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Archive for the 'NGO's & Media' Category

28
May

Wael Abbas in Washington Post: Help Our Fight for Real Democracy

Egyptian blogger Wael Abbas questions the US support to the Egyptian regime while it oppresses strugglers for real democracy - bloggers. Wael explains the role of bloggers in documenting and publishing news of dissent and human rights violations forcing it on main stream media. He explains the ordeals of both jailed bloggers Kareem and Monem stating that in a real democracy; no one should be excluded.

Help Our Fight for Real Democracy
By Wael Abbas

Washington Post
Sunday, May 27, 2007; Page B03

CAIRO Last Thursday, I returned to my country, Egypt, after several weeks in the United States on a Freedom House fellowship. I came home full of anxiety. I feared that the authorities would arrest me as soon as I set foot on Egyptian soil.

That didn’t happen. But as I went through the airport arrival procedures, I felt that I was being closely watched and followed. Men using walkie-talkies observed me from a distance. When I joined my family members outside the terminal, they, too, told me that they had been watched while waiting for me.

I could still be arrested. And if I am, it will be because I dared to speak the truth about President Hosni Mubarak’s regime, which continues to receive billions in foreign aid from the U.S. government — including funds ostensibly intended to support democracy. It will be because I dared to expose the actions that have made Mubarak’s administration one of the world’s foremost violators of human rights, according to human rights organizations including Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch and Freedom House.

I am an Egyptian blogger. And the Mubarak regime is out to get me and others like me.

It is engaged in an all-out campaign against those of us who use the Internet to report the truth about what is happening in Egypt. It is spreading rumors about us and targeting us for character assassination. Judges allied with the government have filed lawsuits against more than 50 bloggers, accusing them of blackmail and of defaming Egypt and demanding that their blogs be shut down. Meanwhile, security officials appear on television to claim that the bloggers are violating media and communications laws.

Is this the kind of regime you want your tax money to support?

My story begins in late 2004, several months before the election in which Mubarak was already the preordained winner. People, however, were fed up. After 25 years under this regime, Egyptians had lost all hope of prosperity and of ever being offered economic solutions.

New political movements, such as Kifaya (which means “enough” and is the moniker for the Egyptian Movement for Change), began to call for reform. They held street demonstrations, chanting anti-Mubarak slogans. But no journalists dared cover the protests because of the thousands of security officials who surrounded the activists. So the Egyptian people knew nothing about what was going on.

That’s when we bloggers decided to take matters into our own hands. We believed in the people’s right to know. I took photos and video footage of the demonstrations and posted them on the Internet, restricting my comments to simple explanations of what was in the pictures. You can write a book and it can all be lies, but one picture can tell the whole story truthfully.

Almost all the opposition and independent newspapers used my photos. I was annoyed at first when some of them stole the material from my blog without crediting me, but in the end I came to feel that it was all right, as long as the message reached the people.

I had about 30,000 visits to my Web site each month. But in May 2005, the situation changed dramatically. On the day of the presidential election, Kifaya, the socialists, the liberals and some Islamists took to the streets to call for a boycott. This time, Mubarak used a new technique. His political party, the National Democratic Party, paid thugs and criminals 20 Egyptian pounds per person (a little over $3) to demonstrate in support of him. The thugs attacked the peaceful demonstrators, tore and burned their banners, sexually harassed female (and some male) activists and journalists. They tore the clothes off one female journalist. I saw men pulling the jeans off a young man and beating him on the buttocks.

I was able to take pictures of what was going on; I was even able to interview one of the thugs, who confessed that he had been paid and that he and others had been brought by bus from the slums specifically to disrupt the peaceful demonstrations. I published the photos and the interview on my blog, and my site received half a million hits in two days. It caused a huge scandal for the government. Newspapers wrote about it for months.

The funny thing is that I got arrested that day, and the police confiscated my camera. But they let me go and gave the camera back after I fooled them into believing that they had deleted all the pictures by removing the batteries. In 2005, digital cameras were still a novelty for police who were accustomed to destroying analog film.

The presidential and parliamentary elections were marred by violence and death. Yes, death — during the parliamentary elections, nine people were killed by police. It was all documented on my blog. And it was U.S. taxpayer money that funded the new police trucks, clubs, helmets and boots with which the police were equipped.

Of course Mubarak and his party won. But despite all the rigging, Ayman Nour, the leader of the liberal Al-Ghad, or Tomorrow Party, managed to get 1 million votes in the presidential election. And the banned Muslim Brotherhood movement won a fifth of the seats in parliament.

