Skip to content
3arabawy
3arabawy

Hossam el-Hamalawy

  • Home
  • About
  • Archive
  • Blog
  • Photos
  • Books
3arabawy

Hossam el-Hamalawy

Tag: bloggers

Egypt’s internet activism

Posted on 14/05/200806/02/2021 By 3arabawy

From the Washington Post:

When most people log onto Facebook, the thought of fermenting revolution is pretty far from their minds. But in the Middle East, and most recently in Egypt, Facebook has become an important platform for dissent in countries that routinely clampdown on liberal activists, and where the mosque has traditionally been the only outlet for venting political frustration.
Last month saw the arrest of Esra Abdel Fattah, 27, after she formed a group on Facebook calling for protests against the high price of food and other commodities in Egypt. Strike action was already planned by factory workers in the Nile Delta city of Mahalla al-Kobra, and the Facebook group, which attracted 64,000 members, tapped into a national mood of unrest. During Fattah’s incarceration, police clashed with protesters in Mahalla, killing three; some 500 people were detained.
By the time Egyptian police freed her two weeks ago, Fattah, an active online activist and member of the liberal al-Ghad political party, had become something of a cyber folk hero, feted by Middle Eastern bloggers and tech-minded students. A second Facebook group began calling for the release of Fattah and the other detainees, and for further protests on May 4th. A Cairo University student even heckled the Egyptian prime minister as he gave a speech at the campus on role of the internet as a communication tool:
“Prime Minister, release all the… detainees,” he said. “They are the same young people who used the Internet to express their opinions.”
But on her release, Fattah gave a press conference in which she admitted her Facebook activities were a mistake, and that she would no longer take part in protest networking.
It’s not difficult to imagine the level of intimidation she must have faced from the Egyptian regime, one of the more thuggish in the region. Last week, another Facebook activist Ahmad Mayer Ibrahim was arrested by Egyptian police for his membership of May 4th protest group (the protest led to some shops closing, and a subdued mood on the streets, but on the whole protesters stayed home). The 27-year-old civil engineer was stripped naked and beaten intermittently for 12 hours before being released without charge.
All of this has left Egyptian bloggers and other Facebook activists taking stock of their sudden elevation to the forefront of cyber protest, and the government’s brutal response.
Some, like Mohammed Nabil, a Cairo University student and Facebook activist, remain undeterred and point to a glorious new era of online activism.
“The people who are signing up to protest on Facebook aren’t the sort of people who’d normally get involved in politics. In the past the activists have often been Islamists, but now the Internet is reaching out to a new generation,” said Nabil. He added that the government would find it impossible to police the internet.
But others are not so sure that Facebook activism isn’t just window-dressing for the more the more important task of “on-the-ground” activism. What scares the government, they say, is not the activities of the privileged middle class who have internet access, but the millions of impoverished laborers, factory hands, and the unemployed. So far the jury is out on Facebook’s ability to mobilize the masses: the April protests that Fattah called coincided with pre-arranged strike plans among workers, but the more purely Facebook phenomenon strike called earlier this month largely petered out.
The popular blog 3arabawy has been keen to play down the role of Facebook:
“I hope our peers in the activist community will wake up and realize now the limitations of online activism…” writes Hossam el-Hamalawy, the blog’s author. “Let’s get back to organizing on the ground, fellow bloggers, and leave behind these cyber-fantasies.”

