Dispatches from Cairo:  Blood, Money and Revolution

http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/dispatches_from_cairo_blood_money_and_revolution_20120223/

Posted on Feb 23, 2012
 
AP / Nariman El-Mofty 
Egyptian women walk past graffiti depicting a military tank on a wall under a 
bridge in Cairo.  
By Lauren Unger-Geoffroy
We asked Lauren Unger-Geoffroy, an international artist who lives in Cairo, to 
share her perspective of 
life in Egypt after the revolution. In this entry, she writes about the 
NGO controversy and a fuel shortage that are distracting the people from the 
flickering goals of the revolution.
CAIRO—A week and a half ago on the corner 
near my apartment a woman went mad and screamed at the metro entrance 
for hours. Her regional patois and cheap black abbaya, which 
flapped in the wind as she raved, indicated she was poor. As people 
coming out of the neighborhood mosque and the metro gathered around, 
some tried to calm her with words and gestures. But she would not be 
calmed.
This differed from the usual shouting and 
general cacophony of our square in that her shrill soliloquy was carried out 
without someone yelling back. She waved her arms and shrieked on a 
newly sand-covered space where a butcher’s stall had stood until the day before.
Police had come and torn down the stall, 
two trucks carrying away every bloody piece of canvas, wood and metal 
that had sheltered the men who cut the meat. Periodically the forces of 
order appear and dismantle fruit and vegetable stands, which are usually just 
crates and baskets, sometimes a piece of wood or metal or an 
umbrella. The sellers, who come in from the countryside on donkey carts 
or in trucks with others, stand back passively after quickly removing 
their wares with the bustling aid of everyone around. Generally after 
the police have gone, the sellers immediately put everything back, 
placing the fruits and vegetables on the ground until new crates and 
boxes can be had.
The police usually avoid the butchers, who 
have knives and axes. But when the police came earlier this month, the 
butchers had their turn. I was not there to see the confrontation, but I was 
told some of the meat cutters were arrested. The next day a truck 
arrived and dumped sand and gravel to cover the blood-soaked dirt as a 
hygienic gesture. The butchers have not returned.

This area is the intersection of an outdoor fruit and vegetable market 
and the metro. It is also the hub of the minibuses that are the most 
popular means of transportation in Cairo. They are small blue-and-white 
vans that go all over the city and its surrounding areas, carrying 
passengers for the equivalent of five to 10 U.S. cents each.  
They fill with passengers as they go toward their announced destinations, and 
people can flag them down anywhere. 
There are hundreds of these vehicles here, and traffic sometimes gets 
bottlenecked and the van drivers sometimes are volatile. The 
requirements for becoming a minibus driver are not rigorous, and it is a 
stressful job that pays very little. 
There are frequent fights among the fruit 
and vegetable sellers, the bus drivers, taxi drivers, police, etc. Our 
square is loud and lively, usually with someone yelling about something, 
donkeys braying. At night packs of dogs bark, and scrawny and filthy 
cats cruise the garbage piles and the stairs of apartment buildings 
hoping to rip apart the trash that people put outside their door to be 
collected by their boweb (doorman).
The fruit sellers sit with their goods 
usually until about 2 a.m. To keep warm in the winters, they make fires 
out of trash, as do the doormen/building guards, the flames marking a 
ragged line of orange lights down the otherwise dark street.
