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Hossam el-Hamalawy

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Hossam el-Hamalawy

Tag: detainees

SS raid blogger’s house

Posted on 11/06/200728/12/2020 By 3arabawy

State Security has raided the house of 26-year-old Muslim Brotherhood blogger Muhammad Mosaad Yaqout, early Sunday, in Balteem:

Egyptian security forces raided on Sunday at dawn, June, 10, 2007, the house of the writer and blogger, Muhammad Mossad Yaqout. The security forces raided the blogger’s house in Baltym, Kafr Al-Sheikh, at 2.00AM and disheveled the house furniture, seized the computer and a number of papers and books and they are still hunting Yaqout.
Yaqout said in a phone call with Ikhwanweb that”The security forces want to arrest me because I support Ghobashi Al-Atawi and Ashraf Al Sayyed, the Muslim Brotherhood candidate in the Shura Council midterm elections for the constituency of Baltym. They want to detain me also because of my anti-regime writings.
Yaqout, 26 years, confirmed that the State Security Police has no arrest warrant and it wants to detain him illegally. Yaqout, a researcher and web editor, is country chased by the security forces on groundless accusations.

814 MBs detained ahead of Upper House elections

Posted on 09/06/200728/12/2020 By 3arabawy

From Ikhwan Web:

The number of Muslim Brotherhood detainees as of Thursday afternoon, June 7th, 2007, reached 814, including 646 who were detained in the last two weeks, since the Muslim Brotherhood (MB) declared running for elections of the Shura Council, the upper chamber of parliament.

Mubarak’s regime arrests over 100 MB members as elections approach

Posted on 08/06/200715/01/2021 By 3arabawy

The regime’s crackdown continues, while the MB leadership still insistent on its non-confrontalist policy, refusing to mobilize properly in the streets or the syndicates on the “big” scale which one could expect the ‘biggest” opposition movement in the country to do.

Few pathetic sit-ins with 200 activists are not gonna get the detainees released.

Keep on bending your heads down Brothers, till the regime cracks your organization Nasser-style

Egypt arrests over 100 Muslim Brotherhood members as elections approach
By Nadia Abou El-Magd
CAIRO, Egypt (AP) _ Police arrested 105 members of the banned Muslim Brotherhood group in the past two days, including two candidates competing in upcoming parliamentary elections, the group and police officials said Wednesday.
The arrests were part of an ongoing crackdown that has intensified in the lead up to elections for the upper house of Parliament, known as the Shura Council. The Brotherhood has announced it has fielded 19 candidates in the June 11 elections.
Police arrested 81 members of the group in several provinces Wednesday, including 54 in Fayoum, 80 kilometers (50 miles) southwest of Cairo, and 20 in Menoufia, 60 kilometers (40 miles) north of Cairo, said the group’s lawyer Abdel Moneim Abdel Maqsoud. He added that 24 members of the Brotherhood were arrested Tuesday in Cairo and Giza.
Police officials confirmed the arrests, speaking on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk to the media. Detained Brotherhood members are often charged with belonging to an illegal group.
“We’re expecting many more arrests leading up to Monday elections,” Abdel Maqsoud told the Associated Press Wednesday. “Brotherhood members in prison have exceeded 600,” he added.
Abdel Maqsoud said the two candidates for Shura Council elections who were arrested were from Fayoum and Gharbeia, located some 100 kilometers (62 miles) north of Cairo.
The upper house of parliament, known as the Shura Council, was established in 1979 as an advisory body, but gained limited legislative powers from the recent constitutional amendments.
The Brotherhood has been banned since 1954 but has continued to operate and is Egypt’s most powerful opposition movement. Its lawmakers, who run as independents, hold 88 seats in the 454-seat parliament.
The Brotherhood advocates implementation of Islamic law but says it wants democratic reforms in Egypt, where President Hosni Mubarak, 79, has had a quarter-century of authoritarian rule.
The government accuses the group of seeking to take over the country and passed a series of constitutional amendments in March that further curtailed the Brotherhood’s ability to participate in politics.
The recent crackdown against Brotherhood members, including leading figures, started in December when Brotherhood students carried out a military-like parade. That prompted government accusations that the movement was forming an armed wing, providing students with combat training, knives and chains. The group denies forming a militia.
A military trial of 40 top Brotherhood figures on terrorism and money laundering charges began in late April, one of the largest such tribunals in years. International human rights groups and journalists were banned from attending the trial’s most recent session held Tuesday.

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