The2011 Egyptian revolution,also known as the25 January Revolution(Arabic:ثورة ٢٥ يناير,romanized:Thawrat khamsa wa-ʿišrūn yanāyir;),[20]began on 25 January 2011 and spread acrossEgypt.The date was set by various youth groups to coincide with the annual Egyptian "Police holiday" as a statement against increasingpolice brutalityduring the last few years ofHosni Mubarak's presidency. It consisted of demonstrations, marches, occupations of plazas, non-violentcivil resistance,acts ofcivil disobedienceandstrikes.Millions of protesters from a range ofsocio-economicand religious backgrounds demanded the overthrow ofEgyptian PresidentHosni Mubarak.Violent clashes between security forces and protesters resulted in at least 846 people killed and over 6,000 injured.[21][22]Protesters retaliated by burning over 90 police stations across the country.[23]
2011 Egyptian revolution | |||
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ثورة ٢٥ يناير(Arabic) Part of theEgyptian Crisis,theArab Spring,and theIran–Saudi Arabia proxy conflict | |||
Date | 25 January 2011 (2 weeks and 3 days) | – 11 February 2011||
Location | 30°2′40″N31°14′8″E/ 30.04444°N 31.23556°E | ||
Caused by | |||
Goals |
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Methods | |||
Resulted in |
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Parties | |||
Lead figures | |||
Number | |||
2,000,000 atCairo'sTahrir SquareSee:Regionssection below. | |||
Casualties | |||
Death(s) |
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Injuries | 6,467 people[18] | ||
Arrested | 12,000[19] |
The Egyptian protesters' grievances focused on legal and political issues,[24]includingpolice brutality,state-of-emergency laws,[1]lack ofpolitical freedom,civil liberty,freedom of speech,corruption,[2]high unemployment, food-priceinflation[3]and low wages.[1][3]The protesters' primary demands were the end of theMubarakregime. Strikes bylabour unionsadded to the pressure on government officials.[25]During the uprising, the capital,Cairo,was described as "a war zone"[26]and the port city ofSuezsaw frequent violent clashes. Protesters defied a government-imposedcurfew,which the police and military could not enforce in any case. Egypt'sCentral Security Forces,loyal to Mubarak, were gradually replaced by military troops. In the chaos, there waslootingby rioters which was instigated (according to opposition sources) by plainclothes police officers. In response, watch groups were organised by civilianvigilantesto protect their neighborhoods.[27][28][29][30][31]
On 11 February 2011, Vice President Omar Suleiman announced thatMubarakresigned as president, turning power over to theSupreme Council of the Armed Forces(SCAF).[32]The military junta, headed by effective head of stateMuhammad Tantawi,announced on 13 February that the constitution is suspended, both houses of parliament dissolved and the military would govern for six months (until elections could be held). The previous cabinet, including Prime MinisterAhmed Shafik,would serve as a caretaker government until a new one was formed.[33]
After the revolution against Mubarak and a period of rule by theSupreme Council of the Armed Forces,theMuslim Brotherhoodtook power in Egypt through a series of popular elections, with Egyptians electing IslamistMohamed Morsito the presidency in June 2012, after winning the election over Ahmed Shafik.[34]However, the Morsi government encountered fierce opposition after his attempt to pass an Islamic-leaning constitution. Morsi also issued a temporary presidential decree that raised his decisions over judicial review to enable the passing of the constitution.[35]It sparked general outrage from secularists and members of the military, and a revolution broke out against his rule on 28 June 2013.[36]On 3 July 2013, Morsi was deposed following the army's intervention on the side of the revolution. The move was led by the minister of defense, GeneralAbdel Fattah el-Sisi,[37]as millions of Egyptians took to the streets in support of early elections.[38]Sisi went on to become Egypt's president after anelection in 2014which was boycotted by opposition parties.[39]
Other names
editIn Egypt and other parts of the Arab world, the protests and governmental changes are also known as the 25 January Revolution (ثورة 25 ينايرThawrat 25 Yanāyir), Revolution of Freedom (ثورة حريةThawrat Horeya)[40]or Revolution of Rage (ثورة الغضبThawrat al-Ġaḍab), and, less frequently,[41]the Youth Revolution (ثورة الشبابThawrat al-Shabāb),LotusRevolution[42](ثورة اللوتس) or White Revolution (الثورة البيضاءal-Thawrah al-bayḍāʾ).[43]
Background
editHosni MubarakbecamePresident of Egyptafter theassassination of Anwar Sadatin 1981. He inherited an authoritarian system from Sadat which was imposed in 1952 following thecoupagainstKing Farouk.The coup in 1952 led to the abolishment of the monarchy and Egypt became a one party and military dominated state. Nasser who was a member of the Free Officers became the second President of Egypt following the resignation of Muhammad Naguib and under his rule, theArab Socialist Unionoperated as the sole political party in Egypt. Under Sadat, the multi-party system during the monarchy was reintroduced but the National Democratic Party (which evolved from Nasser’sArab Socialist Union) remained dominant in Egypt’s politics and there were restrictions on opposition parties. Mubarak'sNational Democratic Party(NDP) maintained one-party rule.[44]His government received support from the West and aid from the United States by its suppression ofIslamic militantsand maintaining thepeace treaty with Israel.[44]Mubarak was often compared to an Egyptianpharaohby the media and some critics, due to his authoritarian rule.[45]He was in the 30th year of his reign when the 2011 uprising began.[46]
Most causes of the revolution against Mubarak—inherited power, corruption, under-development, unemployment, unfair distribution of wealth and the presence of Israel—also existed in1952,when theFree OfficersoustedKing Farouk.[47]A new cause of the 2011 revolution was the increase in population, which aggravated unemployment.[48]
During his presidency,Anwar Sadatneglected the modernisation of Egypt in contrast to his predecessor,Gamal Abdel Nasser,and his cronyism cost the country infrastructure industries which could generate new jobs. Communications media such as the internet, cell phones and satellite TV channels augmented mosques and Friday prayers, traditional means of mass communications. The mosques brought the Muslim Brotherhood to power, and the Brotherhood pressured all governments from 1928 through 2011 (as it had also done in neighboring countries).[48]
Inheritance of power
editMubarak's younger son,Gamal Mubarak,was rumoured in 2000 to succeed his father as the next president of Egypt.[49]Gamal began receiving attention from the Egyptian media, since there were apparently no other heirs to the presidency.[50]Bashar al-Assad's rise to power inSyriain June 2000, after the death of his fatherHafez,sparked debate in the Egyptian press about the prospects for a similar scenario in Cairo.[51]
During the years afterMubarak's 2005 re-election,several left- and right-wing (primarily unofficial) political groups expressed opposition to the inheritance of power, demanded reforms and asked for a multi-candidate election. In 2006, with opposition increasing,Daily News Egyptreported an online campaign initiative (the National Initiative against Power Inheritance) demanding that Gamal reduce his power. The campaign said, "President Mubarak and his son constantly denied even the possibility of [succession]. However, in reality they did the opposite, including amending the constitution to make sure that Gamal will be the only unchallenged candidate."[52]
During the decade, public perception grew that Gamal would succeed his father. He wielded increasing power as NDP deputy secretary general and chair of the party's policy committee. Analysts described Mubarak's last decade in power as "the age of Gamal Mubarak". With his father's health declining and no appointed vice-president, Gamal was considered Egypt'sde factopresident by some.[53]Although Gamal and his father denied an inheritance of power, he was speculated as likely to be chosen as the NDP candidate in the presidential election scheduled for 2011, when Hosni Mubarak's presidential term was set to expire.[54]However, Gamal ultimately declined to run following the 2011 protests.[55]
State-of-emergency law
editEgypt was under astate of emergencysince the assassination of Sadat in 1981, pursuant toLaw No. 162 of 1958.A previous state of emergency was enacted in the 1967Six-Day Warbefore being lifted in 1980.[56][57]Police powers were extended,constitutional rightsandhabeas corpuswere effectively suspended and censorship was legalised as a result.[58]The emergency law limited non-governmental political activity, includingdemonstrations,unapproved political organizations and unregistered financial donations.[56]The Mubarak government cited the threat of terrorism in extending the state of emergency,[57]claiming that opposition groups such as theMuslim Brotherhoodcould gain power in Egypt if the government did not forgeparliamentary electionsand suppress the group through emergency law.[59]This led to the imprisonment of activists without trial,[60]illegal, undocumented and hidden detention facilities[61]and the rejection of university, mosque and newspaper staff based on their political affiliation.[62]ADecember 2010 parliamentary electionwas preceded by a media crackdown, arrests, candidate bans (particularly Muslim Brotherhood candidates) and allegations of fraud due to the near-unanimous victory by the NDP in parliament.[56]Human rights organizations estimated that in 2010, between 5,000 and 10,000 people were in long-term detention without charge or trial.[63][64]
Police brutality