“Why are you talking to those people?” my 
doting landlady asked me about my conversations with the fruit and 
vegetable sellers. “They are low people. Not educated, and dirty,” she 
said disdainfully. “Just buy your fruit and go.” She is well aware that I once 
let our corner fruit seller’s two wives and children hide out in 
my apartment during a stick fight between clans. The doorman reports all 
comings and goings, and the whole neighborhood knows I do not cover all of my 
hair when I go out and that once someone saw me blocks away in a 
car with a man who kissed me. Even so, the neighbors consider me a good 
person, and everyone worried when I was sick last week. My fruit-seller 
friend sent up his littlest daughter to my apartment with a bag of 
oranges and bananas for me.
The sellers have little use for politics. 
They can’t read, in general, and the rare few who have a television and 
care to watch the news receive only the national propaganda channels.
The subject currently dominating the 
national media is the purported American attempt to control Egypt 
through “buying” the military and manipulating the revolution. At the 
heart of the controversy are U.S. Republican and Democratic 
nongovernmental organizations (NGOs). In December, offices of 17 
Egyptian and U.S. NGOs were raided by Egyptian authorities. Forty-three 
people, among them 16 Americans, have been charged with receiving 
illegal foreign financing or operating without proper licenses. Trials 
are set to start soon. (Many of the Americans are no longer in Egypt.) 
Television presenters have whipped up 
latent anti-American sentiment and associated the viscerally detested 
policies of Israel with the American agenda and a fuel shortage being 
suffered by Egypt. They also have tied the issue to continuation of the 
revolution and the need for national dignity. A typical argument goes 
like this: Foreign elements have sent agents and agitators under the 
guise of helping us. We can do it alone. Other Arab countries have 
offered to help us. We don’t need the USA’s money. 
On subsidized-fuel distribution days, when 
the trucks come by with their loads of big, rusty butane canisters, the 
people crowd around and fights inevitably break out. Recently these 
scuffles have become a little more aggressive amid the fuel shortage, 
which may be either real or tactically created by the ruling Supreme 
Council of the Armed Forces. The SCAF has used techniques of this sort 
often in the past to distract public attention from other inconvenient 
focuses.
People who scrabble to get fuel but miss 
out because there are not enough canisters to go around may return to 
dirt-floor homes to watch their old television sets and be told by 
broadcasters that fuel was sold to Israel for a fraction of its worth 
because of a contract made by economic advisers of deposed President 
Hosni Mubarak under pressure from the U.S. and as part of the 1978 Camp 
David treaty … all of this information as usual bearing only a faint 
semblance to the truth but effectively raising the levels of suspicion 
and xenophobia.
When I talked with my landlady, she tsked 
when I mentioned the fuel shortages and our sky-rocketing electric 
bills. No one is unaffected by the trickle-down effect of this crisis. 
She agrees that it may be a government strategy to punish the people and keep 
them dependent on subsidies. She has seen that before. Those still 
demonstrating in Tahrir Square are no longer revolutionaries, she 
believes—they are now only vandals and other bad people, there because 
they have nothing else to do besides make trouble.
According to the state television, there 
have been thefts and break-ins at stores, which is a new development in 
the Egyptian “white revolution.”