I suppose that could be considered progress. But then what did Mubarak do? He sent Nour to jail on charges of having forged the signatures he collected to establish his party. And today, hundreds of members of the Muslim Brotherhood, as well as some of the movement’s parliamentary members, are in prison on charges of having formed an armed movement.

I disagree with the Muslim Brotherhood and its manipulation of Egyptians’ religiosity to achieve its political goals. But if we want a democratic country, we can’t exclude any political sect.

The world may be afraid of an Islamist movement coming to power in Egypt, and that’s why I believe in working on two levels — advocating democracy while enlightening the people so that they make the right choice when the time comes for real democratic elections. That’s why I called my blog Egyptian Awareness. The solution can never lie in supporting and funding a dictatorial regime to suppress the opposition.

Who’s left? The bloggers. Those young fellows who think they’re hotshot reporters, who dared to practice the first form of citizen journalism in Egypt. The ones who have been such a pain in the neck for the government, exposing corruption, negligence, violations of human rights and freedoms.

In the spring of 2006 — the spring of democracy, as some have called it — some judges became fed up with government interference in their rulings and decided to hold a sit-in. In support, a number of bloggers and activists decided to hold a parallel sit-in outside the building where the judges sat. Everyone who took part was arrested. Some of the judges were also assaulted during the raid. All those who were detained were treated inhumanely; some said they were tortured and sodomized.

Eventually, though, the authorities had to release them. And then they had to come up with another way to silence the blogs. They arrested secular blogger Kareem Amer and sentenced him to four years in prison on charges of insulting the president and insulting Islam with statements in his blog. Later, they arrested the Islamist blogger Abdul Monem Mahmoud on charges of belonging to a banned movement, the Muslim Brotherhood. He is now facing trial. Neither secularists nor Islamists are free to express their opinions online under Mubarak’s “democratic” regime.

How much is enough to make Americans question why their money goes to support this government? We Egyptians want a fair struggle for our freedom. We’ll never have it as long as Mubarak and his corrupt regime are propped up by U.S. aid. All we ask is: Give us a fighting chance.

wa2el_3abbas@yahoo.com

Wael Abbas blogs at misrdigital.blogspirit.com

26
May

Please Dad…Wait For Me

Written by Egyptian Journalist Naglaa Bedeir and published in Al-Dustoor independant newspaper, May 25, 2007

Weblogs of his friends have installed a counter to count days since he was arrested. “We are counting it by minutes like you Moneim, he was detained on April, 15, 2007, for such days, hours and a minutes; right now while I am writing, Moneim is detained for 39 days, pending the case of the Agricultural Cooperation Institute, and he appeared yesterday before the state security prosecution who detained him for more 15 days .

“Moneim your stronger, therefore, they imprisoned you”; this is another slogan adopted by bloggers showing solidarity with Moneim. It is true, he is stronger, more elevated and will outlive them .

Moneim’s charge is comic: terrorism, running outlawed group, deviating student activities and hindering the academic process, although he does not know where the Agricultural Institute is located and he met students of this institute for the first time in prison. His real charge which he adopts and always reiterates is that He is” Loving Egypt so much and I hope to see it free of corruption and tyranny.

Moneim’s father is bedridden in a hospital in Alexandria. He suffers from hepatic fibrosis and is in a coma. When Moneim’s mother visited him in prison last week, he wrote in her hand and wrote a message to his father (His jailors denied him paper) and he said in the message:” Forgive me because I did not carry you and left you to hands of strangers to carry you to hospital and wipe your tears and blood; please dad.. wait for me till I come to see you… no not die…wait for me and be proud because I am jailed for your freedom and for loving my nation …be merry about me”.

Moneim is jailed in Tora’s Mahkum prison with criminals is in a 3*7metre cell sheltering 22 inmates along with many epidemics, the most serious of which are scabies, all kinds of drugs, insects, saying bad names, harassment and assaults. They are kept inside the cell for 23 hours a day.

After intervention of Human Rights Organizations and student’s hunger strike, some of them were moved to Torah farm prison, where better conditions are afforded, but Moneim is still held in Torah’s Mahkum.