editAccording to a U.S. Embassy report, police brutality had been widespread in Egypt.[65]In the five years before the revolution, the Mubarak regime denied the existence of torture or abuse by police. However, claims by domestic and international groups provided cellphone videos or first-hand accounts of hundreds of cases of police brutality.[66]According to the 2009 Human Rights Report from the U.S. State Department, "Domestic and international human rights groups reported that the Ministry of Interior (MOI) State Security Investigative Service (SSIS), police, and other government entities continued to employ torture to extract information or force confessions. The Egyptian Organization for Human Rights documented 30 cases of torture during the year 2009. In numerous trials defendants alleged that police tortured them during questioning. During the year activists and observers circulated some amateur cellphone videos documenting the alleged abuse of citizens by security officials. For example, on 8 February, a blogger posted a video of two police officers, identified by their first names and last initials, sodomizing a bound naked man named Ahmed Abdel Fattah Ali with a bottle. On 12 August, the same blogger posted two videos of alleged police torture of a man in a Port Said police station by the head of investigations, Mohammed Abu Ghazala. There was no indication that the government investigated either case."[67]
The deployment ofBaltageya(Arabic:بلطجية)—plainclothes police—by the NDP was a hallmark of the Mubarak government.[68]TheEgyptian Organisation for Human Rightsdocumented 567 cases of torture, including 167 deaths, by police from 1993 to 2007.[69]Excessive force was often used by law enforcement agencies against popular uprisings.[70]
On 6 June 2010, a twenty-eight-year-old Egyptian, Khaled Mohamed Saeed,died under disputed circumstancesin theSidi Gaberarea ofAlexandria,with witnesses testifying that he was beaten to death by police – an event which galvanised Egyptians around the issue of police brutality.[71][72][73]Authorities stated that Khaled died choking onhashishwhile being chased by police officers. However, pictures which were released of Khaled's disfigured corpse from the morgue showed signs of torture.[74]A Facebook page, "We are all Khaled Said", helped attract nationwide attention to the case.[75]Mohamed ElBaradei,former head of theInternational Atomic Energy Agency,led a 2010 rally in Alexandria against police abuse, and visited Saeed's family to offer condolences.[76]
During the January–February 2011 protests, police brutality was common. Jack Shenker, a reporter forThe Guardian,was arrested during the Cairo protests on 26 January. He witnessed fellow Egyptian protesters being tortured, assaulted, and taken to undisclosed locations by police officers. Shenker and other detainees were released after covert intervention byAyman Nour,the father of a fellow detainee.[77][78][79]
Election corruption
editCorruption, coercion not to vote and manipulation of election results occurred during many elections over Mubarak's 30-year rule.[80]Until 2005, Mubarak was the only presidential candidate (with a yes-or-no vote).[81]Mubarak won five consecutive presidential elections with a sweeping majority. Although opposition groups and international election-monitoring agencies charged that the elections were rigged, those agencies were not allowed to monitor elections. The only opposition presidential candidate in recent Egyptian history, Ayman Nour, was imprisoned before the 2005 elections.[82]According to a 2007 UN survey, voter turnout was extremely low (about 25 per cent) because of a lack of trust in the political system.[81]
Demographic and economic challenges
editUnemployment and reliance on subsidised goods
editThe population of Egypt grew from 30,083,419 in 1966[83]to roughly 79,000,000 by 2008.[84]The vast majority of Egyptians live near the banks of theNile,in an area of about 40,000 square kilometers (15,000 sq mi) where the onlyarable landis found. In late 2010, about 40 per cent of Egypt's population lived on the equivalent of roughly US$2 per day, with a large portion relying on subsidised goods.[1]
According to thePeterson Institute for International Economicsand other proponents of demographic structural approach (cliodynamics), a basic problem in Egypt is unemployment driven by a demographicyouth bulge;with the number of new people entering the workforce at about four per cent a year, unemployment in Egypt is almost 10 times as high for college graduates as for those who finished elementary school (particularly educated urban youth—the people who were in the streets during the revolution).[85][86]
Economy and poor living conditions
editEgypt's economy was highly centralised during the presidency ofGamal Abdel Nasser,becoming moremarket-drivenunder Anwar Sadat and Mubarak. From 2004 to 2008 the Mubarak government pursued economic reform to attract foreign investment and increase GDP, later postponing further reforms because of theGreat Recession.The internationaleconomic downturnslowed Egypt's GDP growth to 4.5 per cent in 2009. In 2010, analysts said that the government of Prime MinisterAhmed Nazifwould need to resume economic reform to attract foreign investment, increase growth and improve economic conditions. Despite recent high national economic growth, living conditions for the average Egyptian remained relatively poor[87](albeit better than other African nations[85]with no significant social upheavals).
Corruption
editPolitical corruption in the Mubarak administration'sInterior Ministryrose dramatically, due to increased control of the system necessary to sustain his presidency.[88]The rise to power of powerful businessmen in the NDP, the government and theHouse of Representativesled to public anger during the Ahmed Nazif government.Ahmed Ezzmonopolisedthe steel industry, with more than 60 per cent of market share.[89]Aladdin Elaasar, an Egyptian biographer and American professor, estimated that the Mubarak family was worth from $50 to $70 billion.[90][91]
The wealth of former NDP secretary Ezz was estimated atE£18 billion;[92]the wealth of former housing minister Ahmed al-Maghraby was estimated at more thanE£11 billion;[92]that of former tourism ministerZuhair Garranais estimated atE£13 billion;[92]former minister of trade and industry Rashid Mohamed Rashid is estimated to be worthE£12 billion,[92]and former interior minister Habib al-Adly was estimated to be worthE£8 billion.[92]The perception among Egyptians was that the only people benefiting from the nation's wealth were businessmen with ties to the National Democratic Party: "Wealth fuels political power and political power buys wealth."[93]
During the2010 elections,opposition groups complained about government harassment and fraud. Opposition and citizen activists called for changes toa number of legalandconstitutional provisions affecting elections.[94]In 2010,Transparency International'sCorruption Perceptions Index(CPI) gave Egypt a score of 3.1 based on perceptions by business people and analysts of the degree of corruption (with 10 being clean, and 0 totally corrupt).[95]
Prelude
editTo prepare for the possible overthrow of Mubarak, opposition groups studiedGene Sharp's work on nonviolent action and worked with leaders ofOtpor,the student-ledSerbianorganisation.Copies of Sharp's list of 198 non-violent "weapons", translated into Arabic and not always attributed to him, were circulated inTahrir Squareduring its occupation.[96][97]
Tunisian revolution
editFollowing the ousting of Tunisian president Zine El Abidine Ben Ali after mass protests, many analysts (including formerEuropean Commission PresidentRomano Prodi) saw Egypt as the next country where such a revolution might occur.[98]According toThe Washington Post,"The Jasmine Revolution [...] should serve as a stark warning to Arab leaders – beginning with Egypt's 83-year-old Hosni Mubarak – that their refusal to allow more economic and political opportunity is dangerous and untenable."[99]Others believed that Egypt was not ready for revolution, citing little aspiration by the Egyptian people, low educational levels and a strong government with military support.[100]TheBBCsaid, "The simple fact is that most Egyptians do not see any way that they can change their country or their lives through political action, be it voting, activism, or going out on the streets to demonstrate."[101]
Self-immolation
editAfter theself-immolationofMohamed Bouaziziin Tunisia on 17 December, a man set himself afire on 18 January in front of the Egyptian parliament[102]and five more attempts followed.[100]On 17 January, Abdou Abdel Monaam, a baker, also set himself on fire to protest a law that prevented restaurant owners from buying subsidised bread, leading him to buy bread at the regular price – which is five times higher than the subsidised. Mohammed Farouq Mohammed, who is a lawyer, also set himself afire in front of the parliament to protest his ex-wife, who did not allow him to see his daughters.[103]In Alexandria, an unemployed man by the name of Ahmed Hashem Sayed also set himself on fire.[104]
National Police Day protests
editOpposition groups planned a day of revolt for 25 January, coinciding withNational Police Day,to protest police brutality in front of theMinistry of Interior.[105]Protesters also demanded the resignation of the Minister of Interior, an end to State corruption, the end of emergency law and presidentialterm limitsfor the president.
Many political movements, opposition parties and public figures supported the day of revolt, including Youth for Justice and Freedom, theCoalition of the Youth of the Revolution,the Popular Democratic Movement for Change, theRevolutionary Socialistsand theNational Association for Change.TheApril 6 Youth Movementwas a major supporter of the protest, distributing 20,000 leaflets saying "I will protest on 25 January for my rights". TheGhad El-Thawra Party,Karama,WafdandDemocratic Frontsupported the protests. The Muslim Brotherhood, Egypt's largest opposition group,[106]confirmed on 23 January that it would participate.[107]Public figures, including novelistAlaa Al Aswany,writerBelal Fadland actorsAmr WakedandKhaled Aboul Naga,announced that they would participate. TheleftistNational Progressive Unionist Party(theTagammu) said that it would not participate, and the Coptic Church urged Christians not to participate in the protests.[106]
Twenty-six-year-oldAsmaa Mahfouzwas instrumental[108]in sparking the protests.[109][110]In a video blog posted a week before National Police Day,[111]she urged the Egyptian people to join her on 25 January in Tahrir Square to bring down the Mubarak regime.[112]Mahfouz's use ofvideo bloggingandsocial mediawentviral[113]and urged people not to be afraid.[114]The Facebook group for the event attracted 80,000 people.