Blogging the strike: Activists remain behind bars

Posted on 05/05/200824/03/2015 By 3arabawy

From the Daily News Egypt…

The last entry on Kareem Al-Beheiri’s blog, egyworkers.blogspot.com, reads, “It is now 7 am on April 6 and I am on my way to the Mahalla textile factory to cover the events of the strikes. I wish success to all seeking to expose the failing Egyptian political system.”
It is unlikely that in those early hours of the morning Kareem expected that a month later his blog would still post the very same entry. Kareem was among the hundreds of protesters, journalists, activists and bloggers arrested around Egypt on April 6 and 7.
Although workers had organized a strike planned for April 6 inside the Spinning and Weaving factory in Mahalla Al-Kubra, State Security forces prevented the workers’ strike from ever coming off the ground. Yet, protesting masses on the streets could not be halted.
Leading up to May 4, Mahalla streets are crowded with State Security vehicles causing Hamdy Hussein, Director of the Afaq Socialist Center to describe the town as being under “military occupation.”
Prior to the protests on April 6, in an attempt to quell the uprising, minister of investment Mahmoud Mohieddin raised worker’s food allowance from LE 43 to LE 90. Days following the April 6 strikes Mahalla workers received a 30-day bonus, while other workers across the country were given a 15-day bonus. In an attempt to placate the masses on Labor Day, President Hosni Mubarak announced a 30 percent raise for public sector workers.
Worker and activist Hamdy Hussein explained that this raise, though played up in the government press was nothing out of the ordinary. “The 30 percent income raise is part of established worker rights,” Hussein told Daily News Egypt.
Hussein stresses that various grassroots factions — not the worker leadership — organized the protests that took place in the city of Mahalla Al-Kubra and across Egypt on April 6 and 7. The people assembled in the streets because of a deep frustration and anger at the political system in Egypt, he added.

Lawyers had managed to visit blogger Kareem and Textile Workers’ League leading activist Kamal el-Fayoumi, as well as Tarek Amin, in Bourg el-Arab prison two days ago according to a Socialist source in Cairo. I wasn’t told yet any details about how the meeting went, but what the socialist source said, confirmed by Mahalla blogger Abdel Gelil, is that the morale of the detainees is high.

What’s worrying however is all detained Ghazl el-Mahalla activists have been officially fired from their jobs by the state management of Ghazl el-Mahalla company.

And to add to the melodrama, it turned out, according to a statement I received from the lawyers yesterday, that both Kamal el-Fayoumi and Tarek Amin were contacted prior to their arrest on 6 April by someone who identified himself as a journalist with the BBC Arabic service, requesting an interview. When Kamal and Tarek went to the agreed place, “they discovered it was a [police] ambush,” added the statement. The BBC should officially respond to this, and give an explanation. Did any of their journalists get in touch with Kamal and Tarek on that day prior to their arrest? If so, what went wrong? But if not, then they should simply ask the Mubarak’s regime why use their name in scams against dissidents!? Next time an Egyptian activist gets a phone call from someone who claims to be from the BBC Arabic Service will definitely think twice before answering any questions or agreeing to meet somewhere…

Fellow activists in Cairo and Mahalla are calling on labor unions around the world to issue new solidarity statements with the Mahalla detainees, who are currently held in Bourg el-Arab Prison, Alexandria, by a martial decree from General Habib el-Adly, Mubarak’s Torturer-In-Chief. We urgently need statements that denounce their sackings from their jobs, and which demand their immediate release and reinstatement. Feel free to email me, or better post your solidarity letters in the comments section, and I’ll do my best to see they reach labor organizers in Egypt…

