http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/2011/1034/sc30.htm

10 - 16 February 2011
Issue No. 1034
Published in Cairo by AL-AHRAM established in 1875

Cyber revolution

Mohamed Abdel-Baky reports on the role of Internet activists in instigating 
protests 

"Egypt deserves a better future. On 25 January we will change our country. 
Nobody will stop us if we are united. Young people must speak now." Such were 
the words on Facebook that ignited the uprising that erupted across Egypt two 
weeks ago. 

On the same Facebook page on which the invitation to protest appeared were 
links to where and when demonstrations would take place and the numbers of 
coordinators, lawyers and doctors. 

By 21 January membership of the page had grown to more than 100,000, with many 
volunteering to lead demonstrations in their home towns. 

"Everything was online and everybody was participating in organising the 
protests," said activist Abdallah Helmi.

Two days before the protests youth movements, including the 6 April and HASHD, 
offered online training courses for those organising demonstrations on how to 
avoid clashes with the security forces. 

"Be ready with masks for the tear gas. Do not insult, talk or provoke any 
soldiers or policemen. This is not personal. They have orders to stop you but 
we are all Egyptians and one day the security forces will know that we are 
right," said one online guide sent to hundreds of thousands of protesters. 

While the ensuing demonstrations quickly developed a dynamic of their own the 
role of youth movements in kick-starting the process was essential. The 6 April 
youth movement, created in 2008 to support striking textile workers in the 
industrial town of Mahala Al-Kobra, took the lead, focussing on technical 
assistance, coordination and creating an online communication channel between 
protesters through social networks like Twitter, Facebook and UStream.

Protests appear to have been first mooted by Asmaa Mahfouz, 25, who wrote on 
her Facebook page on 18 January that she would not remain silent in the face of 
security abuses and government policies that were impoverishing a majority of 
Egyptians. 

"I am going to Tahrir Square on 25 January. I am going to demand the rights of 
people tortured to death by their own security forces," wrote Mahfouz. She was 
inspired to do so following the death of Sayed Belal, allegedly killed during 
interrogation following the Two Saints Church bombing on the New Year's Eve in 
Alexandria that killed 23. 

Many of Mahfouz's friends told her that they were ready to join her, at which 
point the 6 April movement began calling for nationwide protests on 25 January, 
Police Day. 

In Cairo the 6 April movement was joined by Youth for Justice and Freedom 
(YJFM), HASHD, the Popular Front for Freedom and the Al-Baradei Campaign in 
organising the demonstrations. 

The groups espouse similar ideologies. They have all demanded democratic 
transition under a national unity government and new constitution, and in 
recent months have actively canvassed among students in Cairo, the Delta towns 
and Alexandria. 

"We did not imagine that hundreds of thousands of people would turn out on 25 
January. We had expected around 20,000 people," says Mohamed Awad, YJFM's 
executive coordinator. 

In Alexandria, Mansoura and Suez protests were organised by activists belongs 
to the El-Baradei Campaign, the Ghad Party, the Democratic Front and HASHD. In 
Sharqiya and Ismailia they were organised by the National Association of Change 
(NAC), the 6 April movement and, later, involved many members of the Muslim 
Brotherhood. 

Kollena Khaled Said (We are all Khaled Said), the Facebook page dedicated to 
the young Alexandrian beaten to death by the police late last year, was 
instrumental in attracting protesters. By 24 January 300,000 members had agreed 
to participate in the following day's protests. 

An online situation room on Facebook was created to publish updates every few 
minutes about protests across Egypt, and listed was legal assistance by lawyers 
in case any of the protesters were arrested by the police. 

"Our role was to coordinate the protests and create a network of movements and 
activists across the country to spread the protests. The real credit goes to 
the young Egyptians who are making change happen," says 6 April coordinator 
Ahmed Maher. 

Following the initial day's protests the dynamic became more fluid. Most of the 
demonstrations on 27 and 28 January were organised locally, by people with no 
affiliation to youth movements or other political groups. 

"The challenge now for us is to be resilient and forge a unanimous position 
among the protesters in Tahrir Square," says Awad. 

Two weeks into occupying Tahrir Square the role of youth movements is evolving. 

On Sunday the four movements, along with the El-Baradei Campaign, the 
Democratic Front's youth group and the Muslim Brotherhood's youth group agreed 
to form a coalition comprising representatives from each mandated to act as 
spokespeople, mediating between the protesters and the media.


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