Timeline
editThis sectionneeds additional citations forverification.(April 2011) |
25 January 2011 ( "Day of Revolt" ):Protests erupted throughout Egypt, with tens of thousands gathering in Cairo and thousands more in other Egyptian cities. The protests targeted the Mubarak government; while mostly non-violent, there were some reports of civilian and police casualties.
26 January 2011:Civil unrest in Suez and other areas throughout the country. Police arrested many activists.
27 January 2011:The government shuts down four major ISPs at approximately 5:20 p.m. EST.[115]disrupting Internet traffic and telephone services[116]
28 January 2011:The "Friday of Anger" protests began, with hundreds of thousands demonstrating in Cairo and other Egyptian cities after Friday prayers. Opposition leader Mohamed ElBaradei arrived in Cairo amid reports of looting. Prisons were opened and burned down, allegedly on orders from Interior Minister Habib El Adly. Prison inmates escapeden masse,in what was believed to be an attempt to terrorise protesters. Police were withdrawn from the streets, and the military was deployed. International fears of violence grew, but no major casualties were reported. Mubarak made his first address to the nation, pledging to form a new government. Later that night clashes broke out in Tahrir Square between revolutionaries and pro-Mubarak demonstrators, leading to casualties. No fatalities have been reported in Cairo, however, 11 people were killed in Suez and another 170 were injured.1,030 people were reported injured nationwide.
29 January 2011:The military presence in Cairo increased. A curfew was imposed, which was widely ignored as the flow of protesters into Tahrir Square continued through the night. The military reportedly refused to follow orders to fire live ammunition, exercising overall restraint; there were no reports of major casualties. On 31 January, Israeli media reported that the 9th, 2nd, and 7th Divisions of theEgyptian Armyhad been ordered into Cairo to help restore order.[117]
1 February 2011:Mubarak made another televised address, offering several concessions. He pledged political reforms and said he would not run in the elections planned for September, but would remain in office to oversee a peaceful transition. Small-but-violent clashes began that night between pro- and anti-Mubarak groups.
2 February 2011 (Camel Incident):Violence escalated as waves of Mubarak supporters met anti-government protesters; some Mubarak supporters rode camels and horses into Tahrir Square, reportedly wielding sticks. The attack resulted in 3 deaths and 600 injuries.[118]Mubarak repeated his refusal to resign in interviews with several news agencies. Violence toward journalists and reporters escalated, amid speculation that it was encouraged by Mubarak to bring the protests to an end. The camel and horse riders later claimed that they were "good men", and they opposed the protests because they wanted tourists to come back to keep their jobs and feed their animals. The horse and camel riders deny that they were paid by anyone, though they said that they were told about the protests from a ruling party MP. Three hundred people were reported dead by the Human Rights Watch the following day, since 25 January.[119][120]Wael Ghonim, Google executive and creator of the pageWe are all Khaled Said,was reported missing and the company asked the public to help find him.[121]
6 February 2011:An interfaith service was held withEgyptian ChristiansandMuslimsin Tahrir Square. Negotiations by Egyptian Vice PresidentOmar Suleimanand opposition representatives began during continuing protests throughout the country. The Egyptian army assumed greater security responsibilities, maintaining order and guarding TheEgyptian Museum of Antiquity.Suleiman offered reforms, while others in Mubarak's regime accused foreign nations (including the U.S.) of interfering in Egypt's affairs.
10 February 2011:Mubarak addressed the Egyptian people amid speculation of a military coup. Instead of resigning (which was widely expected), he said he would delegate some powers to Vice President Suleiman while remaining Egypt's head of state. Mubarak's statement was met with anger, frustration and disappointment, and in a number of cities there was an escalation in the number and intensity of demonstrations.
11 February 2011 ( "Friday of Departure" ):Large protests continued in many cities, as Egyptians refused to accept Mubarak's concessions. At 6:00 pm Suleiman announced Mubarak's resignation, entrusting the Supreme Council of Egyptian Armed Forces with the leadership of the country.
Post-revolution timeline
editUnder the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces
edit13 February 2011:TheSupreme Councildissolved Egypt's parliament and suspended the constitution in response to demands by demonstrators. The council declared that it would wield power for six months, or until elections could be held. Calls were made for the council to provide details and more-specific timetables and deadlines. Major protests subsided, but did not end. In a gesture to a new beginning, protesters cleaned up and renovated Tahrir Square (the epicenter of the demonstrations); however, many pledged to continue protesting until all demands had been met.
17 February:The army said that it would not field a candidate in the upcoming presidential elections.[122]Four important figures in the former regime were arrested that day: former interior ministerHabib el-Adly,former minister of housingAhmed Maghrabi,former tourism minister H.E.Zuheir Garanaand steel tycoonAhmed Ezz.[123]
2 March:Theconstitutional referendumwas tentatively scheduled for 19 March 2011.[124]
3 March:A day before large protests against him were planned,Ahmed Shafikstepped down as prime minister and was replaced byEssam Sharaf.[125]
5 March:SeveralState Security Intelligence(SSI) buildings across Egypt were raided by protesters, including the headquarters for theAlexandria Governorateand the national headquarters inNasr City,Cairo. Protesters said that they raided the buildings to secure documents they believed prove crimes by the SSI against the people of Egypt during Mubarak's rule.[126][127]
6 March:From the Nasr City headquarters, protesters acquired evidence ofmass surveillanceand vote-rigging, noting rooms full of videotapes, piles of shredded and burned documents and cells in which activists recounted their experiences of detention and torture.[128]
19 March:The constitutional referendum passed with 77.27 per cent of the vote.[129]
22 March:Portions of the Interior Ministry building caught fire during police demonstrations outside.[130]
23 March:TheEgyptian Cabinetordered a law criminalising protests and strikes which hamper work at private or public establishments. Under the new law, anyone organising such protests will be subject to imprisonment or a fine ofE£500,000(about US$100,000).[131]
1 April ( "Save the Revolution Day" ):About 4,000 demonstrators filled Tahrir Square for the largest protest in weeks, demanding that the ruling military council more quickly dismantle lingering aspects of the old regime;[132]protestors also demanded trials forHosni Mubarak,Gamal Mubarak,Ahmad Fathi Sorour,Safwat El-SherifandZakaria Azmi.
8 April ( "Cleansing Friday" ):Tens of thousands of demonstrators again filled Tahrir Square, criticizing the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces for not following through on their demands: the resignation of remaining regime figures and the removal of Egypt's public prosecutor, due to the slow pace of investigations of corrupt former officials.[133]
7 May:TheImbaba church attacks,in whichSalafiMuslims attackedCopticChristian churches in the working-class neighborhood ofImbabainCairo.[134]
27 May ( "Second Friday of Anger", "Second Revolution of Anger" or "The Second Revolution" ): Tens of thousands of demonstrators filled Tahrir Square,[135]in addition to demonstrations in Alexandria, Suez, Ismailia and Gharbeya, in the largest demonstrations since the ouster of the Mubarak regime. Protestors demanded no military trials for civilians, restoration of the Egyptian Constitution before parliament elections and for all members of the old regime (and those who killed protestors in January and February) to stand trial.
1 July ( "Friday of Retribution" ):Thousands of protesters gathered in Suez, Alexandria and Tahrir Square to voice frustration with the ruling Supreme Council of the Armed Forces for what they called the slow pace of change, five months after the revolution, some also feared that the military is to rule Egypt indefinitely.[136]
8 July ( "Friday of Determination" ):Hundreds of thousands of protesters gathered in Suez, Alexandria and Tahrir Square, demanding immediate reform and swifter prosecution of former officials from the ousted government.[137]
15 July:Tahrir Square protests continued.
23 July:Thousands of protesters attempted to march to the defense ministry after a speech by Muhammad Tantawi commemorating theEgyptian Revolution of 1952,but are met with counter-insurgents with sticks, stones and Molotov cocktails.
1 August:Egyptian soldiers clashed with protesters, tearing down tents. Over 80 people were arrested.[138]
6 August:Hundreds of protesters gathered and prayed in Tahrir Square before they were attacked by soldiers.[139]
9 September (2011 Israeli embassy attack;the "Friday of Correcting the Path" ):Tens of thousands of people protested in Suez, Alexandria and Cairo; however, Islamist protesters were absent.
9 October (Maspero demonstrations):[140][141]Late in the evening of 9 October, during a protest in theMaspiro television building,[142]peaceful Egyptian protesters calling for the dissolution the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces, the resignation of Chairman Field Marshal Muhammad Tantawi and the dismissal of the governor of Aswan province were attacked by military police. At least 25 people[143]were killed, and more than 200 wounded.