جبهة الدفاع عن متظاهرى مصر
البيان الثاني و الثلاثون
المحلة:
لم تتوقف حشود الأمن عن التوافد على مدينة المحلة منذ عصر الأمس، وقد تحولت المدينة إلى ثكنة عسكرية ، و نقاط تفتيش ثابتة في كل شارع ، ومنطقة مصنع مصر للغزل والنسيج ممنوع الاقتراب منها أو التصوير، وهناك تهديدات مباشرة تلقاها العمال انه في حالة الاحتجاج والتظاهر سيكون الرد بالرصاص الحي.
معتقل برج العرب:
قد تمكنت الجبهة من زيارة معتقل برج العرب أمس، وكنا ذاهبين لزيارة المعتقلين السياسيين والبالغ عددهم 19 معتقل من البحيرة وكفر الشيخ والمنصورة والإسكندرية والمحلة ، وبالصدفة اكتشفنا وجود 42 معتقل من اهالى المحلة معتقلين جنائيا، وعندما قدمنا تصاريح زيارة السياسيين علمنا بقرار إطلاق سراح إبراهيم صالح وإبراهيم توفيق و أسامة كامل واحمد أمين ومحمد عوف من المنصورة، واحمد عراقي ومصطفى حلمي من الإسكندرية ، وطاهر أبو شعرة من دمنهور، وبذلك بقى في المعتقل كريم البحيرى وطارق أمين وكمال الفيومي من عمال المحلة ، ومحمد زايد الصباحي وسامح حسانين وناجى السخاوى من كفر الشيخ وقطب حسانين واحمد السيد من الإسكندرية، وعادل العطار وعصام جويدة من البحيرة، وقد حكي لنا عمال المحلة الثلاثة وقائع القبض عليهم صباح يوم 6 ابريل الساعة العاشرة صباحا وقبل حدوث اى احتجاجات في المحلة، فقد القي القبض على كريم أثناء مصاحبته لفريق قناة بى بى سى العربية، أما طارق وكمال فقد اتصل بهم شخص عرفهم بنفسه انه من قناة بى بى سى العربية ويرغب في التسجيل معهم وعندما ذهبوا إلى المكان المتفق عليه اكتشفوا انه كمين.
القاهرة
القاهرة تشهد يوما عاديا من تكدس المواصلات ، وزحمة الشوارع ، وملابس المواطنين العادية والتي لا يغلب عليها السواد، ولا يكسر هذا المشهد إلا الحشود الأمنية بمنطقة الإسعاف وإمام دار القضاء العالي، بالإضافة لبعض الحشود الأمنية بمنطقة التحرير، أما أبرز الملامح فكانت في حرب الصحف بين القومية والمستقلة حيث عمدت القومية إلى الاحتفاء بمولد الرئيس وكان أبرزها الأهرام الذي ربط بين مولد مبارك وميلاد مصر من جديد، في حين جاءت الصحف المستقلة متضاربة حيث أبرزت نهضة مصر خبر رفض 14 حزبا لإضراب الفيس بووك واتهام هذه الأحزاب للمضربين بالقوى غير الشرعية وبالعمالة لأمريكا، في حين أفردت المصري اليوم ملفا عن حكم مبارك وأوضحت في الصفحة الأولى تحول المحلة إلى ثكنة عسكرية، أما الدستور فكان المانشيت الرئيسي حول 4 مايو بين عيال الله وعيال الحكومة، وأفردت صفحة عن أحوال المعتقلين، في حين جاء مانشيت البديل بعنوان جائعون مصاحبا لوجه مبارك وعليه علامات الشيخوخة وتعليقات حول أمراض الشيخوخة وأفردت بالداخل صفحة عن المعتقلين وملفا حول شخصية مبارك بعنوان كل 80 سنة وأنت طيب يا ريس مصر عجزت أمام نقابة المحامين فقد ترددت أبناء عن احتمال تظاهر المحامين أمام النقابة في الساعة الثانية ظهرا
دمنهور:
تم بالأمس القبض على علاء أحمد فوزي من مدينة دمنهور

Egyptians ignore strike call by Facebook activists group

Posted on 05/05/200806/02/2021 By 3arabawy

As expected, yesterday’s “Facebook Strike” was a failure.. I hope our peers in the activist community will wake up and realize now the limitations of online activism. Let’s get back to organizing on the ground, fellow bloggers, and leave behind these cyber-fantasies.

