Skip to content
3arabawy
3arabawy

Hossam el-Hamalawy

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

Hossam el-Hamalawy

Tag: students

18 & 19 January 1977: The Lost Revolution

Posted on 19/11/200705/02/2021 By 3arabawy

The Bread Uprising that shook Egypt’s urban towns on the 18th and 19th of January, 1977, is always wrongly treated in the mainstream media as an “Uprising of thieves,” quoting President Sadat’s description of the events, with emphasis on the violence and the looting that accompanied the people’s uprising.

After Mahalla triggered the Winter of Labor Discontent, and once more pushed for a Hot Industrial Autumn, some on the Left today cannot help but drawing parallels between the current situation and the time leading to Jan ’77.

The preconditions that preceded Bread Intifada will be the subject of a future posting; the events were the climax of a rising social movement from February 1968, that culminated in the two-day uprising that was to be crushed by Sadat’s army in 1977.

In this posting, however, I’ll focus on 1976 onwards, and the organized working class movement vs. the rioting which was mainly conducted by the urban poor. The resources used are parts of the MA Thesis I wrote eight years ago.

  • January 1977 Bread Uprising (Photo from Al-Ahram Archives)
  • January 1977 Bread Uprising (Photo from Al-Ahram Archives)
  • January 1977 Bread Uprising (Photo from Al-Ahram Archives)
  • January 1977 Bread Uprising (Photo from Al-Ahram Archives)
  • January 1977 Bread Uprising (Photo from Al-Ahram Archives)
  • January 1977 Bread Uprising (Photo from Al-Ahram Archives)
  • January 1977 Bread Uprising (Photo from Al-Ahram Archives)
  • January 1977 Bread Uprising (Photo from Al-Ahram Archives)
  • [19-1-1977] Demonstrators protesting increased food prices regroup on a rubble strewn street in Cairo Wednesday, after battling the Central Security Forces (Photo by AP)

Crackdown on Kefaya students in Assiut

Posted on 02/11/200724/03/2015 By 3arabawy

I received an email from blogger Wael Abbas, saying two Kefaya students (one from Karama and the other from the Nasserist Party) at Assiut University’s faculty of law were expelled by the Dean for distributing leaflets on the right to free education.

The students names are: Muhammad Kamal-Eddin and El-Husseini Abu Deif.

يسقط مبارك | بوستر من تصميم حسام الحملاوي ٢٠٠٧

Campus activism updates

Posted on 02/11/200730/12/2020 By 3arabawy

From the Daily Star Egypt:

Two journalists have filed a series of complaints against both campus security at Ain Shams University and its president, Ahmad Zaki Badr, and say that guards obstructed them from reporting on student demonstrations last week, blocking one man’s entrance to the campus and violently beating another who made it inside.
Aboul Seoud Muhammad, a journalist with Al-Masry Al-Youm, says that security forces barred him from entering the campus when he went to cover the demonstrations protesting vote-rigging and state interference in student body elections.
“I gave the security officers at the gates my card saying that I am a journalist and a member of the syndicate, but they said that I couldn’t enter unless I had a special pass,” Muhammad told Daily News Egypt. “I knew this wasn’t right, so I called the President of the University, Ahmad Zaki Badr, and he said he would send someone from the public relations (PR) office down to escort me in to the campus.
“I waited for two hours and no one came,” he added. “I called the president’s office and the PR office again and again and no one ever came down.”
While he stood waiting outside the university, Muhammad says he saw Amr Sharaf, a photographer from Al Dostour, come stumbling out. He had been badly beaten.
“He was badly hurt and had wounds on his head,” says Muhammad. “He said he had been beaten by a police officer.
“We tried to take a picture of Amr Sharaf and his wounds but the security officers said we couldn’t because it would tarnish the reputation of the university.”

Moreover, Al-Masry Al-Youm reports on mass protests on several campuses yesterday in Ain Shams, Fayoum, Ganoub el-Wadi and others over variety of issues including the increase in education fees and text books prices, vote rigging in student elections.

You can also find more background reports on the violations that marred the past student union elections here and here.

  • Previous
  • 1
  • …
  • 49
  • 50
  • 51
  • …
  • 65
  • Next

Search 3arabawy

Follow 3arabawy

  • Facebook
  • Flickr
  • Instagram
  • X
  • YouTube
©2025 3arabawy