19 November:Clashes erupted as demonstrators reoccupied Tahrir Square. Central Security Forces usedtear gasto control the situation.[144]
20 November:Police attempted to forcibly clear the square, but protesters returned in more than double their original numbers. Fighting continued through the night, with police using tear gas, beating and shooting demonstrators.[144]
21 November:Demonstrators returned to the square, withCoptic Christiansstanding guard as Muslims protesting the regime pause for prayers. The Health Ministry said that at least 23 died and over 1,500 were injured since 19 November.[144]Solidarity protests were held inAlexandriaandSuez.[145]Dissident journalistHossam el-HamalawytoldAl Jazeerathat Egyptians would begin ageneral strikebecause they "had enough" of the SCAF.[146]
28 November 2011 – 11 January 2012:Parliamentary elections
17 December 2011:The Institute d'Egypte caught fire during clashes between protesters and Egyptian military; thousands of rare documents burned.[147]
23 January 2012:Democratically elected representatives of the People's Assembly met for the first time since Egypt's revolution, and the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces gave them legislative authority.[148][149][150]
24 January:Field Marshal Tantawi said that the decades-old state of emergency would be partially lifted the following day.[151][152][153][154]
12 April:An administrative court suspended the 100-member constitutional assembly tasked with drafting a new Egyptian constitution.[155][156][157]
23–24 May:First round of voting in thefirst presidential electionsince Hosni Mubarak was deposed.
31 May:The decades-long state of emergency expired.[158][159]
2 June:Mubarak and his former interior ministerHabib al-Adliwere sentenced to life in prison because of their failure to stop the killing during the first six days of the revolution. The former president, his two sons and a business tycoon were acquitted of corruption charges because thestatute of limitationshad expired. Six senior police officials were also acquitted for their role in the killing of demonstrators, due to lack of evidence.[160][161][162][163]
8 June:Political factions tentatively agreed to a deal to form a new constitutional assembly, consisting of 100 members who will draft the new constitution.[164]
12 June:When the Egyptian parliament met to vote for members of a constitutional assembly dozens of secular MPs walked out, accusing Islamist parties of trying to dominate the panel.[165]
13 June:After Egypt's military government imposedde factomartial law (extending the arrest powers of security forces), the Justice Ministry issued a decree giving military officers authority to arrest civilians and try them in military courts.[166][167][168][169]The provision remains in effect until a new constitution is introduced, and could mean those detained could remain in jail for that long according to state-run Egy News.[170]
14 June:The Egyptian Supreme Constitutional Court ruled that a law passed by Parliament in May, banning former regime figures from running for office, was unconstitutional; this ended a threat toAhmed Shafik's candidacy for president duringEgypt's 2012 presidential election.The court ruled that all articles making up the law regulating the 2011 parliamentary elections were invalid, upholding a lower-court ruling which found that candidates running on party slates were allowed to contest the one-third of parliamentary seats reserved for independents. The Egyptian parliament was dissolved, and the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces resumed legislative authority. The SCAF said that it would announce a 100-person assembly to write the country's new constitution.[170][171][172][173][174]
15 June:Security forces were stationed around Parliament to bar anyone, including lawmakers, from entering the chambers without official authorisation.[175][176]
16–17 June:Second round of voting in theEgyptian presidential election.The SCAF issued an interim constitution,[177][178][179][180][181][182][183][184]giving itself the power to control the prime minister, legislation, the national budget and declarations of war without oversight, and chose a 100-member panel to draft a permanent constitution.[176][185]Presidential powers include the power to choose his vice president and cabinet, to propose the state budget and laws and to issue pardons.[180]The interim constitution removed the military and the defense minister from presidential authority and oversight.[168][180]According to the interim constitution, a permanent constitution must be written within three months and be subject to a referendum 15 days later. When a permanent constitution is approved, a parliamentary election will be held within a month to replace the dissolved parliament.[178][179][180][181]
18 June:The SCAF said that it picked a 100-member panel to draft a permanent constitution[176]if a court strikes down the parliament-picked assembly, planning a celebration at the end of June to mark the transfer of power to the new president.[168][186]Muslim Brotherhood candidate Mohamed Morsi declared himself the winner of the presidential election.[178][179]
19–24 June:Crowds gathered inTahrir Squareto protest the SCAF's dissolution of an elected, Islamist parliament and await the outcome of the presidential election.[187][188][189][190][191][192][193]
24 June:Muslim BrotherhoodcandidateMohamed Morsi,the firstIslamistelected head of an Arab state, is declared the winner of the presidential election by the Egyptian electoral commission.[194][195][196][197][198][199]
26 June:The Supreme Administrative Court revoked Decree No. 4991/2012 from the Minister of Justice, which granted military intelligence and police the power to arrest civilians (a right previously reserved for civilian police officers).[185][200][201][202]
27–28 June:After the firstConstituent Assembly of Egyptwas declared unconstitutional and dissolved in April by Egypt's Supreme Administrative Court, the second constituent assembly met to establish a framework for drafting a post-Mubarak constitution.[203][204]
29 June:Mohamed Morsi took a symbolic oath of office in Tahrir Square, affirming that the people are the source of power.[205][206][207]
30 June:Morsi was sworn in as Egypt's first democratically elected president before the Supreme Constitutional Court at the podium used by U.S. President Barack Obama to reach out to the Islamic world in 2009 in hisA New Beginningspeech.[208][209][210][211][212]
Under President Mohamed Morsi
editNovember 2012 declaration
editOn 22 November 2012, Morsi issued a declaration immunizing his decrees from challenge and attempting to protect the work of the constituent assembly drafting the new constitution.[213]The declaration required a retrial of those acquitted of killing protesters, and extended the constituent assembly's mandate by two months. The declaration also authorised Morsi to take any measures necessary to protect the revolution. Liberal and secular groups walked out of the constituent assembly because they believed that it would impose strict Islamism, while the Muslim Brotherhood supported Morsi.[214][215]
Morsi's declaration was criticised by Constitution Party leaderMohamed ElBaradei(who said that he had "usurped all state powers and appointed himself Egypt's newpharaoh"),[216]and led to violent protests throughout the country.[217]Protesters again erected tents inTahrir Square,demanding a reversal of the declaration and the dissolving of the constituent assembly. A "huge protest" was planned for Tuesday, 27 November,[218]with clashes reported between protesters and police.[219]The declaration was also condemned byAmnesty International UK.[220]
In April 2013 a youth group was created opposing Morsi and attempting to collect 22 million signatures by 30 June 2013 (the first anniversary of his presidency) on a petition demanding early presidential elections. This triggered the June 2013 protests. Although protests were scheduled for 30 June, opponents began gathering on the 28th.[221]Morsi supporters (primarily from Islamic parties) also protested that day.[222] On 30 June the group organised large protests in Tahrir Square and the presidential palace demanding early presidential elections, which later spread to othergovernorates.[223]
June—July 2013 protests and overthrow
editOn 30 June 2013, the first anniversary of Morsi's inauguration as president, millions of Egyptians protested against him, demanding he step down from office. Morsi refused to resign. A 48-hour ultimatum was issued to him, demanding that he respond to the demands of the Egyptians,[224]and on 3 July 2013, the President of Egypt was overthrown. Unlike the imposition ofmartial lawwhich followed the 2011 resignation of Hosni Mubarak, on 4 July 2013, a civilian senior juristAdly Mansourwas appointed interim president and was sworn in over the new government following Morsi's removal. Mansour had the right to issue constitutional declarations and vested executive power in theSupreme Constitutional Court,giving him executive, judicial and constitutional power.[225]Morsi refused to accept his removal from office, and many supporters vowed to reinstate him. They originally intended their sit-ins to celebrate Morsi's first anniversary, but they quickly became opposed to the new authorities.[226]Their sit-inswere dispersedon 14 August that year by security forces, leading to at least 904 civilian deaths and 8 police officers killed.[227][228]
On 18 January 2014, the interim government institutionalised anew constitutionfollowing a referendum in which 98.2% of voters were supportive. Participation was low with only 38.6% of registered voters participating[229]although this was higher than the 33% who voted in a referendum during Morsi's tenure.[230]On 26 March 2014,Abdel Fattah el-Sisi,the head of theEgyptian Armed Forces,who at this time was in control of the country, resigned from the military, announcing he would stand as a candidate in the2014 presidential election.[231]The poll, which had a 47% turnout, and was held between 26 and 28 May 2014, resulted in a resounding victory for Sisi, who was then sworn into office asPresident of Egypton 8 June 2014.[232][233]
Protests by city
editCairo
editCairo has been at the centre of the revolution; the largest protests were held in downtown Tahrir Square, considered the "protest movement's beating heart and most effective symbol".[234]During the first three days of the protests there were clashes between the central security police and demonstrators, but on 28 January the police withdrew from all of Cairo. Citizens formed neighbourhood-watch groups to maintain order, and widespread looting was reported. Traffic police were reintroduced to Cairo the morning of 31 January.[235]Media reports initially claimed that up to one million protesters[236]gathered in the square, leading to widespread coverage of the massive turnout. However, other analyses suggested that such estimates might have been overstated. A crowd-size analysis based on Tahrir Square's physical dimensions and density pointed to smaller numbers, suggesting a maximum capacity of 200,000 to 250,000 individuals within the square and surrounding areas.[237][238][239]During the protests, reporters Natasha Smith,Lara LoganandMona Eltahawyweresexually assaultedwhile covering the events.[240][241][242][243]
Alexandria
editAlexandria,home ofKhaled Saeed,experienced major protests and clashes with police. There were few confrontations between demonstrators, since there were few Mubarak supporters (except for a few police-escorted convoys). The breakdown of law and order, including the general absence of police from the streets, continued until the evening of 3 February. Alexandria's protests were notable for the joint presence of Christians and Muslims in the events following thechurch bombingon 1 January, which sparked protests against the Mubarak regime.
