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Freemonem

Author Archive for sami

30
May

Monem Free, FreeMonem, Monem Free

The Public Prosecutor ordered the release of Monem and his group. Monem is expected to be released on Saturday [June, 2nd]. Meanwhile he still under threat till he is physically out. Bloggers detained spring 2006 were usually transferred to Security Directorates or State Security facilities, and then to their local police stations, where they were locked up with criminal suspects, prior to their release. We reproduce below a Press Release written by Said Abady on Ikwhanweb

Monem Free

In a surprise decision, the High State Security Prosecutor ordered the release of MB blogger and journalist Abdel Monem Mahmoud, along with the group of students from the Institute of Agricultural Engineering, in addition to three MB leaders including Dr. Mohamed Abdelal, assistant professor of plastic surgery at Ein Shams University, Dr. Salem Ramdan, and engineer Nader Ramdan.

Monem and his group are expected to be release on Saturday after completing paperwork.

Attorney Islam Lotfi praised the decision which took everyone by surprise. He added that the release came as result of the pressure by bloggers and human rights organizations across the world. He called for the immediate release of MB detainees and all political prisoners in Egypt.

Lotfi also stated that the release order came without any explanation exactly as the decision to arrest them in the first place, which was completely unjustified.

More details to follow

16
May

UN Watch: Belarus, Egypt Urged to Release Prisoners Before UN Rights Council Elections

Egypt must release jailed bloggers before Thursday’s elections for the UN Human Rights Council, said UN Watch, a human rights organization based in Geneva in a statement issued today [May 16th, 2007].

un_watch.jpg

Geneva, May 15, 2007 — Belarus and Egypt must release jailed opposition leaders, journalists and bloggers before Thursday’s elections for the UN’s top human rights body, said UN Watch, a human rights organization in Geneva, Switzerland.  In a statement issued today also concerning Angola and Qatar, UN Watch urged the four repressive regimes seeking seats on the UN Human Rights Council to take immediate, concrete steps to show that they merit consideration for Council membership.  The General Assembly in New York will choose new Council members in elections to be held this Thursday, May 17.

Election to the Council is supposed to be based on the candidate’s “contribution to the promotion and protection of human rights and [its] voluntary pledges and commitments made thereto,” according to the Council’s founding document, General Assembly Resolution 60/251.  Once it is a Council member, a country is supposed to “uphold the highest standards in the promotion and protection of human rights” and “fully cooperate with the Council.”

“In light of the deeply entrenched repression in these four countries—Angola, Belarus, Egypt and Qatar—UN Watch considers them not qualified for Council membership,” said Hillel Neuer, the group’s executive director.  (See assessment of Council candidates here.)  “If, however, these regimes nevertheless wish to try to prove that they should be considered as potential Council members, they must—at a minimum—take concrete actions immediately.”  According to UN Watch, these include:

Angola—which in its Council campaign pledge said that it “fights for a wide implementation of the human rights consecrated in the international instruments to which the country is a part” and promised, among other things, to “mainstream[] human rights throughout [Angolan] society” and “promote[] the rule of law”—must

   •  Fully cooperate with the three Council Special Rapporteurs, which it has agreed in principle to allow to visit (the special rapporteurs on adequate housing, freedom of opinion and expression, and freedom of religion or belief).

   •  Dismiss the espionage charges against Dr. Sarah Wykes of the British NGO Global Witness for researching corruption in the oil sector, or at the very least permit Dr. Wykes to be defended against the charges by legal counsel of her choice.

   •  Allow private radio outlets to broadcast nationwide.

Belarus—which in its Council campaign pledge promised to “do its utmost to ensure that all international human rights instruments to which it is a party are fully observed”—must

   •  Release from prison Alexander Kozulin, the 2006 opposition Presidential candidate, who is currently serving a 5 ½ year term for peacefully protesting against the unfree and unfair election.

   •  Announce that it will allow a visit by, and fully cooperate with, the Council’s Special Rapporteur on the human rights situation in Belarus, whom Belarus has stonewalled since his appointment in 2004, as well as the other UN human rights investigators with outstanding visit requests.

   •  Remove the prohibition on funding and cease other efforts to limit the activities of the only permitted human rights organization, the Belarusian Helsinki Committee, and also allow other independent non-governmental organizations to operate freely.

Egypt—which in its Council campaign pledge promised to “upgrade the level of its implementation of all human rights instruments which it has ratified,” including by “preserv[ing] the freedom of the press,” “strengthening the independence of the judiciary,” and “deepening its democracy”—must

   •  Release journalist Huwaida Taha Mitwalli, who is currently imprisoned for attempting to report on the government’s use of torture, as well as bloggers including Abd al-Monim Mahmud and Abd al-Karim Nabil Sulaiman (a.k.a. Karim Amer),who have been imprisoned for exercising their internationally protected right to freedom of expression.

   •  Announce that it will permit visits by, and fully cooperate with, the five Council Special Rapporteurs that have outstanding visit requests dating back as far as 1996 (the Special Rapporteurs on torture, human rights defenders, freedom of religion or belief, and the independence of judges and lawyers).

   •  Rescind its order to close the offices of the workers’ rights organization Center for Trade Union and Workers’ Services.

Continue reading ‘UN Watch: Belarus, Egypt Urged to Release Prisoners Before UN Rights Council Elections’

09
May

Monem : the blogger Vs. The Pharaoh

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04
May

Abdel-Monem Mahmoud: the Egyptian totalitarian regime is the problem

Below is an Interview I did with Abdel-Monem mahmoud at the 3rd annual Al Jazeera Forum in Doha, Qatar, tow weeks before his arrest. It has been published on Global Voices on May, 3rd. Translated from Arabic by S.A and Fatima Azzahra El Azzouzi. It has been edited for clarity by Mary Joyce

As I promised in my last article “Online Freedom for All: Some cases worth supporting”, I’m publishing here the translation of the interview I did with the jailed Egyptian blogger and journalist Abdel-Monem Mahmoud at the 3rd annual Al Jazeera Forum in Doha, Qatar, tow weeks before Monem’s arrest. Monem has been arrested on 15 April 2007 after reporting on torture in a video and in an article he called “The Fourth Anniversary of the Torture of Detainee #25” (available in English) and after using blogs as campaigning tools against the transferring of civilians to military tribunals in his “Blogs Against Military Rulers” (also available in English)

In this interview Monem spoke about his experiences as Brother blogger and the history of the use of Internet by the Muslim Brotherhood and its young generation. He also explained why, as Brother, he is supporting his fellow jailed blogger, the secular Kareem Amer and how the blogging is challenging traditional media in Egypt.

On the occasion of the World Press Freedom Day, few bloggers and activists from around the world have launched the Free Monem campaign making available for the Anglophone audience what Monem was blogging about and what sort of a person Monem is. “ We cannot let the regime succeed in silencing him. We have to show the Egyptian regime that when you imprison a blogger, you don’t silence his voice, you AMPLIFY it!” they wrote in their email announcement.
Continue reading ‘Abdel-Monem Mahmoud: the Egyptian totalitarian regime is the problem’

29
Apr

Monem Was Blogging Freedom


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Ana Monem



Contributors

Alaa Abd El Fattah (Egypt)
Ahmad Abd-Alhafez (Egypt)
Amr Gharbeia (Egypt)
Astrubal (Tunisia)
Fatima Azzahra El Azzouzi (Morocco)
Khaled Hamzah (Egypt)
Lea (Syria)
Malek khadhraoui (Tunisia)
Mary Joyce (USA)
Nora Younis (Egypt)
S.A (Morocco)
Sami Ben Gharbia (Tunisia)

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