On the same day that Egyptian
police shot dead at least 74 Muslim Brother demonstrators and wounded scores,
the Interior Ministry released what it called its first animated short for
children. A little boy and his grandfather (a retired police officer) sit on a
couch in a spare living room, watching television footage of an earthquake in
Turkey. The boy asks his grandfather, “Geddo geddo, what’s an earthquake?” The
grandfather recites the geological definition of an earthquake and sagely
schools the child in the proper safety procedures in such an event. To the awe
of his grandson, he highlights the heroic role of the civil defense forces, “who
will sacrifice their lives for us.” The video ends with the message, “We seek to
upgrade the thinking of the Ministry of Interior and to provide excellent
services, so please cooperate with us.”
Commentary on Egyptian Politics and Culture by an Egyptian Citizen with a Room of Her Own
Sunday, July 28, 2013
Saturday, July 27, 2013
A Litany of State Violence
Rabaa Sit-in Mass Shootings, July 27 2013 (AP Photo) |
A non-exhaustive list of organized
violence by military and/or police forces against unarmed citizens since the January
25th revolution. The list doesn’t include countless episodes of deliberate
police inaction in the face of deadly citizen-on-citizen violence, most notably
the March 2011 Manshiyyat Nasser Christian-Muslim clashes (15 dead, 114
injured), the February 2012 Port Said soccer deaths (74 dead, 1,000 injured), the
December 5, 2012 Muslim Brothers’ break-up of the Ittehadeyya Palace sit-in (10
deaths), and the June 2013 lynching of four Shi’a Muslims and injury of eight.
The 18 days, 25 January-11 February 2011: 848 dead, 1,000+ disappeared
Balloon Theater clashes, June 2011: 1,114 injured
Maspero massacre, October 2011: 28 dead, hundreds injured
Mohamed Mahmoud St. clashes, November 2011: 45 dead, 60 eye
injuries
Cabinet Offices sit-in, December 2011: 17 dead, 928 injured
Mohamed Mahmoud St. clashes, February 2012: 15 dead
Defense Ministry sit-in, April-May 2012: 12 deaths
Ramlet Boulaq clashes, August 2012: 75 arrests
Qursaya Island clashes, November 2012: 3 dead, 5 injured
Port Said protests, January 2013: 42 dead, 874 injured
Presidential Guard massacre, July 2013: 92 dead
Rabaa Sit-in mass shootings, July 2013: 70 dead, scores wounded
Saturday, July 20, 2013
The Middling Muslim Brothers
Muslim Brothers' Guidance Bureau |
It’s a small detail of great consequence. On July 3, members of the presidential guard stepped away and let Dr. Mohamed Morsi and his aides be arrested by army commandos. If men with guns and tanks can simply arrest an elected president, then what’s to keep them from doing it again and again?
The horrible precedent this sets is buried under the partisan fury for and against the
Muslim Brothers. Haters of the MB apparently see nothing wrong with the
military summarily detaining the first elected national leader in Egyptian
history. Boosters of the MB are so caught up in their own injury that they’re
not pausing to wonder why a great many people feel relief and even satisfaction
at the demise of the Morsi presidency.
Tuesday, July 16, 2013
Military Tutelage, Egyptian-Style
If there were lingering doubts that the military pounced on the June 30 protests to re-establish its political supremacy, Gen. El-Sisi’s Sunday address removed a lot of them. Using convoluted language and tortured logic, the speech’s organizing premise is that the “people summoned the armed forces for the mission of balancing the tipped scale and restoring diverted goals.”
“The people” are mentioned 28 times, but their sovereignty is not once affirmed. What’s emphasized is that the armed forces are the unmoved mover, guarding the country’s politics, not just its borders.
Friday, July 12, 2013
Fashioning a Coup
I understand
the outrage of honest citizens who went out to protest against Mohamed Morsi on
June 30 only to have their efforts branded a coup. When you’re in the middle of
a crowd of boisterous humanity that stretches farther than the eye can see, nothing
exists outside of that overwhelming reality. The feeling of mutual recognition
and collective empowerment erases all context and constraints. As well it
should. You don’t go to a protest to think carefully or make necessary
distinctions. But when you exit the protest and survey the big picture, you do
have to face inconvenient facts.
One such
fact is that the protests were unscrupulously appropriated and packaged for
ends I’m pretty sure many protesters find abhorrent. A genuine popular protest
and a military coup aren’t mutually exclusive. The massive protests of June 30
came in conjunction with a much larger scheme that began very soon after Morsi
took office. This long term project by entrenched state elites seeks more than
simply ejecting the Muslim Brothers from power, although that’s a highly prized
outcome.