“Don’t go back there! They are low people there now. They should go home and 
let the country make this election. We have the parliament and we 
will elect the president before June, inshalla,” the landlady 
said, disgusted. “And the boys and girls are there together without 
chaperones.” She shakes her head and sighs. “Allah knows best.”
And yet, this fuel shortage is so odd. In 
December, a joint venture was contracted between the U.K.’s Dana 
Petroleum and the state-owned Egyptian General Petroleum Corp., which 
owns 70 percent of the Egyptian Natural Gas Co., as well as at least 38 
industry-related companies. The details of the Egyptian corporation’s 
revenues and beneficiaries are deep within the black box of the obscure 
economic cabal of the government. The new venture will produce oil and 
gas from a concession on the Gulf of Suez. 
Egypt’s Petroleum Minister Abdallah Ghorab, commenting at the North Africa 
Technical Conference and Exhibition, 
which focused on managing hydrocarbon resources, said at the Feb. 20-22 
Cairo gathering that international investors had pledged $8 billion in 
petroleum investments this year.
The petroleum risk manager for the 
consultant firm PFC Energy, Hanan Amin-Salem, stated that the industry’s 
primary concern is not in fact political instability but “economic 
populism.” 
“Egypt faces potentially incendiary 
inflation if the central bank reserves fully deplete in the next several 
months, as expected, which could trigger further political unrest,” she added.
Addressing investors’ worries about Egypt’s political future, Amin-Salem with a 
pointed look asked the audience, 
“Who’s in charge of economic policy?”
Shell VP John Berry optimistically assured 
his listeners that increased global demand for oil and gas, as well as 
dwindling reserves, would cause the sector to continue to expand.
“Petroleum production will require both 
more money and more ‘gray brain cells’ per barrel,” he said, referring 
to the development of new extraction technologies. “Egypt’s more mature 
oil fields may be ready for EOR [enhanced oil recovery],” and “powerful 
friends” such as the United States.
Berry said further: “Egypt needs to create a climate where people who know what 
needs to be done will be able to do 
it. We need a good leader to create such a climate.”
Sherif Ismail Mohamed, managing director of Ganope (Ganoub El-Wadi Petroleum 
Co.), one of the five branches of the 
Petroleum Ministry, talked about the critical issue of fuel subsidies, 
citing the necessity of reducing petroleum subsidies for the poor on the 
grounds that they are economically unsustainable and encourage 
smuggling.
Meanwhile, U.S. Transportation Secretary 
Ray LaHood’s son and a handful of other American NGO employees—staying 
at the luxurious U.S. Embassy in Cairo—are awaiting trial. Workers of 
the U.S.-funded International Republican Institute, the National 
Democratic Institute, Freedom House and 14 non-U.S. organizations, most 
of whom are surely without ulterior motives in their humanitarian 
purposes, were charged in the crackdown on NGOs. The SCAF has jockeyed 
to simultaneously appease the escalating anti-American sentiment among 
Egyptians and to reassure the military’s U.S. and other collaborators of the 
soft outcome of trials intended to be demonstrations of Egyptian 
national sovereignty.
The move against the NGOs was driven by a 
powerful woman, Fayza Abul-Naga, the minister of planning and 
international cooperation, one of the last remaining high officials 
deeply rooted in the Mubarak regime. By brilliantly tapping into the 
public’s resentment and xenophobia, she has made herself a nationalist 
hero and untouchable politically.
The $1.5 billion in aid that America has 
given Egypt each year since 1987 has long been used as leverage by 
Washington, and currently the U.S. threat to withdraw that aid is a 
means to pressure Egypt to back down in the NGO case and to ensure that 
the Camp David treaty is respected amid Egypt’s shifting politics. 
However, the Egyptian people know that $1.3 billion of the U.S. aid goes 
directly and exclusively into the military’s armaments and coffers each year 
and that the starved infrastructure and welfare of the country see only $200 
million. Offers to replace at least that much are coming in 
from the private sector as well as Islamic and external Arab sources. 
Egypt’s de facto ruler, Field Marshal 
Mohamed Hussein Tantawy, and the SCAF are obliged to play the game 
through, to try to keep the support of the nation’s silent majority, but more 
so to satisfy their U.S. ally—and not for the petty $1.3 billion 
alone. Military-owned public and semipublic companies, which lie in 
almost every sector of the economy, include partnerships and joint 
ventures with U.S. and foreign energy corporations and industrial 
consortiums: Shell, GAP, Calvin Klein, Thales, Peugeot, Rolls-Royce, to 
name a few. How many countries have a military capable of bailing out 
its civil government with $1 billion, as Egypt’s military did just 
months ago? The fact is, the Egyptian military is no less than an 
economic giant whose motivation is to safeguard the feudal-like powers 
and privileges of its social cast, its tax exemptions, its position on 
the market, its free access to land and, above all, its absolute 
unaccountability on all levels, at the people’s cost in blood and 
continued ignorance and deprivation. 
If the people had access to the real 
information, would that change the direction this country will take? 
Political persuasions are unpredictable. The presidential candidates 
will begin to declare on March 10. The Egyptian people do not know how 
to keep their eye on the money. They are preoccupied by so many other 
issues—spies, fuel shortages, violence and wondering whether they want 
their religion to be enforced by law. The ticking pendulum swings.
A brilliant friend has made videos showing 
the true nature of the SCAF economic holdings. I had posted them on 
three of my pseudonymous blogs and on Facebook. They were all deleted, 
and one of the blogs has been completely erased. (The videos have been 
reposted under new names.) My friend participated in the artistic 
explosion of revolutionary creativity under a pseudonym but recently 
began to use his real name. I won’t mention it here. I haven’t heard 
from him in a few days.
One of the videos ends with a view of people standing along a trail of blood 
soaking into the ground. The blood belonged to Mohamed Mostafa, 19, an 
engineering student who was shot with a high-velocity rifle at dawn in 
Tahrir Square by an Egyptian storm trooper. He was a former member of 
Egypt’s national tennis team and national swimming team and was a member of El 
Ahly Ultras. The ground was later covered with sand.

The blood-soaked ground looked the same as the earth on which the 
butcher tent in my square had stood. Where a woman went mad. Where the 
butane canisters are distributed, first-come, first-served, and where 
tonight the poor fruit seller who tells me to pay when I can, sits, 
wrapped in rough cloth in front of a meager fire, guarding his apples 
and guavas and finally taking a rest on the cold, bloody ground. 

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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