody.
The three were fired from their jobs after their arrest, said Beheiri, whose detention was condemned by international human rights watchdogs.
“Many of us had never seen the inside of a prison before,” Beheiri said, describing his first weeks at Borg al-Arab prison near the Mediterranean city of Alexandria sharing a small cell with 25 people as “terrifying.”
“We had bread thrown at us. They would dip their hands in our food before throwing it at us,” said Beheiri who, with the others, mounted two hunger strikes while in detention.
On April 16, the prosecution ordered the release of several detainees including Beheiri, Fayoumy and Amin, but the three remained behind bars until Sunday.
Beheiri said that during interrogations at state security headquarters in various Egyptian cities, questioning focused mainly on his blog and his connections to other bloggers.
“It’s the new fashion,” he said of a large-scale crackdown against Egypt’s cyber dissidents.
He said the first thing he wanted to do when he got home after the release was to blog the events.
“But I couldn’t remember my own password. It was so frustrating,” he said.
Symbolic of their rise to power, Egyptian police have arrested several political bloggers in recent months.
But despite Egypt’s Internet explosion, the cyber realm remains largely the preserve of the young and educated in a country where 40 percent of the population of 80 million people cannot read.
Nevertheless, Egypt’s bloggers, who rarely conceal their real identity, have taken on the role of bridging the gap between civil society’s desire for democracy and workers’ demands for better pay and working conditions.

Here’s a press release from RSF, and more updates on the detainees from the HMLC blog could be found here.

Updates on the detainees

Posted on 02/06/200806/02/2021 By 3arabawy

كريم البحيري

I received an email from Kareem. He’s fine alhamdolilah, and back with his family. He’d also like to send his regards to all the comrades around the world who stood in solidarity with him and the Ghazl el-Mahalla detainees.

Here’s also a report by Sarah Carr:

Three men detained in connection with the events of April 6 in Mahalla were released Saturday, lawyer Ahmad Ezzat told Daily News Egypt.
Kamel El-Fayyoumy, Karim El-Beheiry and Tareq Amin arrived home at 1 am early Sunday morning after their release, said Ezzat.
The men were being held in the Borg El-Arab prison where they had launched a hunger strike in protest at their detention.
El-Beheiry was arrested after he received a phone call from someone claiming to be from the BBC who requested a meeting.
When he, together with Amin, went to the meeting point both men were arrested by members of state security.
El-Fayyoumy was arrested separately.
El-Beheiry said in a joint letter subsequently sent out by the three men that he was tortured while being held at the Mahalla state security headquarters on April 7.
All three men were involved in the organization of a strike in the Ghazl El-Mahalla factory planned for the same day, which collapsed following worker disunity and intimidation by security bodies.
Violence subsequently erupted in the Delta town after security bodies clashed with residents protesting increasing food prices.
El-Fayyoumy, Amin and El-Beheiry were dismissed from their employment in the factory shortly after their arrest.
A court ordered their release on the April 21 during its examination of the cases of 204 individuals arrested in connection with the events in Mahalla.
Twenty-five of this group of 204 were issued detention orders after the court ordered their release — including El-Beheiry, El-Fayyoumy and Amin.
The Interior Ministry ordered the release of a total of 11 individuals on Saturday arrested in connection with the events in Mahalla.
Sami Francis and Fathy Hefnawy remain in El-Marg prison, Cairo.
The two men are members of opposition group Kefaya and were arrested on charges of inciting the April 6 general strike.
The strike was called for by opposition political parties and other activists via Facebook, in protest against corruption and rising food prices.
In addition, 42 individuals remain in preventative custody in connection with the events of Mahalla. The release of 10 of these 42 individuals was ordered yesterday at 2 pm.
They were in the El-Gharbeia security division in preparation for their release at time of press.
This group have been charged with rioting, illegal possession of firearms and theft, among other charges.
Following the events in Mahalla — during which a 15-year-old boy standing on a third floor balcony was shot dead, allegedly killed by police using live ammunition — state-run newspaper and television reports stated that the violence which erupted in the Delta town was caused by rioting criminals.
Rights groups and members of the independent media who witnessed the events allege that the police used unnecessary force against a peaceful, unplanned demonstration against rising food prices which had emerged spontaneously.
State-run media pointed to the damage committed against a school in Mahalla in support of government claims that the crowds which gathered on April 6 and 7 did so in order to commit criminal acts.
However, eyewitnesses interviewed by Daily News Egypt in April alleged that the damage to the school and the theft of its equipment occurred while police forces watched, and that the vandalism was in fact, orchestrated.
Ezzat alleges that the group are victims of trumped-up charges.
Also still in detention is Muhammad Maree.
Marei was arrested in Mahalla with US photojournalist James Buck on April 10.
He has been moved from the Borg El-Arab prison to Mansoura prison, where he is being allowed to sit exams.
Marei, a student of veterinary science, was translating for Buck when both men were detained while speaking to relatives of the hundreds detained on April 6 and 7.
While Buck was eventually released, Marei was not.
He subsequently disappeared before being taken to Borg El-Arab prison, where he is being held on charges of riotous assembly with more than five people of a nature to disturb public order.

More updates on the detainees on HMLC blog.

Mabrouk! The Mahalla 3 are home with their families

Posted on 01/06/200806/02/2021 By 3arabawy

I couldn’t blog about it earlier, since I was outside the house.. Our three comrades (Kamal el-Fayoumi, Tarek Amin and Kareem el-Beheiri) have arrived safely in their homes after they were released from State Security Police’s custody.

We still have Muhammad Maree, James Buck’s translator, left behind still in prison, together with a number of Mahalla citizens. Maree was transferred yesterday, according to a phone call from Socialist lawyer Ahmad Ezzat and a blog posting by Buck, to the Mansoura Prison, where he’ll be allowed to take the rest of his university exams. Muhammad already missed at least one, thanks to the detention decree by General Habib el-Adly, Mubarak’s Torturer-In-Chief.

UPDATE: More details about the released detainees at the HMLC blog.

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