Egyptians largely ignored a call by online activists for a general strike Sunday to protest against the government on President Hosni Mubarak’s 80th birthday.
Analysts said the failure showed the limited influence of activists organizing on social networking site Facebook after their successful strike last month generated enthusiasm that a new form of political protest was emerging in the Arab world’s largest nation.
Veteran political analyst Mohammed Sayyed Said sees the networking sites as excellent tools for political discussion. But he said the “total failure” of this strike showed their inability to connect with the common people here.
“The advantages were very clear,” he told The Associated Press. “Several thousand people were debating an issue, which is extraordinary by any standards. … But when it comes to touching cause with the public, it’s a different story,” said Said, who is also editor of the independent Badeel newspaper.
Only 8 percent of Egyptians use the Internet, according to the International Telecommunications Union.
Egypt’s so-called “Facebook party” burst onto the political scene in March when a group set up on the site called for a nationwide strike April 6 in solidarity with nation’s dissatisfied workers. It quickly garnered 60,000 members.
The lack of traffic and nearly empty schools and universities on that day suggested that the online advocacy had convinced many Egyptians to express their dissatisfaction over low wages and rising prices.
But the response may have had more to do with the fact that workers at the country’s largest textile factory in Mahalla el-Kobra had already decided to strike that day and they had popular sympathy.
Still a flurry of local and international media reports hailed what they said was a new method of political opposition to subvert heavy state restrictions on dissent.
Buoyed by their success, the Facebook group called a second strike for Sunday to coincide with the president’s 80th birthday. They are demanding legislation to raise wages, control prices and battle corruption.
“Everybody is suffering, if not from corruption, then from prices hike,” said Ahmad Maher, a construction engineer who helped set up the Facebook group. “All want a change to take place in Egypt.”
Inflation in Egypt reached 14.4 percent annually in March, making life even more difficult for the 20 percent of the country’s 76.5 million people who live below the poverty line of about US$2 per day. In the last two months, eleven people have died in clashes while standing in line to buy subsidized bread, according to police.
Activist Hossam el-Hamalawy, a left-wing blogger with close ties to the labor movement, dismissed their efforts ahead of the strike in what proved to be prophetic criticism about the limitations of the group.
“A few bloggers sipping coffee … in downtown Cairo cannot bring about this general strike,” he wrote on April 27.
El-Hamalawy argued that only groups with deep links to the people, such as some of the labor organizations in Egypt’s vast public sector factories, can pull off a successful strike and pressure the government.
“A group of ‘Facebook activists’ cannot also mobilize for it,” he wrote on this blog. “Neither are the current opposition groups all together.”
In the capital Cairo on Sunday, it was business as usual with snarled traffic and busy commuters filling the streets despite the strike call.

You can continue reading Paul Schemm’s and Maggie Michael’s AP report here. And here’s also a report by Sarah Carr on the downtown Cairo protest:

Protesters gathered outside the Lawyers’ Syndicate yesterday and called for an end to the rule of Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, on his 80th birthday.
Around 40 people took part in the demonstration on the steps of the Syndicate, the only protest in the capital on a day when activists on Facebook had called for a general strike throughout Egypt.
The call was made last month, a few days after another general strike called for by opposition groups on April 6 in solidarity with textile workers at Ghazl El Mahalla who had announced their intention to strike.

DSCN3822

Ahmad has some pix too of the Kefaya students’ demo at Assiut University.

Again, let’s get back to organizing on the ground. The general strike is coming, but will come from below, not from above and certainly not from the cyberspace. I urge you all to read this classic by Rosa Luxembourg: “The Mass Strike” [available in Arabic here]. Be patient as you decipher names and events that took place a century or two ago. The politics and dynamics of the mass strikes are still the bloody same.

And please also take time to read the Center for Socialist Studies statement re the April events and Comrade Yehya’s article in the Lebanese Al-Akhbar.

We should be grateful we have today all these technological resources that didn’t exist for the 19th and 20th Century revolutionaries. But this technology should be complimentary and a logistical support for whatever we do ON THE GROUND. I’m neither depressed nor demoralized about yesterday. I never believed it’s gonna work. I hope others do not get demoralized either. This enthusiasm among the youth for strikes and bringing the country to halt as a means of toppling the dictator is a positive phenomenon, yet should be channeled into reaching out to those workers in the factories in the Nile Delta as well as the urban poor in the slums. These workers and urban poor are NOT on Facebook, and I’m afraid I don’t expect them to be on it anytime soon. They will only listen to and liaise with bloggers and activists they see in person. So, Let’s focus on reality and not virtual reality.

Down with Mubarak… Down with the Ministry of Torture… Power to the Egyptian Workers…

  • Previous
  • 1
  • …
  • 32
  • 33
  • 34
  • …
  • 84
  • Next

Search 3arabawy

Follow 3arabawy

  • Facebook
  • Flickr
  • Instagram
  • X
  • YouTube
  • Spotify
  • Bluesky
©2026 3arabawy