I visited, once, a son of a colleague of mine at Boulak Abo Al Ela police station because he was held for taking drugs. The police station is a very good looking and clean archeological building. The police station’s commissioner was very polite. When he saw us he said:” Of course you want to see Haitham ( the son of my friend) all his visitors are journalists” and he asked us politely to enter a small side room and he brought in Haitham, who sat silent and made up smile on his face; then, his lips quivered suddenly and he became tear-eyed and said:” I am nearly chocked I can’t bear it”; I was about to cry and my fried cried. We brought him Kentucky sandwiches, cigarettes, juice and bottled water, and we accompanied him to the cell. I saw in the cell chair beside a wide window that overlooks the back garden of the police station. I said to him tenderly:” You are well-served here”

“It is a prison after all” he said. And he was released on the following day!!.

25
May

نجلاء بدير في جريدة الدستور: منعم وهيثم

نجلاء بدير، الصحفية المصرية اللامعة والمعروف عنها ثراء كتاباتها بالبعد الانساني، نشرت لها جريدة “الدستور” المصرية هذه المقالة بتاريخ 25 مايو 2007

منعم وهيثم
نجلاء بدير
جريدة الدستور

مدونات أصدقائه ومحبية تضع عدادا مكتوبا عليه، وبنعد الدقائق زيك يا منعم، أعتقل في 15/4/2007 أي منذ كذا يوم وساعة ودقيقة وف اللحظة التي أكتب فيها الآن، منعم معتقل منذ 39 يوما، على ذمة قضية معهد التعاون الزراعي، وعرض أمس على نيابة أمن الدولة وأخذ استمرار حبس لمدة 15 يوما.
منعم أنت أقوى ولذا سجنوك… شعار آخر يضعه المدونون المتضامنون مع منعم.. وهو بالفعل أقوى وأرقى وأبقى.
تهمة منعم مضحكة إرهاب وإدارة جماعة محظورة وتحويل أنشطة طلابية وتعطيل العملية الدراسية، وهو لا يعرف مكان المعهد الزراعي أصلا وأول مرة يلتقي بطلبته في السجن، أما تهمته الحقيقية التي يعترف بها ويصر عليها هي “دايب في حب مصر ونفسي أشوفها حرة من الفساد والطغيان”.
أبو منعم في المستشفى بالإسكندرية .. مريض تليف كبدي ودخل في الغيبوبة.. عندما زارته أمه في السجن الأسبوع الماضي أخذ يدها وكتب عليها، رسالة أخذ يدها وكتب عليها رسالة لأبيه (منعوه من استخدام ورق) قال فيها “سامحني لأنني لم أحملك وتركتك لأيدي الغرباء يحملونك إلى المستشفى ويمسحون دموعك ودماءك، انتظرني يا أبي حتى أتي إليك.. لا تمت .. انتظرني وأنت رافع رأسك لأنني حبيس من أجل حريتك وحبي لوطني فأرض عني”
منعم محبوس في سجن طره محكوم مع الجنائيين في زنزانة واحدة 22 نزيلا في زنزانة واحدة، 22 نزيلا في زنزانة 3 في 7 أمتار، ومع الأوبئة المتعددة، وأخطرها الجرب والمخدرات بجميع أنواعها، والحشرات والسباب والتحرش والاعتداءات، الزنزانة تظل مغلقة 23 ساعة في اليوم.
بعد تدخل منظمات حقوق الإنسان وإضراب الطلاب عن الطعام تم نقل بعضهم إلى سجن مزرعة طرة، حيث الظروف افضل لكن منعم مازال في طرة المحكوم.
أذكر أنني زرت أبن أحدى زميلاتي في قسم بولاق أبو العلا محكوم عليه في قضية تعاطي مخدرات القسم مبني أثري شديد النظافة والجمال ومأمور القسم شديد الاحترام والتهذيب بمجرد أن رآنا على باب مكتبه قال لنا، طبعا هيثم (اسم ابن صديقتي) كل زواره صحفيون ودعانا برقة لدخول حجرة جانبية صغيرة واستدعى هيثم، جلس صامتا راسما ابتسامة مفتعلة على وجهه، وفجأة ارتعشت شفتاه وامتلأت عيناه بالدموع وهمس “أنا مخنوق يا طنط … أنا مخنوق ، كدت أبكي من التأثر وبكت صديقتي، أحضرنا معنا لهيثم سجائر وسندوتشات من كنتاكي وعصيرا ومياها معدنية، ودخلنا معه حتى باب الغرفة المحجوز فيها فرأينا كرسيا موضوعا بجوار شباك واسع يطل على الحديقة الخلفية للقسم، قلت له بحنان: ياعم ده أنت آخر روقان رد بعتاب يا عم ده سجن يا طنط.. وخرج في اليوم التالي!!

