بطاقة رقم 2100168
There’s another letter, I had posted last summer from a former Islamist detainee, you can find here.
Hossam el-Hamalawy
There’s another letter, I had posted last summer from a former Islamist detainee, you can find here.
I’m receiving news that Police is cracking down on the Cinema Metro demo. Plainclothes security agents are dispersing protesters and people away.
Five people, I heard, have been arrested including activist Nadia Mabrouk, Waleed Salah, a student from the AUC named Dina, a foreign journalist and an unnamed protester.
The police also assaulted Reuters photographer Nasser Nouri, and smashed his camera battery.
A group of women protesters, including anti-torture activist Dr. Magda Adly, are cornered now inside the Excelsior Cafe, next to Cinema Metro.
UPDATE: Those who were under siege in the Excelsior Cafe have managed to leave, and they are on their way to the Press Syndicate. Talaat Harb is full of baltaggiya (plainclothes thugs used by the police).
UPDATE: The Press Syndicate is under siege by Central Security Forces, plainclothes thugs.
UPDATE: It seems all those kidnapped by the police were released, except for Kefaya activists Nadia Mabrouk and her fiance Waleed Salah who are spending the night in Qasr el-Nil Police Station, and will be transferred to the prosecutor in the morning on charges of possessing leaflets of anti-regime inflammatory content, disturbing public order, etc.
I was told by their lawyer that Nadia was beaten up during the arrest, and a State Security officer kept on hitting her several times against the metal stair steps of the Prison Truck. Later she was greeted with a slap on the face at Qasr el-Nil Police Station (where Kefaya activist Muhammad el-Sharqawi was brutally tortured and sexually abused last May), before she was thrown to al-takhsheeba.
Here are two press reports on the demo, from The Daily Star Egypt and the New York Times.
UPDATE: Reporters Without Borders denounced the police crackdown on journalists covering the protest.
Dozens of wives of Islamist detainees demonstrated today in front of the Lawyers’ Syndicate, Downtown Cairo, to protest their husbands continuous detention by the Interior Ministry. Some of them have been in jails without trial since the 1980s.
Meanwhile, a handful of Muslim Brothers journalists demonstrated in front of the Press Syndicate, protesting the closure of the group-affiliated paper, Afaq Arabiya, seven months ago by the government. The journalists posed as vegetable sellers, to symbolize their financial difficulties. “We are left with nothing but selling vegetables ya hokouma,” they were shouting.