February 5, 2011
Detentions, and Aide's Role, Anger Egyptians
By DAVID D. KIRKPATRICK

CAIRO — Vice President Omar Suleiman of Egypt has won the blessing of both the 
Mubarak and Obama administrations as the leader of a political transition 
toward democracy in Egypt. But human rights advocates say that so far Mr. 
Suleiman, who also is in charge of Egyptian intelligence, has shown no sign of 
discontinuing the practice of extra-legal detention of political opponents — a 
hallmark of President Hosni Mubarak's nearly 30-year rule that is a central 
grievance of the protesters in the streets.

"We have been seriously concerned about the arrests and harassment of human 
rights workers and youth activists who are around the demonstrations," said 
Heba Morayef, a researcher with Human Rights Watch in Cairo. "These are exactly 
the same practices that inspired the Jan. 25 demonstrations in the first place, 
not a departure."

The continuing pattern is one reason many of the opposition leaders and 
protesters in the streets say they are determined not to back down until Mr. 
Mubarak leaves office: if he stays, they say, they risk imprisonment, torture 
and death.

The most notable example is the long disappearance of Wael Ghonim, a Google 
executive and leader of the young Internet activists who started the revolt. 
Believed by many to be the anonymous host of the Facebook page that first 
called for the Jan. 25 protest that kicked off the Egyptian uprising, he wrote 
that day on his Twitter account, "We got brutally beaten up by police people," 
and later, "Sleeping on the streets of Cairo, trying to feel the pain of 
millions of my fellow Egyptians."

"Very worried as it seems that government is planning a war crime tomorrow 
against people," he wrote two days later. "We are all ready to die." He 
disappeared soon after, and after a thorough search of area hospitals, his 
family and human rights workers have concluded that he was taken by Egyptian 
security forces.

The pattern was most evident last Thursday, when the authorities rounded up 
scores of journalists and human rights workers all around Cairo. Though most 
foreigners appear to have been released, many Egyptians are still out of sight 
or in custody.

Around 8:45 on Thursday evening, for example, a group of about 10 young online 
political organizers — part of the group that started the revolt with an online 
call to protest — sat down for dinner at a coffee shop here after a meeting at 
the home of Mohamed ElBaradei, a Nobel Prize-winning diplomat who has become a 
spokesman for the democracy movement.

One of the young organizers, Ahmed Eid, was talking on his mobile phone when he 
saw an army officer and a police officer approaching his friends' table. "I 
thought at first that it was just to check their IDs," he later wrote in a 
group e-mail to human rights workers. "When I found that it is taking longer 
than usual and that they had 3 plain-clothed men with them, I felt that they 
were going to be arrested. I decided to stand afar and follow up with them over 
the phone."

After one of their wives confirmed that the group had been arrested, a human 
rights lawyer went to the Haram police station to inquire about their defense. 
He, too, was arrested. On Saturday night, a human rights worker said they had 
been released, but there were no details given.

The government has also detained without charges and subsequently released 
dozens of foreign journalists, holding many overnight.

Officials of the Muslim Brotherhood say security forces recently raided the 
office of its Web site, and over the weekend they reportedly raided a Cairo 
office of the pan-Arab news network Al Jazeera as well.

In another notable raid, a group of men with clubs accompanied by a handful of 
soldiers stormed the Hisham Mubarak Legal Center, breaking windows, rifling 
desks and confiscating two safes, a person present said. Screaming and yelling 
at the roughly 35 human rights workers and civil rights lawyers present, the 
men forced them to the ground and handcuffed their hands behind their backs.

"This is the real Egypt! This is the real Egypt!" one of them said, pointing to 
the human rights workers prone on the floor, recalled Dan Williams, a 
researcher with Human Rights Watch who was among those captured. He said the 
man seemed to be saying: "The real Egypt is, we can do whatever we want with 
Egyptians. We come in, we manacle you, and you sit down and you do what we say."

Unlike the online political organizers who started the revolt, however, the 35 
or so human rights workers and legal advocates were released Sunday morning, 
after the potential for another violent crackdown appeared to have passed.

Mr. Williams said a white van from the security services dropped him off at a 
full hotel in an outer neighborhood of the city, forcing him to risk harassment 
or worse at makeshift checkpoints throughout the city as he searched for a bed 
for the night.

More in Middle East (1 of 37 articles)
Protest in Egypt Takes a Turn as Workers Go on Strike

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