A protester carries Shaimaa El-Sabbagh, who was killed during a protest in Cairo on Saturday.
"If there were any attempts to hold
security officers accountable over the past four years, Shaimaa wouldn't
have been killed," said Khaled Dawood, a spokesman for the Constitution
Party.
El-Sabbagh
was one of at least 16 people killed in protests over the weekend at
events marking the fourth anniversary of Egypt's revolution, officials
say.
Fifteen were killed Sunday,
including a police conscript, according to the Ministry of Health. Two
of those killed were men trying to plant a bomb in Behira Province,
ministry spokesman Hossam Abdel-Ghaffar said.
It
was not clear Sunday night how many people had been arrested, because
some were released on the spot or shortly afterward, the Interior
Ministry said. Eight journalists covering the Sunday protests were among
those detained, the Association for Freedom of Thought and Expression
Reported.
Meanwhile, the prosecutor
general has launched an investigation into El-Sabbagh's death and called
policemen on duty that day in for questioning, along with six Socialist
Popular Alliance Party members arrested at the Saturday march.
Elhamy
El-Marghany, spokesman for the party, called El-Sabbagh's death an
assassination that "sends a message against political and partisan
life."
Tumultuous times
Four
years ago on Police Day, a national holiday celebrated January 25,
thousands of Egyptians marched to protest security violations. The
protests quickly gained momentum as clashes with security forces left
hundreds dead and culminated in the ouster of then-President Hosni
Mubarak.
Almost all the police officers
implicated in the 2011 violence were acquitted. Last November, a Cairo
court dismissed charges against Mubarak and acquitted his interior
minister and top security aides on charges related to the protesters'
deaths.
Thousands have been killed and
thousands more arrested since 2011 as local and international rights
groups decried the impunity with which security forces operated. The
toll dramatically increased in the summer of 2013 following the removal
of ex-President Mohamed Morsy in the wake of another wave of mass
protests. The crackdown on his supporters in August 2013 left at least
1,000 killed.
Many of the famous activists associated
with the original January 25 demonstrations are now behind bars. Rights
groups have scaled down operations as the government announced the
activation of an old law that would restrict activities and funding.
Those
who marched with El-Sabbagh on Saturday chose to demonstrate the day
before January 25 "so they don't get confused or lumped with the Muslim
Brotherhood protests," Dawood said.
Egypt's
government has said a surge in terrorist attacks have forced stricter
measures, as hundreds of army and police personnel were killed in
bombings and shootings.
The Interior
Ministry said in a statement to state media last December that it had
arrested 10,000 rioters, saboteurs and terrorists in 2014 alone.
The
opposition has consistently condemned these attacks but says the regime
is using terrorism as an excuse to impose more restrictions.
Split streets
On
Sunday, Egyptian military armored personnel carriers closed Tahrir
Square to traffic. State celebrations planned to mark the day were
canceled to mourn the passing of Saudi Arabia's King Abdullah.
Secular
political parties that now see demonstration as an ineffective and
costly tool for change dissuaded youth members from protesting on the
anniversary day.
"Today there's a new
phase of revolutionary work. The coup has to realize that the revolution
has taken a new turn," Muslim Brotherhood spokesman Mohamed Montaser
tweeted. "Victory is inevitable."
Sunday's
demonstrations and marches took place away from the iconic square. The
Anti-Coup Alliance, which was launched to support Morsy but has
witnessed the departures of Islamist parties and movements seeking
different strategies, posted photos and videos of marches and clashes
with the police in and outside Cairo.
Revolution at crossroads
For
Reda Hamed, a 47-year-old member of the leftist Bread and Liberty
Party, this clampdown on political life is the battlefront. It was the
killing of April 6 Movement's Sayed Weza during the demonstrations last
January 25 that convinced Hamed to reconsider his belief that
revolutionaries shouldn't legitimize the regime by political
participation.
"I'm not ready to see
another kid shot. I had to think about changing the mechanism of the
revolution. Demonstrations and protests had to be changed to protect the
youth of the revolution, so that no one else is shot dead. Enough with
blood," he told CNN.
Hamed and fellow
party members have an enduring goal: maintaining a place on the
political scene until emerging parties are strong enough to mount a
serious challenge.
Electoral
campaigning would provide a state-sanctioned framework to reach out to
people, network and organize in a bid to achieve the goals that fueled
the revolution, he explained.
Days
before the anniversary, Hamed was in Cairo's Salam City neighborhood
telling potential voters about a revolution that hoped to make
authorities accountable. "The revolution didn't give us anything," a man
told him.
Others voiced numerous
concerns about security, health care, unemployment and housing. They had
little hope that Hamed or any elected official would bring about
change.
'It begins with bread'
In a televised speech Sunday, President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi struck an optimistic chord.
"The
fourth anniversary represents to all of us a new flame of hope,
development and action," he said. "There is no doubt that there are
shortcomings that exist and will take time until we all overcome them.
With the will to work and the will to change, we will be able to
overcome these shortcomings and achieve our hopes."
Finance
Minister Hany Kadry told CNN late last year that the government is
working on multiple fronts: battling inflation, increasing spending on
education and health care, increasing the minimum wage and backing a new
smart card system to deliver subsidies more efficiently.
"So
we are dealing with this while the most important thing is to rebuild
confidence in the Egyptian economy to attract investors again and
because we believe very much that having a job is your first line of
protection against poverty and hardship," he said.
In addition to a megaproject developing the Suez Canal, Egypt is planning an international investment conference in March.
In
the densely populated, low-income Salam City, Hamed echoed the chant so
popular during the revolution: "Bread, freedom and social justice."
"When there is bread and freedom, social justice and human dignity will be achieved. For people, it begins with bread."
Protester's death fuels election debate
The
debate on how to achieve these goals is still going on, with the voices
that oppose contesting elections gaining momentum after El-Sabbagh's
death.
"We can't imagine that elections
supervised by the Interior Ministry, presided over by the minister
killing our youth, can be fair elections," Bread and Liberty spokesman
Mona Azab said at a joint press conference on Sunday.
"Political
parties that claim to battle for democracy, social justice and a
civilian system should take a unified stance," Constitution Party head
Hala Shukrallah said at the press conference.
A Monday meeting will decide whether that means withdrawing from elections.
Despite the setbacks, Hamed was hopeful.
"The
revolution didn't fail. The revolution is on the path typically taken
by all revolutions in the world. Revolutions don't happen and succeed in
three to four years. The revolution is accumulative," he said, "and we
won't see results before 10 or 15 years at least."
SOURCE: CNN
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