The Daily Star Egypt reports.
Tag: students
Police crackdown on MB students
State Security Police have arrested more than 20 Muslim Brotherhood students from their homes on Sunday dawn. The detained activists belonged to the Faculty of Commerce at Helwan University, and were part of the Free Student Union–a new independent student union launched by the MB and the Socialists last year in an attempt to act as an independent association parallel to the government (i.e. security)-dominated student unions in Egyptian universities.
UPDATE: A Reuters report by Aziz El-Kaissouni on the Free Student Union:
Egyptian Islamist students plan parallel election
CAIRO, Nov 6 (Reuters) – Egyptian students affiliated with the Muslim Brotherhood said on Monday they were holding parallel student elections next week after most of their candidates were disqualified from the official elections.
The “free” student unions will adopt student causes and defend their rights, they said in a statement.
Egypt has allowed only four or five of about 2,000 prospective Muslim Brotherhood candidates to stand in the elections taking place next Monday, said a source close to the Muslim Brotherhood electoral campaign.
The election authorities disqualified most of the candidates associated with the Brotherhood from elections for workers committees and trade unions.
Hundreds of students, mostly Brotherhood members or sympathisers, protested last week inside several Egyptian universities against the disqualifications.
Twenty-nine Muslim Brothers were arrested on Sunday, 15 of them involved in the student elections in Helwan south of Cairo.
Although officially banned, the Muslim Brotherhood operates relatively openly but is subject to frequent crackdowns by the government, which often detains the group’s members without charge for months at a time.
The Brotherhood holds nearly a fifth of seats in parliament, its members standing as independents to get around the ban.
The U.S.-based rights group Human Rights Watch said last month that Egypt had intensified its crackdown on the Muslim Brotherhood.
Abdel Aziz Megahed, a Muslim Brotherhood student and secretary-general of a “free” union elected at Cairo University last year, said students from other political groups had agreed to take part in the parallel elections.
Islamist groups clash with government forces on Egyptian campuses
A background story on the campus clashes last week:
Islamist groups clash with government forces on Egyptian campuses
By Hannah Allam and Miret el Naggar
McClatchy NewspapersCAIRO – Tensions between the Egyptian government and a powerful Islamist opposition force spilled onto university campuses last week with clashes that erupted when security forces barred some candidates from running for student elections.
Leaders of the Muslim Brotherhood, the banned but tolerated Islamist group, said youth members were blocked from running for student council positions at several universities in Egypt. When students at one college in Cairo protested with a sit-in, baton-wielding riot police swarmed the campus and clashed with students, witnesses said.
While no one was seriously injured in this week’s unrest, many Egyptians fear an escalation of violence as President Hosni Mubarak’s U.S.-friendly government grows increasingly heavy-handed in fighting the wave of Islamist fervor that’s fast encroaching on his own secular, authoritarian regime.
Under the latest crackdown on the Brotherhood, the government has blocked members from running for university and union leadership positions, prevented senior Brotherhood leaders from traveling outside Egypt and turned up the pressure on women who wear the full facial veils favored by ultraconservative Muslims.
Mahdi Akef, leader of the Muslim Brotherhood, said the government’s use of force and mass arrests would backfire, fueling more anger among the millions of Egyptians who support the group. Akef said 700 Brotherhood members had been arrested in recent months; 65 remain in detention. In addition to restricting Brotherhood candidates from virtually all elections, Akef added, the government is seizing schools and hospitals established by the group.
“They are blocking the Brotherhood from any domain, from any part of society,” Akef said in an interview. “This is a failed policy and it will lead to the government’s destruction. They’re desperate. They’re now to be pitied.”
Egyptian campuses have emerged as the latest battleground between conservative Islamists and secular, pro-government forces. Student members of the Brotherhood at several universities were outraged to find their names removed from lists of nominees for this month’s student elections. Protests against the action turned violent at some schools.
“It was the first time the central police stormed into the university and started beating us,” said Muhammad Emam, 23, a student member of the Muslim Brotherhood at Cairo University. “Some people were scared and tried to run out, but they were trapped by a cordon of riot police outside so they could neither move back nor run away.”
Interior ministry officials weren’t available for comment on the incidents. Georgette Sobhi, a legislator from the ruling National Democratic Party, said it wasn’t yet clear whether “the security forces were the aggressors, or whether they were reacting to the Muslim Brotherhood’s violence.”
Alarmed at the success of the militant Islamist group Hamas in the Palestinian elections, the Egyptian government quickly turned to quashing a similar ascension of Islamists in Egypt. The Brotherhood is officially banned, but some members ran as independents in last year’s parliamentary elections and scooped up an unprecedented 88 of the 444 seats. They’ve also assumed leadership positions in influential professional syndicates that represent doctors, lawyers, teachers and pharmacists.
Apart from the efforts to stamp out the group’s university presence, analysts say, Mubarak’s administration also is keen to prevent the Brotherhood from taking over trade unions, which encompass millions of working-class Egyptians.
“The Muslim Brotherhood already has the professional syndicates under their control, so if they take control of the labor unions as well, it will be a definite disaster for the regime,” said Emad Mubarak, director of a human rights group in Cairo.