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’

07
May

HRW: Egypt Need to Reform Laws Used to Silence Critics

Human Rights Watch issued a statement May 3rd in which Joe Stork, HRW Deputy Director -MENA, said “Egypt’s sorry record of torture is only made worse by its practice of punishing journalists who dare to speak about it.”
The statement came after Howaida Taha, Al Jazeera reporter was sentenced 6 months in prison for producing a documentary on Egyptian authorities systematic torture of citizens.

Human Rights Watch
Egypt: Prison for Al-Jazeera Journalist Who Exposed Torture
Need to Reform Laws Used to Silence Critics
(Cairo, May 3, 2007) – The sentencing of Al-Jazeera journalist Huwaida Taha Mitwalli to six months in prison for her reporting on torture in Egypt makes a mockery of World Press Freedom Day, Human Rights Watch said today.

Mitwalli, an Egyptian national who also reports for the London-based daily Quds al-Arabi, was convicted by a Cairo criminal court on May 2 for “possessing and giving false pictures about the internal situation in Egypt that could undermine the dignity of the country” in connection with an Al-Jazeera documentary about torture in Egypt. The court also fined her 20,000 Egyptian pounds (US$3,518).
Continue reading ‘HRW: Egypt Need to Reform Laws Used to Silence Critics’

07
May

Monem, 23 Other Detainees To Begin Hunger Strike

Below is an article published today, May 7, 2007, on the Muslim Brotherhood English website.

Blogger and journalist Abdel Monem Mahmoud and 23 other detained students from the Institute of Agricultural Engineering threatened to begin a hunger strike on Tuesday May 8, to protest their inhumane imprisonment conditions and the endless cycle of intimidations by criminal prisoners which reached to the point of sexual harassment, and the disgraceful inaction by the prison administration.

In a statement released by Monem and other political detainees on Monday, they demanded their immediate release and dropping all the trumped up charges against them, accusing the prison administration of adopting a new strategy of psychological torture by allowing and encouraging criminal prisoners to intimidate and harass them.

Among the list of other inhumane imprisonment conditions the statement cited are,

1-Confinment for 23 hours a day in overcrowded cells where an average of 22 inmates are kept in 10×22 feet cells infested with bugs with only one extremely filthy bathroom to share.

2-Numerous assaults by criminal prisoners and thugs, including sexual harassment and verbal abuse.

3-Use of illegal drugs inside prison cells by criminals and drug dealers, and the produced smoke which makes it very difficult to even breath an already polluted air, in addition to extremely foul language and screaming all night by intoxicated thugs which became a source of psychological agony.

4-Poor medical care in handling life threatening and contagious medical conditions, including skin diseases and HIV. Four cases of chicken pox and measles were denied appropriate care and hospital admission.

The statement also complained that the students who were mostly preparing for their final exams, surrendered their school books to the prison administration in protest, since it became impossible for them to study in such awful environment

The statement concluded by calling on the Attorney General, the National Council on Human Rights and all human rights groups to intervene to protect the life and dignity of the students.

Attorney Islam Lotfy stated to Ikhwanweb that the “Al Mahkom” prison where Monem and his fellow political prisoners are kept is designated for the most vicious criminals and known for its inhumane conditions. He added that several cases of TB and HIV have been detected among prisoners and the government apparent lack of action and poor medical care inside the prison put his clients’ life in danger.

According to Lotfy, several complaints have been filed to the prison administration and government officials to keep political detainees separate from criminal prisoners but nothing was done. The government seems to be adopting a new strategy by letting others do their dirty work by inflicting psychological torture on its political opponents who have been detained only for their views and opinions.

Monem was arrested on April 15 along group of students from the Institute of Agricultural Engineering and charged with belonging to an illegal organization [MB] and by reporting information that defame the regime and threaten national security.

For more information, please contact,

-Attorny Islam Lotfy at 002-010-771745 (mobile)

-Mohammad Ghozlan, Kawakby Foundation For Democracy and Development at 002-010-2040116 (mobile)

07
May

Guardian: Heroes or martyrs?

This article was published by Issandr el-Amrani at the Guardian’s Comment is Free on May 3, 2007.
Issandr Amrani
Heroes or martyrs?
The Arab world presents a generally grim picture of media freedom. Newspapers and television or radio stations are generally impossible to start without the state’s approval and require close connections to ruling regimes. While satellite news stations such as al-Jazeera have brought much good to the media landscape, they are not immune from the backroom dealings between Arab regimes or powerful business and political interests.