Mansoura
editIn the northern city ofMansoura,there were daily protests against the Mubarak regime beginning on 25 January; two days later, the city was called a "war zone".[citation needed]On 28 January, 13 were reported dead in violent clashes; on 9 February, 18 more protesters died. One protest, on 1 February, had an estimated attendance of one million. The remote city ofSiwahad been relatively calm,[244]but localsheikhsreportedly in control put the community underlockdownafter a nearby town wasburned.[245]
Suez
editSuezalso saw violent protests. Eyewitness reports suggested that the death toll was high, although confirmation was difficult due to a ban on media coverage in the area.[246]Some online activists called Suez Egypt'sSidi Bouzid(the Tunisian city where protests began).[247]On 3 February, 4,000 protesters took to the streets to demand Mubarak's resignation.[248]A labour strike took place on 8 February,[249]and large protests were held on 11 February.[250]The MENA news agency reported the death of two protestors and one police officers on 26 January.[251]
Other cities
editThere were protests inLuxor.[252]On 11 February police opened fire on protesters inDairut,tens of thousands of protesters took to the streets ofShebin el-Kom,thousands protested inEl-Arishon the Sinai Peninsula,[250]large protests took place in the southern cities ofSohagandMinyaand nearly 100,000 people protested in and around local-government headquarters inIsmaïlia.[250]Over 100,000 protesters gathered on 27 January in front of the city council inZagazig.[253]Bedouinsin theSinai Peninsulafought security forces for several weeks.[254]As a result of the decreased military border presence, Bedouin groups protected the borders and pledged their support of the revolution.[255]However, despite mounting tension among tourists no protests or civil unrest occurred inSharm-El-Sheikh.[256]
Deaths
editBefore the protests six cases ofself-immolationwere reported, including a man arrested while trying to set himself afire in downtown Cairo.[257]The cases were inspired by (and began one month after) the acts of self-immolation in Tunisia which triggered the Tunisian revolution. The self-immolators included Abdou Abdel-Moneim Jaafar,[258]Mohammed Farouk Hassan,[259]Mohammed Ashour Sorour[260]and Ahmed Hashim al-Sayyed, who later died from his injuries.[261]
As of 30 January, Al Jazeera reported as many as 150 deaths in the protests.[262]
By 29 January, 2,000 people were confirmed injured.[263]That day, an employee of theAzerbaijaniembassy in Cairo was killed on their way home from work;[264]the following day, Azerbaijan sent a plane to evacuate citizens[265]and opened a criminal investigation into the killing.[266]
Funerals for those killed during the "Friday of Anger" were held on 30 January. Hundreds of mourners gathered, calling for Mubarak's removal.[267]By 1 February the protests left at least 125 people dead,[268]although Human Rights Watch said that UN High Commissioner for Human RightsNavi Pillayclaimed that as many as 300 might have died in the unrest. The unconfirmed tally included 80 Human-Rights-Watch-verified deaths at two Cairo hospitals, 36 in Alexandria and 13 in Suez;[269][270][271]over 3,000 people were reported injured.[269][271]
An Egyptian governmental fact-finding commission about the revolution announced on 19 April that at least 846 Egyptians died in the nearly three-week-long uprising.[272][273][274]One prominent Egyptian who was killed wasEmad Effat,a senior cleric at theDar al-Ifta al-Misriyyahschool ofAl-Azhar University.He died 16 December 2011, after he was shot in front of the cabinet building.[275]At Effat's funeral the following day, hundreds of mourners chanted "Down with military rule".[275][276]
International reaction
editInternational response to the protests was initially mixed,[277]although most governments called for peaceful action on both sides and a move towards reform. Most Western nations expressed concern about the situation, and many governments issued travel advisories and attempted to evacuate their citizens from Egypt.[278]
The European Union Foreign Affairs Chief said, "I also reiterate my call upon the Egyptian authorities to urgently establish a constructive and peaceful way to respond to the legitimate aspirations of Egyptian citizens for democratic and socioeconomic reforms."[279]The United States, the United Kingdom, France and Germany issued similar statements calling for reform and an end to violence against peaceful protesters. Many states in the region expressed concern and supported Mubarak; Saudi Arabia issued a statement "strongly condemn[ing]" the protests,[280]while Tunisia and Iran supported them. Israel was cautious, withPrime MinisterBenjamin Netanyahuasking his government ministers to maintain silence and urging Israel's allies to curb their criticism of President Mubarak;[281][282]however, anArab-Israeliparliamentarian supported the protests. Solidarity demonstrations for the protesters were held worldwide.
Non-governmental organizationsexpressed concern about the protests and the heavy-handed state response, withAmnesty Internationaldescribing attempts to discourage the protests as "unacceptable".[283]Many countries (including the U.S., Israel, the UK and Japan) issued travel warnings or began evacuating their citizens, andmultinational corporationsbegan evacuatingexpatriateemployees.[284]Many university students were also evacuated.
Post-ouster
editMany nations, leaders and organizations hailed the end of the Mubarak regime, and celebrations were held in Tunisia and Lebanon. World leaders, including German ChancellorAngela Merkeland UK Prime MinisterDavid Cameron,joined in praising the revolution.[285]U.S. President Barack Obama praised the achievement of the Egyptian people and encouraged other activists, saying "Let's look at Egypt's example".[286]Amid growing concern for the country, Cameron was the first world leader to visit Egypt, ten days after Mubarak's resignation. A news blackout was lifted as the prime minister landed in Cairo for a brief five-hour stopover, hastily added to the beginning of a planned tour of the Middle East.[287]On 15 March, United States Secretary of State Hillary Clinton visited Egypt; she was the highest-ranking U.S. official to visit the country since the handover of power from Mubarak to the military. Clinton urged military leaders to begin the process of a democratic transition, offering support to protesters and reaffirming ties between the two nations.[288]
Results
editOn 29 January Mubarak indicated that he would change the government because, despite the crossing of a "point of no return", national stability andlaw and ordermust prevail. He asked the government, formed only months ago, to step down and promised that a new government would be formed.[289]Mubarak appointedOmar Suleiman,head of Egyptian Intelligence, vice president andAhmed Shafikprime minister.[290]On 1 February, he said he would stay in office until the next election in September, and then leave. Mubarak promised political reform, but made no offer to resign.
The Muslim Brotherhood joined the revolution on 30 January, calling on the military to intervene and all opposition groups to unite against Mubarak. It joined other opposition groups in electing Mohamed el Baradei to lead an interim government.[291]
Many of theAl-Azharimamsjoined protesters throughout the country on 30 January.[292]Christian leaders asked their congregations not to participate in the demonstrations, although a number of young Christian activists joined protests led byNew Wafd PartymemberRaymond Lakah.[293]
On 31 January, Mubarak swore in his new cabinet in the hope that the unrest would fade. Protesters inTahrir Squarecontinued demanding his ouster, since a vice-president and prime minister were already appointed.[294]He told the new government to preserve subsidies, control inflation and provide more jobs.[295]
On 1 February Mubarak said that although his candidacy had been announced by high-ranking members of his National Democratic Party,[296]he never intended to run for reelection in September.[297]He asked parliament for reforms:
According to my constitutional powers, I call on parliament in both its houses to discuss amending article 76 and 77 of the constitution concerning the conditions on running for presidency of the republic and it sets specific a period for the presidential term. In order for the current parliament in both houses to be able to discuss these constitutional amendments and the legislative amendments linked to it for laws that complement the constitution and to ensure the participation of all the political forces in these discussions, I demand parliament to adhere to the word of the judiciary and its verdicts concerning the latest cases which have been legally challenged.
— Hosni Mubarak, 1 February 2011[298]
Opposition groups, including the Muslim Brotherhood (MB), repeated their demand that Mubarak resign; after the protests turned violent, the MB said that it was time for military intervention.[299]Mohamed ElBaradei,who said he was ready to lead a transitional government,[300]was a consensus candidate from a unified opposition, which included the6 April Youth Movement,the We Are All Khaled Said Movement, theNational Association for Change,the 25 January Movement,Kefayaand the Muslim Brotherhood.[301]ElBaradei formed a "steering committee".[302]On 5 February, talks began between the government and opposition groups for a transitional period before elections.
