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Hossam el-Hamalawy

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Hossam el-Hamalawy

Tag: bloggers

Crackdown on Egyptian blogosphere continues

Posted on 08/03/200727/12/2020 By 3arabawy

I received the following message from blogger ِAmr Gharbeia:

Rumors have been reaching me for days now, and I received confirmation only today from lawyer Gamal Eid, executive manager of Arabic Network for Human Rights Information.
It seems that Judge Abdel Fattah Morad, head of Alexandria Appeal Court, has started a lawsuit against the government in Egypt’s Administrative Courts in order to block a number of Egyptian websites. The list, 21-websites-long, includes the blogs and sites that took part in the discussion around the book the Judge has written, and the wide plagiarism evident in the book copying HRInfo’s report on Internet Freedoms in the Arab World, and a how-to-blog guide written by blogger Bent Masreya.
Of the 21 blogs and website, I was able so far to confirm Kifaya’s and HRInfo’s websites, in addition to the blogs of Bent Masreya, Yehia Megahed, and my own.

UPDATE: More details from Amr:

The lawsuit is started by Abdel Fattah Murad, one of Egypt’s most senior judges–and head of the Alexandria Appeal Court, where imprisoned blogger Abdul Kareem Nabil Soliman’s case is heard next week.
The judge is a self-claimed authority in internet issues. I was excited by the fact that he started a blog a while ago, and wrote him asking if he would mind me writing a review for a book he published recently on “the scientific and legal foundations of blogs”. He did not mind, until I published the thing. He obviously has copied tens of pages from the recent report by the Arabic Network for Human Rights Information on Internet freedoms in the Arab world. I noticed this only because some of the figures and estimations were taken from an interview with me. He did this without citation, except for one link to in the endnotes, while putting footnotes to other books he wrote on text that he has not written.
Three things prove it is not a mistake: 1) he copied at least two other bloggers with no referencing at all; 2) he changed parts in the text copied from the report to mean the opposite, for example to indicate that Tunisia is a nice, liberal and progressive country; and 3) he published at the front and back pages of his book several warnings against plagiarism, and referred to laws, religions and scientific research methods. He does not allow anyone to cite anything more than two lines from his writings, and in the book he warns against bloggers who violate copyrights, associates them with international terrorism and other things, and claims he has written a reference on scientific methodology. To top it all, he annexes ready-to-fill complaint forms against bloggers who publish pornography (fitting someone’s head over a naked body, an imaginary case with no history in Egypt’s blogs) and publicizing news that could tarnish the country’s reputation.
I do not really care much for copy rights, and think they are over-rated and keep knowledge, medicine, and soon genetically-engineered food from the world’s poorest, and I would not have written anything if this was another blogger, or a journalist, or even a university professor. What worries me, however, is that this is a judge whose ruling cannot be appealed. He can silence, imprison or execute people, and he oversees our elections.
Once the blogs are found offensive by the court, then in light of the Egyptian’s regime reputation, it is automatic to prosecute the bloggers. This is an early warning. We are still gathering information, and HRInfo should be making a release and starting procedure Saturday next.

MB blogger calls for Kareem’s release

Posted on 08/03/200716/01/2021 By 3arabawy

Muslim Brotherhood blogger Abdel Moneim Mahmoud calls for the release of secular blogger Kareem Amer and all political detainees..

I take my hat off to Abdel Moneim.

France bans citizen journalists from reporting police brutality

Posted on 07/03/200718/12/2020 By 3arabawy

What could one expect from a country of racist, corrupt politicians like Sarkouzi and Le Pen, except this:

The French Constitutional Council has approved a law that criminalizes the filming or broadcasting of acts of violence by people other than professional journalists. The law could lead to the imprisonment of eyewitnesses who film acts of police violence, or operators of Web sites publishing the images, one French civil liberties group warned on Tuesday.

France should be added to the black list of the enemies of the internet and civil liberties. The more I read about this country’s security services, their pioneering role in founding the modern school of interrogation under torture, their treatment of foreigners and refugees, as well as demonstrators and activists… the more I understand why Mubarak and Chirac are such good friends.

To citizen-journalists in France: You have my absolute solidarity against this law. And if you fear any legal consequences, I would like to assure you that there are many in the Egyptian blogosphere (including myself) who are ready to post any French police brutality videos you send us.

By the way, I think my fellow Egyptians would also be interested to know that the Egyptian Central Security Forces, which beat the shit out us in demonstrations, were actually established after Nasser’s security services were impressed by the role the French riot police (known as the CRS) played in suppressing the French students and workers intifada in May 1968.

Thanks France, keep on spreading your liberty around the world.

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