Local Rupert Murdochs have brought more polished, consumer-oriented media - a vast improvement over ossified state organs - but they tread carefully on the most sensitive issues, not wanting to endanger vast business empires. Even the most courageous journalists know they can be only a pen stroke away from being sacked, banned, imprisoned, or worse. Al-Jazeera journalist Howeida Taha found this out yesterday when an Egyptian court sentenced her in absentia to six months in prison - just in time for World Press Freedom Day.

It is little surprise, then, that in the past few years, some of the best journalism in the region has come from a burgeoning local blogosphere. Take the example of Egypt, the most populous Arab country and a cultural leader in the region. Last autumn, bloggers such as Wael Abbas - the closest thing in the Egyptian blogosphere to a wire service - were the first to publish gruesome torture videos made by police officers with their mobile phones. If you were interested in the wave of labour unrest that Egypt has exerienced in the last six months, you could do no better than to turn to Arabawy, where leftist journalist and blogger Hossam el-Hamalawy has kept tabs on a social upheaval barely covered by official Egyptian media. National indignation over the harassment of women in Downtown Cairo last Eid (the Muslim holiday after Ramadan) could not have become the major talking point of television chat shows for a week if it were not for bloggers that had captured the event on their mobile phones and broadcast it on YouTube. Bloggers have on repeated occasions imposed their agenda on the mainstream media, which could not afford to ignore what many were discussing online anyway.
Continue reading ‘Guardian: Heroes or martyrs?’

06
May

Egypt’s blog rebels silenced by jail

 

telegraph web site screen shot

 

Below is a articel published By Charles Levinson, Sunday, May 6, 2007, on the website of The Telegraph newspaper

A popular Egyptian blogger known for his withering criticisms of the government has given up writing after becoming the latest victim of a state crackdown on dissent.

The blogger, known as Sandmonkey, signed off last week, writing that he had noticed state security agents on his street and heard clicking noises on his phone. “There has been too much heat around me lately,” he wrote.

n recent months, the Egyptian regime has jailed several bloggers, ending a period in which it had taken a more relaxed attitude towards internal critics. Human rights activists claim the about-turn follows the US administration’s decision to relax pressure on Middle Eastern governments to enact democratic reforms.

During Sandmonkey’s three years on the internet, his was one of the most widely read Egyptian blogs, popular especially among Western readers for his unconventional opinions about his country and the Middle East. “Cynical, snarky, pro-US, secular, libertarian, disgruntled” was how he described himself. Continue reading ‘Egypt’s blog rebels silenced by jail’

04
May

The case of Abdel-Monem Mahmoud

Below is a blogpost published By Jillian York, on Friday, May 4, 2007, on the website of INTHEFRAY (a nonprofit organization that seeks to transcend geographic, political, and social boundaries, to defend endangered liberties and rights, and to demand justice, transparency, and opportunity.)

inthefray

The case of Abdel-Monem Mahmoud, a blogger and member of the Muslim Brotherhood is the second of its kind in Egypt, a country where press freedom has greatly deteriorated in the past few years, according to a report released by the Committee for the Protection of Journalists (CPJ) on May 3, International Press Freedom Day.  The report, entitled “Backsliders,” listed Egypt in seventh place, after Ethiopia, Gambia, Russia, DRC, Cuba and Pakistan.  Following Egypt were Azerbaijan, Morocco, and Thailand.
Continue reading ‘The case of Abdel-Monem Mahmoud’

04
May

EGYPT: Petition for release of bloggers Kareem Amer and Abdul-Moneim Mahmud

RSF

Reporters Without Borders / Internet Freedom desk

PETITION FOR RELEASE OF BLOGGERS KAREEM AMER AND ABDUL-MONEIM MAHMUD

Six months after the arrest of Kareem Amer, Reporters Without Borders has started a petition calling for the blogger’s release and that of his colleague Abdul-Moneim Mahmud.

Internet-users are being asked to sign online, in which the worldwide press freedom organisation calls on the Internet Governance Forum (IGF), a conference organised under the UN mantle, to block Egypt from hosting the event in 2008 unless the two bloggers are freed.

Sign the petition : http://www.rsf.org/article.php3?id_article=21993

Text of the petition:
Continue reading ‘EGYPT: Petition for release of bloggers Kareem Amer and Abdul-Moneim Mahmud’




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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