The government cracked down on the media, halting internet access[303](a primary means of opposition communication) with the help of London-basedVodafone.[304][305][306]Journalists were harassed by supporters of the regime, eliciting condemnation from theCommittee to Protect Journalists,European countries and the United States.Narus,a subsidiary ofBoeing,sold the Mubarak government surveillance equipment to help identify dissidents.[307]
Reforms
editThe revolution's primary demands, chanted at every protest, were bread (also jobs and other material needs), freedom, social justice and human dignity.[308]The fulfillment of these demands has been uneven and debatable. Demands stemming from the main four include the following:
Demand | Status | Date |
---|---|---|
1. Resignation of President Mubarak | Met | 11 February 2011 |
2. New minimum and maximum wages | Partially met | The basic minimum wage rose fromE£246toE£870on 22 March 2015[310] |
3. Canceling emergency law | Met[311] | 31 May 2012 |
4. Dismantling theState Security Investigations Service | Claimed met;[312]reneged in 2013[313] | 31 May 2012 |
5. Announcement by vice-presidentOmar Suleimanthat he would not run for president | Claimed met;[314] reneged in April 2012 |
3 February 2011 |
6. Dissolution of parliament | Met | 13 February 2011 |
7. Release of those imprisoned since 25 January | Ongoing; More have been arrested and facedmilitary trialsunder the SCAF | |
8. Ending the curfew | Met[315] | 15 June 2011 |
9. Removing theSSI-controlled university police | Claimed met | 3 March 2011 |
10. Investigation of officials responsible for violence against protesters | Ongoing | |
11. Firing Minister of InformationAnas el-Fiqqiand haltingmediapropaganda | Claimed met; minister fired, howeverministrystill exists and propaganda ongoing[316] | |
12. Reimbursing shop owners for losses during the curfew | Announced; not met | 7 February 2011 |
13. Announcing demands on government television and radio | Claimed met | 11–18 February 2011 |
14. Dissolution of theNDP | Met | 16 April 2011 |
15. Arrest, interrogation and trial of Hosni Mubarak and his sons, Gamal andAlaa | Met[317] | 24 May 2011 |
16. Transfer of power from SCAF to civilian council | Met[318] | 30 June 2012 |
On 17 February, an Egyptian prosecutor ordered the detention of three former ministers (interior minister Habib el-Adli, tourism minister Zuhair Garana and housing minister Ahmed el-Maghrabi) and steel magnate Ahmed Ezz pending trial for wasting public funds. The public prosecutor froze the bank accounts of Adli and his family following accusations that overE£4 million($680,000) were transferred to his personal account by a businessman. The foreign minister was requested to contact European countries to freeze the other defendants' accounts.[319]
That day, the United States announced that it would give Egypt $150 million in aid to help it transition towards democracy. U.S. Secretary of StateHillary Clintonsaid thatWilliam J. Burns(undersecretary of state for political affairs) andDavid Lipton(a senior White House adviser on international economics) would travel to Egypt the following week.[319]
On 19 February a moderate Islamic party which had been banned for 15 years,Al-Wasat Al-Jadid(Arabic:حزب الوسط الجديد,New Center Party), was finally recognised by an Egyptian court. The party was founded in 1996 by activists who split from the Muslim Brotherhood and sought to create a tolerant, liberal Islamic movement, but its four attempts to register as an official party were rejected. That day, Prime Minister Ahmed Shafiq also said that 222 political prisoners would be released. Shafiq said that only a few were detained during the uprising; he put the number of remaining political prisoners at 487, but did not say when they would be released.[320]On 20 FebruaryYehia El Gamal[ar],an activist and law professor, accepted on television the position of deputy prime minister. The next day, the Muslim Brotherhood announced that it would form a political party, theFreedom and Justice Partyled by Saad Ketatni, for the upcoming parliamentary election.[321][322][323]A spokesperson said, "When we talk about the slogans of the revolution – freedom, social justice, equality – all of these are in theSharia(Islamic law). "[324]
On 3 March, Prime Minister Shafiq submitted his resignation to the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces. The SCAF appointedEssam Sharaf,a former transportation minister and a vocal critic of the regime following his resignation after the 2006Qalyoub rail accident,to replace Shafik and form a new government. Sharaf's appointment was seen as a concession to protesters, since he was actively involved in the events in Tahrir Square.[325][326][327]Sharaf appointed formerInternational Court of JusticejudgeNabil Elarabyforeign minister and Mansour El Essawi as interior minister.[328][329]
On 16 April the Higher Administrative Court dissolved the former ruling National Democratic Party (NDP), ordering its funds and property to be transferred to the government.[330]On 24 May it was announced that Hosni Mubarak and his sons, Gamal and Alaa, would be tried for the deaths of anti-government protesters during the revolution.[331]
Trials
editMubarak's resignation was followed by a series of arrests of, and travel bans on, high-profile figures on charges of causing the deaths of 300–500 demonstrators, injuring 5,000 more,embezzlement,profiteering,money launderingandhuman rights abuses.Among those charged were Mubarak, his wifeSuzanne,his sons Gamal and Alaa, former interior ministerHabib el-Adly,former housing minister Ahmed El-Maghrabi, former tourism ministerZoheir Garanaand former secretary for organizational affairs of the National Democratic Party Ahmed Ezz.[332]Mubarak's ouster was followed by allegations of corruption against other government officials and senior politicians.[333][334]On 28 February 2011, Egypt's top prosecutor ordered anassets freezeon Mubarak and his family.[335]This was followed by arrest warrants, travel bans and asset freezes for other public figures, including former parliament speakerFathi Sorourand formerShura CouncilspeakerSafwat El Sherif.[336][337]Arrest warrants were issued for financial misappropriations by public figures who left the country at the outbreak of the revolution, including former trade and industry ministerRachid Mohamed Rachidand businessmanHussein Salem;Salem was believed to have fled to Dubai.[338]Trials of the accused officials began on 5 March 2011, when former interior minister Habib el-Adli appeared at the Giza Criminal Court in Cairo.[339]
In March 2011Abbud al-Zumar,one of Egypt's best-known political prisoners, was freed after 30 years. Founder and firstemirof theEgyptian Islamic Jihad,he was implicated on 6 October 1981assassination of Anwar Sadat.[340]
On 24 May, Mubarak was ordered to stand trial on charges ofpremeditated murderof peaceful protestors during the revolution; if convicted, he could face the death penalty. The list of charges, released by the public prosecutor, was "intentional murder, attempted killing of some demonstrators... misuse of influence and deliberately wasting public funds and unlawfully making private financial gains and profits".[12]
Analysis
editRegional instability
editThe Egyptian and Tunisian revolutions sparked awave of uprisings,with demonstrations spreading across theMiddle East and North Africa.Algeria,Bahrain,Iran,Jordan,Libya,Morocco,YemenandSyriawitnessed major protests, and minor demonstrations occurred inIraq,Kuwait,Mauritania,Oman,Saudi Arabia,Somalia[citation needed]andSudan.
The Egyptian protests in Egypt were not centred around religion-based politics, but nationalism and social consciousness.[341]Before the uprising, the best-organised and most-prominent opposition movements in the Arab world usually came from Islamist organisations with members who were motivated and ready to sacrifice. However, secular forces emerged from the revolution espousing principles shared with religious groups: freedom, social justice and dignity. Islamist organisations emerged with a greater freedom to operate. Although the cooperative, inter-faith revolution was no guarantee that partisan politics would not re-emerge in its wake, its success represented a change from the intellectual stagnation (created by decades of repression) which pitted modernity and Islamism against one another. Islamists and secularists are faced with new opportunities for dialogue on subjects such as the role of Islam and Sharia in society, freedom of speech and the impact of secularism on a predominantly Muslim population.[342]
Despite the optimism surrounding the revolution, commentators expressed concern about the risk of increased power and influence for Islamist forces in the country and region and the difficulty of integrating different groups, ideologies and visions for the country. JournalistCaroline Glickwrote that the Egyptian revolution foreshadowed a rise in religious radicalism and support for terrorism, citing a 2010PewOpinion poll which found that Egyptians supported Islamists over modernizers by an over two-to-one margin.[343]Another journalist,Shlomo Ben-Ami,said that Egypt's most formidable task was to refute the old paradigm of the Arab world which sees the only choices for regimes repressive, secular dictatorships or repressive theocracies. Ben-Ami noted that with Islam a central part of the society, any emergent regime was bound to be attuned to religion. In his view, a democracy which excluded all religion from public life (as in France) could succeed in Egypt but no genuine Arab democracy could disallow the participation of political Islam.[344]
Since the revolution Islamist parties (such as the Muslim Brotherhood) have strengthened in the democratic landscape, leading constitutional change, voter mobilization and protests.[345][346]This was a concern of the secular and youth movements, who wanted elections to be held later so they could catch up to the already-well-organised groups. Elections were held in September 2011, with Liberty and Justice (the Muslim Brotherhood party) winning 48.5 per cent of the vote. In 2014 in Upper Egypt, several newspapers reported thatUpper Egyptwanted to secede from the rest of the country to improve its standard of living.[347]
Alexandria church bombing
editEarly on New Year's Day 2011 a bomb exploded in front of an Alexandria church, killing 23CopticChristians. Egyptian officials said that "foreign elements" were behind the attack.[348]Other sources claim that the bomb killed 21 people only and injured more than 70.[349][350]Some Copts accused the Egyptian government of negligence;[351]after the attack, many Christians protested in the streets (with Muslims joining later). After clashing with police, protesters in Alexandria and Cairo shouted slogans denouncing Mubarak's rule[352][353][354]in support of unity between Christians and Muslims. Their sense of being let down by national security forces was cited as one of the first grievances sparking 25 January uprising.[355] On 7 February a complaint was filed against Habib al-Adly (interior minister until Mubarak dissolved the government during the protests' early days), accusing him of directing the attack.[356]
Role of women
editEgyptian womenhave been participating actively in the revolution, in the same way that they played an active role in the strike movement in the few last years, in several cases pressurizing the men to join the strikes.[358]In earlier protests in Egypt, women only accounted for about 10 per cent of the protesters, but on Tahrir Square they accounted for about 40 to 50 per cent in the days leading up to the fall of Mubarak. Women, with and without veils, participated in the defence of the square, set up barricades, led debates, shouted slogans and, together with the men, risked their lives.[358]Some participated in the protests, were present in news clips and on Facebook forums and were part of the revolution's leadership during the Egyptian revolution. In Tahrir Square, female protesters (some with children) supported the protests. The diversity of the protesters in Tahrir Square was visible in the women who participated; many worehead scarvesand other signs of religious conservatism, while others felt free to kiss a friend or smoke a cigarette in public. Women organised protests and reported events; female bloggers, such as Leil Zahra Mortada, risked abuse or imprisonment by keeping the world informed of events in Tahrir Square and elsewhere.[359]Among those who died was Sally Zahran, who was beaten to death during one of the demonstrations.NASAreportedly planned to name one of itsMarsexploration spacecraft in Zahran's honour.[360]
