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Hossam el-Hamalawy

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Hossam el-Hamalawy

Tag: parliament

Egypt parliament fire fuels scorn of government

Posted on 24/08/200803/01/2021 By 3arabawy

Maggie Michael reports:

A fire that gutted the upper house of parliament this week has fueled Egyptians’ scorn for their authoritarian government, with critics saying it is unable to protect its own buildings and maintain basic infrastructure.
Firefighters appeared ineffectual Tuesday as they battled the blaze raging through the top floors of the 19th-century palace that houses the Shura Council. Dozens of fire trucks rushed to the scene, but at least in the early hours, only a few sprayed water on it. Firefighters mainly stayed outside, while the flames spread and ravaged the interior.
Army helicopters dropped buckets of water from the nearby Nile River, but were seen to often miss the building. They did get enough water on it to collapse part of the roof, with little effect on the fire. It took 18 hours to extinguish the blaze.
One firefighter was killed and a dozen were injured.
Interior Minister Habib el-Adly ruled out arson or terrorism. Initial reports said the blaze was sparked by a short-circuit in an air conditioning unit. The fire recalled a string of past accidents that were thought to have been caused or exacerbated by negligence.
In 2006, a ferry crossing the Red Sea from Saudi Arabia sank, killing more than 1,000 Egyptians. A parliamentary investigation found the ferry had been allowed to operate while failing to meet minimum safety requirements and both the company and government were criticized for failing to respond quickly to the sinking.
The acquittal of the ferry’s owner on negligence charges last month raised an outcry that authorities were protecting the wealthy businessman.
In 2002, a fire destroyed a train in southern Egypt, killing 370 people, mostly poor passengers in third-class cars, and there have been several deadly train collisions since.
“It’s the same confusion, the same accusations (of negligence) and the same denial,” columnist Magdy el-Galad wrote Thursday in the independent daily Al-Masry Al-Youm, comparing the parliament blaze to the earlier disasters.
Ibrahim Eissa, editor of opposition Al-Dustour daily, criticized the “deterioration of our system, which has become incapable of protecting even its buildings from fire and disasters.” The opposition Al-Wafd daily called for those responsible for the fire to be put on trial.

US-backed Mubarak extends state of emergency for another 2 years

Posted on 26/05/200802/01/2021 By 3arabawy

Hosni Mubarak, has done it again:

Egypt on Monday extended a controversial decades-old state of emergency by two years despite pledges to replace it by new legislation, in a move slammed by rights groups as anti-constitutional.
“Parliament has accepted during its afternoon session today the decision by the president of the republic to extend the state of emergency for two years starting from June 1, or until a new terror law is drafted, whichever comes first,” the state news agency MENA said.
“It was passed with 305 votes in favor and 103 against,” Issam al-Mokhtar, an MP with the Muslim Brotherhood, told AFP by telephone.
The state of emergency was first imposed in 1981 after the assassination by Islamists of president Anwar Sadat and has been repeatedly renewed since then despite protests from rights groups and regime opponents.
Prime Minister Ahmad Nazif pledged to “only use the law in the fight against terrorism… and to protect the security of the nation and its citizens,” MENA reported.
“The government… has only used the articles of the law strictly for the goals intended, namely the fight against terrorism,” Nazif told parliament.
Last year, Judicial and Parliamentary Affairs Minister Mufid Shehab said the state of emergency would end in 2008, even if the new anti-terror law meant to replace it was not ready.

U.S. Dog كلب الأمريكان

Mubarak’s NDP-dominated parliament passes law prohibiting demos in places of worship

Posted on 21/02/200801/01/2021 By 3arabawy

From the Daily News Egypt:

The People’s Assembly’s (PA) legislative committee passed a new draft law filed by the government forbidding demonstrations inside places of worship, Hamdy Hassan, PA member affiliated with the Muslim Brotherhood told Daily News Egypt.
However, Hassan believes that the new law is “against freedom of expression,” adding that the Egyptian government regularly puts restrictions on freedom of expression through any possible means.
“The government does not even allow protests inside closed meetings between political parties,” Hassan said.
The law, according to Hassan, was drafted specifically to disallow “the demonstrations that usually take place after Friday prayers especially inside Al-Azhar mosque.”
Hafez Abu Saeda, director of the Egyptian Organization for Human Rights (EOHR), echoed Hassan’s opinion. He told Daily News Egypt that the new law “certainly limits freedom of expression.”
“Our stand on this law as a human rights organization is clear as we are against any law or regulation that goes against the public’s right to stage a peaceful protest expressing their point of view as long as those protests do not involve assaults on any private or public property or individuals,” Abu Saeda said.
He added that the government failed to provide “a justification for why it came up with such a law.”
“For so many years Al-Azhar mosque was the place where many peaceful protests were staged against events that took place both inside and outside Egypt,” Abu Saeda explained, adding that this law is aimed at putting a stop to Al-Azhar demonstrations.

In other news, Al-Masry Al-Youm leaked clauses of the new Counterterrorism Law to be enacted by the Parliament. And what’s the Muslim Brotherhood leaders’ reaction, in the midst of the police crackdowns and military tribunals? Ali Greisha, a leading MB member said that “the law would not affect MB work and called on President Mubarak to start a truce with this group, saying that MB would promise not to challenge the regime in return for liberty of movement and expression.”

Mr. Greisha wake up and spare us this crap. Hosni is not gonna listen to you, as he never listened to you before nor to anyone else. Hosni listens only to his masters in Washington DC and Europe or when he feels he’s about to be dethroned by street pressure. So please stop this regime-ass-kissing parade and start mobilizing in the streets.

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