The participation and contributions by Egyptian women to the protests were attributed to the fact that many (especially younger women) were better educated than previous generations and represent more than half of Egyptian university students. This is an empowering factor for women, who have become more present and active publicly. The advent of social media also provided a tool for women to become protest leaders.[359]
Role of the military
editTheEgyptian Armed Forcesinitially enjoyed a better public reputation than the police did; the former was seen as a professional body protecting the country, and the latter was accused ofsystemic corruptionand lawless violence. However, when the SCAF cracked down on protesters after becoming thede factoruler of Egypt the military's popularity decreased.[361][362]All fourEgyptian presidentssince the 1950s have a military background. Key Egyptian military personnel include defense minister Tantawi and armed forces chief of staffSami Hafez Enan.[363][364]The Egyptian military numbers about 468,500 active personnel, plus a reserve of 479,000.[365]
As head of Egypt's armed forces, Tantawi has been described as "aged and change-resistant" and is attached to the old regime. He has used his position as defense minister to oppose economic and political reform he saw as weakening central authority. Other key figures (Sami Hafez Ananchief among them) are younger, with closer connections to the U.S. and the Muslim Brotherhood. An important aspect of the relationship between the Egyptian and American military establishments is the $1.3 billion in annual military aid provided to Egypt, which pays for American-made military equipment and allows Egyptian officers to train in the U.S. Guaranteed this aid package, the ruling SCAF is resistant to reform.[366][367][368]One analyst, conceding the military's conservatism, says it has no option but to facilitate democratisation. It will have to limit its political role to continue good relations with the West, and cannot restrict Islamist participation in a genuine democracy.[344]
The military has led a violent crackdown on the Egyptian revolution since the fall of Mubarak. On 9 March 2011 military police violently dispersed a sit-in in Tahrir Square, arresting and torturing protesters. Seven female protesters were forcibly subjected tovirginity tests.[369]During the night of 8 April 2011 military police attacked a sit-in in Tahrir Square by protesters and sympathetic military officers, killing at least one.[370]On 9 October the Egyptian military crushed protesters under armed personnel carriers and shot live ammunition at a demonstration in front of theMaspero television building,killing at least 24.[371]On 19 November the military and police engaged in a continuous six-day battle with protestors in the streets of downtown Cairo andAlexandria,killing nearly 40 and injuring over 2,000.[372]On 16 December 2011 military forces dispersed asit-inat the Cabinet of Ministers building, killing 17.[373]Soldiers fired live ammunition and attacked from the rooftop with Molotov cocktails, rocks and other missiles.[374]
Impact on foreign relations
editForeign governments in the West (including the U.S.) regarded Mubarak as an important ally andsupporterin theIsraeli–Palestinianpeace negotiations.[44]After wars withIsraelin 1948, 1956, 1967 and 1973, Egypt signed apeace treatyin 1979 (provoking controversy in theArab world). According to the 1978Camp David Accords(which led to the peace treaty), Israel and Egypt receive billions of dollars in aid annually from the United States; Egypt received over US$1.3 billion in military aid each year, in addition to economic and development assistance.[375]According to Juan Cole many Egyptian youth felt ignored by Mubarak, feeling that he put the interests of the West ahead of theirs.[376]The cooperation of the Egyptian regime in enforcing theblockade of the Gaza Stripwas deeply unpopular with the Egyptian public.[377]
Online activism and social media
editThe6 April Youth Movement(Arabic: حركة شباب 6 أبريل) is an Egyptian Facebook group begun in spring 2008 to support workers in El-Mahalla El-Kubra, an industrial town, who were planning tostrike on 6 April. Activists called on participants to wear black and stay home the day of the strike. Bloggers and citizen journalists used Facebook, Twitter, Flickr, blogs and other media tools to report on the strike, alert their networks about police activity, organize legal protection and draw attention to their efforts.The New York Timeshas called it the political Facebook group in Egypt with the most dynamic debates.[378]In March 2012 it had 325,000[379]predominantly young and members, most previously inactive politically, whose concerns included free speech, nepotism in government and the country's stagnant economy. Their Facebook forum features intense and heated discussions, and is frequently updated.
We are all Khaled Saidis a Facebook group which formed in the aftermath of Said's beating and death. The group attracted hundreds of thousands of members worldwide, playing a prominent role in spreading (and drawing attention to) the growing discontent. As the protests began, Google executiveWael Ghonimrevealed that he was behind the account. He was later detained for a few days until the government was able to get a hold of certain information that they needed. Many questions were left around that subject, no one really understood what had actually happened or what has had been said.[380]In a TV interview with SCAF members after the revolution, Abdul Rahman Mansour (an underground activist and media expert) was disclosed as sharing the account with Ghonim.[381]Another online contribution was made byAsmaa Mahfouz,an activist who posted a video challenging people to publicly protest.[382]Facebook had previously suspended the group because some administrators were using pseudonyms, a violation of the company's terms of service.[383]
Social mediahas been used extensively.[384][385][386][387]As one Egyptian activist tweeted during the protests, "We use Facebook to schedule the protests, Twitter to coordinate, and YouTube to tell the world."[388]Internet censorship has also been extensive, in some cases to the extent of taking entire nations virtually offline.[389]
Facebook, Twitter and blogging helped spread the uprising. Egyptian businessman Khaled Said was beaten to death by police in June 2010, reportedly in retaliation for a video he posted showing Egyptian police sharing the spoils of a drug bust. Wael Ghonim's memorial Facebook page to Said grew to over 400,000 followers, creating an online arena where protestors and those discontented with the government could gather and organise. The page called for protests on 25 January, later known as the "Day of Wrath". Hundreds of thousands of protestors flooded the streets to show their discontent with murder and corruption in their country. Ghonim was jailed on 28 January, and released 12 days later.
Egyptian activist and 6 April Youth Movement member Asmaa Mahfouz posted a video urging the Egyptian people to meet her at Tahrir Square, rise up against the government and demand democracy. In the video, she spoke about four protesters who had immolated themselves in protest of 30 years of poverty and degradation. On 24 January Mahfouz posted another video relating efforts made in support of the protest, from printing posters to creating flyers. The videos were posted on Facebook and then YouTube. The day after her last video post, hundreds of thousands of Egyptians poured into the streets in protest.
Since 25 January 2011, videos (including those of a badly beaten Khaled Said, disproving police claims that he had choked to death), tweets and Facebook comments have kept the world abreast of the situation in Egypt. Amir Ali documents the ways in which social media was used by Egyptian activists, Egyptian celebrities and political figures abroad to fan the protests.[390]
Democracy Now!journalist Sharif Abdel Kouddous provided live coverage andtweetsfromTahrir Squareduring the protests, and was credited with using social media to increase awareness of the protests.[391][392]The role of social media in the Egyptian uprising was debated in the first edition of theDubai Debates:"Mark Zuckerberg – the new hero of the Arab people?"[393]Amir Ali has argued that, based in part on the Egyptian revolution, social media may be an effective tool in developing nations.[394]
Critics who downplay the influence of social networking on the Arab Spring cite several points:
- Fewer than 20 per cent of Egyptians had internet access, and the internet reached less than 40 per cent of the country[395]
- Social-networking sites were generally unpopular in the Middle East,[396][397]
- Such sites were not sufficiently private to evade authorities[398]
- Many people did not trust social networking as a news source[399]
- Social-networking sites were promoted by the media[400]
- Social-networking sites did not involve non-activists in the revolution[401]
Some protesters discouraged the use of social media. A widely circulated pamphlet by an anonymous activist group titled "How to Protest Intelligently" (Arabic: كيف للاحتجاج بذكاء؟), asked readers "not to use Twitter or Facebook or other websites because they are all being monitored by the Ministry of the Interior".[402]
Television, particularly live coverage byAl Jazeera EnglishandBBC News,was important to the revolution; the cameras provided exposure, preventing mass violence by the government in Tahrir Square (in contrast to the lack of live coverage and more-widespread violence in Libya).[403]Its use was important in order to portray the violence of the Egyptian government, as well as, building support for the revolution through several different mediums. On one front was social media giving minute by minute updates via YouTube, Facebook and Twitter, and in the other hand was the use of the mainstream media to report to a wider audience about the overall developments occurring in Egypt.[404]The ability of protesters to focus their demonstrations on a single area (with live coverage) was fundamental in Egypt but impossible in Libya, Bahrain and Syria, irrespective of social-media use. A social-media expert launched a network of messages with the hashtag #jan25 on 11 February 2011, when Mubarak's resignation was announced.[405]
Social media helped secure solidarity for the revolutionaries from people outside of Egypt. This is evident through movements like the "March of Millions", "Voice of Egypt Abroad", "Egyptians Abroad in Support of Egypt" and "New United Arab States", who had their inception during the revolution inside the realms of Twitter and Facebook.[404]
Journalism scholarHeather Fordstudied the use ofinfoboxesandcleanup templatesin the Wikipedia article regarding the revolution. Ford claims that infoboxes and cleanup tags were used as objects of "bespoken-code" by Wikipedia editors. By using these elements, editors shaped the news narrative in the first 18 days of the revolution. Ford used the discussion page and the history of edits to the page. She shows how political cartoons were removed, and how the number of casualties became a source of heated debate. Her research exemplifies how editors coordinated and prioritised work on the article, but also how political events are represented through collaborative journalism.[406]
Role of media disruption on 28 January 2011
editDuring the early morning hours of 28 January the Mubarak regime shut down internet and cell phone networks in the whole country. This media shutdown was likely one of the reasons why the numbers of protestors exploded on 28 January.
While the regime disrupted the media, people needed to engage in face-to-face communication on a local level, which the regime could not monitor or control. In such a situation it is more likely that radicals will influence their neighbors, who are not able to see the public opinion displayed in social media, therefore these people are then more likely to also engage in civil unrest.[407]
This vicious circle can be explained through athreshold modelof collective behavior, which states that people are more likely to engage in risky actions if other people inside their networks (neighbors, friends, etc.) have taken action. Radicals have a small threshold and are more likely to form new networks during an information blackout, influencing the people.
Disrupting the media and communication had 2 main results: it increased the local mobilization of people and empowered radicals who influenced their surroundings, which resulted in an increase in protests.[408]
During 28 January the increased local mobilization pushed a large amount of apolitical Egyptians into action, either to look after their friends and family in the absence of mobile communication or to complain about the shutdown, resulting in large protests not only in Cairo. Meanwhile, the Mubarak regime was unable to communicate a possible threat to the protestors via social media and was therefore unable to dissuade the crowds through this mean, which spread the protests further.[407]
Post-revolutionary art
editThe 25 January Revolution and the fall of Hosni Mubarak the following month ushered in a new artistic era reflecting a changed social and political environment;[409]"the revolution triggered a new public culture".[410]Since its beginning, artists played a significant role in the protests;street artand music (electroortechno sha'bi) were used to craft a public culture.[411]Artists documented and captured the essence of the revolution, distributing their art through online and face-to-face social networks.[412]
See also
edit- 2011 virginity tests of protestors in Egypt
- Cross border attacks in Sabah
- 1997 Asian financial crisis#Indonesia
- 1967 Hong Kong riots
- Lebanese Civil War
- Grigoris Lambrakis,a similar Greek political activist
- Syrian civil war
- Democracy in the Middle East and North Africa
- Muslim Brotherhood in post-Mubarak electoral politics of Egypt
- Mohamed Mahmoud graffiti
- Freedom in the World
- List of freedom indices
- List of modern conflicts in the Middle East
- List of modern conflicts in North Africa
- Financial crisis of 2007–2008
- 2007–2008 world food price crisis
- Asmaa Mahfouz– political activist
- Ahmed Seada– political activist
- University on the Square– a university 2011 documentation project
- 2019 Egyptian protests
- 2016–17 Egyptian protests
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Further reading
edit- Bradley, John R.(2008).Inside Egypt: the land of the Pharaohs on the brink of a revolution.New York:Palgrave Macmillan.ISBN978-0-230-12066-2.OCLC156832004.
- El-Mahdi, Rabab; Marfleet, Philip, eds. (2009).Egypt: the moment of change.London:Zed Books.ISBN978-1-84813-021-0.
- Faris, David (17 May 2010).Revolutions Without Revolutionaries? Social Media Networks and Regime Response in Egypt(PhD thesis).University of Pennsylvania.hdl:20.500.14332/27943.
- Ketchley, Neil (2017).Egypt in a time of revolution: contentious politics and the Arab Spring.Cambridge studies in contentious politics. Cambridge; New York:Cambridge University Press.ISBN978-1-107-18497-8.
- Maurushat, Alana; Chawki, Mohamed; Al-Alosi, Hadeel; El Shazly, Yassin (9 October 2014)."The Impact of Social Networks and Mobile Technologies on the Revolutions in the Arab World—A Study of Egypt and Tunisia".Laws.3(4): 674–692.doi:10.3390/laws3040674.ISSN2075-471X.
- Radsch, Courtney C. (2008)."Core to Commonplace: The Evolution of Egypt's Blogosphere".Arab Media & Society(6, Fall).American University of Cairo.
- Rutherford, Bruce K. (2008).Egypt after Mubarak: liberalism, Islam, and democracy in the Arab world.Princeton studies in Muslim politics. Princeton:Princeton University Press.ISBN978-0-691-13665-3.OCLC228427187.
- Albrecht, Holger (October 2015). "The Myth of Coup-proofing: Risk and Instances of Military Coups d'état in the Middle East and North Africa, 1950–2013".Armed Forces & Society.41(4): 659–687.doi:10.1177/0095327X14544518.ISSN0095-327X.JSTOR48669889.
General
edit- Egypt ResourcesfromGoogleCrisis Response
- Egyptian revolution of 2011Archived29 June 2017 at theWayback Machineat theBest of the Web Directory
- Media librarydocumenting Egypt's 25 Jan revolution with thousands of videos & photos
- Digital Libraryincludes photos, videos, visual art, and oral histories contributed by student activists, academics, security officers, and demonstrators in and around Cairo.
- Web Archiveincludes archived versions of blogs, Twitter feeds, local and regional media coverage, and other sites related to the 25 January Revolution.
- Middle East and North Africa in turmoil – Tracking the Protests.Chart provided byThe Washington Postto keep up day by day with all of the anti-government protests which as off May 2011 are spreading rapidly through the Middle East and North Africa.
- Timeline: Transition in Egypt.Key events leading up to the first presidential election since the ouster of President Hosni Mubarak and subsequent developments as provided byThe Washington Post
- Egypt Elections: Key Events Timeline In Egyptian Uprising And Transitionas provided byAgence France-Presse
- Egypt's revolution: Interactive mapas provided byBBCNews Middle East
- Vox Populi: ongoing project by Lara Baladi which includes a series of media initiatives, art projects, publications and a portal into web based archives
Live coverage
edit- "Egypt's new era".BBC News.UK. 26 March 2011.
- "Egypt protests live".The Guardian.UK. 1 February 2011.
- "Egyptian Revolution – One Year On".Thomson Reuters Foundation.UK. 25 January 2012.
- "Unrest in Egypt".Reuters.UK.
- Egypt Real Time Video StreamatFrequency
Crowdsourcing
edit- "Egypt's Revolution".Qatar: Al Jazeera. Archived fromthe originalon 29 January 2011.
- Emergency Law and Police Brutality in EgyptArchived30 January 2011 at theWayback MachineatCrowdVoice
- Citizen Media coverage on Egypt ProtestsbyGlobal Voices Online
- Testimonials From EgyptiansArchived12 February 2011 at theWayback MachineatThe Real News
- "Egyptian elections".UK: Thomson Reuters Foundation.
- "University on the Square: Documenting Egypt's 21st Century Revolution".Egypt: American University in Cairo. Archived fromthe originalon 26 November 2012.
Interviews
edit- Interview with Wael Ghonim, Google mideast manager:Guardian via Dream TV, subtitled;Full translation
- "Egypt's 21st Century Revolution Oral Histories".Egypt: American University in Cairo. Archived fromthe originalon 1 July 2012.
Documentaries
edit- Egypt: A Nation in Waiting (Al Jazeera documentary focusing on past trends in Egypt's political history and the events which led to the revolution.)
- Revolution in Cairo (PBS Frontline documentary about the role of the 6 April youth movement, cyberactivism and the Muslim Brotherhood in the revolution)
- How to Start a Revolution (A multi-award winning British documentary on nonviolent action and the Arab Spring focusing on Gene Sharp.)Archived10 February 2012 at theWayback Machine
- Uprising (2012 film)
- The Square (2013 film)
- Tickling Giants
Analysis and criticism
edit- Norman Finkelstein:An important analysis of the Egyptian revolution and counter-revolution.
- "Isqat Al-Nizam".Egypt: American University in Cairo. Archived fromthe originalon 13 April 2012.Retrieved25 March2012.
- "Egyptian and Arab Revolution Scholarly Works".Egypt: American University in Cairo.
- Demonstrations in Tahrir Square: Two Years Later, What has Changed?: Hearing before the Subcommittee on the Middle East and North Africa of the Committee on Foreign Affairs, House of Representatives, One Hundred Thirteenth Congress, First Session, 26 February 2013
External links
edit- "Tahrir Documents".University of California, Los Angeles.
Collected from demonstrations in Cairo's Tahrir Square
2011–present