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Egyptians find their voice after years of repression
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By Miral Fahmy
CAIRO (Reuters) - For decades, authoritarian rule and police brutality ensured the only voice heard from Egypt was that of its leaders. Since popular protests deposed President Hosni Mubarak, the silent majority has erupted into a...
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Protesters wave Egyptian flags during a protest in Tahrir square, Cairo, April 8, 2011.
Credit: Reuters/Mohamed Abd El-Ghany
By Miral Fahmy
CAIRO |
Wed Apr 27, 2011 8:02am EDT
CAIRO (Reuters) - For decades, authoritarian rule and police brutality ensured the only voice heard from Egypt was that of its leaders. Since popular protests deposed President Hosni Mubarak, the silent majority has erupted into a cacophony.
Emboldened by the success of their uprising, almost everyone in post-Mubarak Egypt, from Western-educated professionals to illiterate farmhands to once-banned Islamists, has something to say about their nation's past and future.
For possibly the first time since Egypt became a republic in 1952, most people are not afraid to articulate their demands, and they expect the authorities to listen.
"The voice of the Egyptian individual has been suppressed for nearly 60 years, but now, for the first time in many years, Egyptians feel this voice matters," said Rasha Abdulla, chair of the school of journalism and mass communication at the American University in Cairo.
"There's a thirst to speak out, an infatuation with the idea that we can actually make a difference, so now everybody's talking politics. Nobody's afraid any more," she said.
Freedom of speech has until now been largely alien to one of the Middle East's biggest and most influential nations.
The muting of millions of Egyptians began under President Gamal Abdel-Nasser, the first of three strongmen to rule Egypt after the end of British occupation. Nasser was notorious for a rigorous censorship apparatus and the "night visitors," secret police who spirited opponents away, never to be heard of again.
When Anwar Sadat took over in 1970, he liberalized the economy, but not Egypt's politics. Mubarak, who became president after Islamists assassinated Sadat in 1981, maintained the same repression during his 30-year rule which ended on February 11.
"Looking back, I realize just how ignorant, how weak and how scared we were," said Mariam Mikhail, a housewife in her 40s who said she never dared to talk about politics.
"We all told each other: 'it's not our problem', and put up with the repression until the people eventually exploded."
The clearest manifestation of Egypt's newly found freedom of speech is its state-owned media.
PRESS ATTACKS CORRUPTION
Newspapers like Al Ahram and Al Akhbar that once dedicated reams of sycophantic newsprint to Mubarak's every utterance now run headlines attacking the rampant graft in which he, his sons and his administration are alleged to have been involved.
Mubarak and many of his ministers are being held for interrogation on charges of corruption, abuse of power and murder. Some ex-officials are already on trial.
Mubarak has denied any wrongdoing but that has not prevented state television from reporting on the steps the prosecutor is taking to put him on trial.
"We're finally reporting the news as it actually happens, and not how the officials want the country to hear it," said Mohammed Zaki, a journalist with state television.
Two months after Mubarak's overthrow, Egyptians are still reveling in their right to be heard, and are at their most vocal in Cairo's central Tahrir Square on Fridays, the first day of the weekend.
Architect Mohammed Fathy, 30, calls himself a full-time revolutionary. Every day since the protests broke out on January 25, Fathy has gone to Tahrir, first to demand Mubarak's overthrow, and now to call for an end to the corruption that mars almost all aspects of daily life.
"Nobody in Egypt had any idea about their rights, about their obligations and they were too afraid to ask," he said. "I've seen people die for the sake of this country. I am determined to carry on until Egypt is truly free."
Egyptians are also taking to the streets to challenge their rulers in a way they would not have dared do under Mubarak.
Last week, hundreds of Islamists from the militant Gama'a Islamiya group staged a rare protest near the heavily fortified U.S. embassy in central Cairo to demand the release of their spiritual leader who is jailed in the United States.
Protests have also raged in at least three provinces against the appointment of ex-police officers as provincial governors. Police watched from the sidelines, instead of beating and arresting the demonstrators as they did in Mubarak's time.
"The people's demands are like orders for us," newly appointed Prime Minister Essam Sharaf told a recent "meet the people" event in Sinai. "The government must listen to the people, because it is from the people."
RED LINES
Despite their heady sense of freedom, Egyptians know they have a long way to go before they can speak their minds about everything, especially their military rulers.
Troops with machineguns rounded up several youngsters earlier this month in Tahrir Square and dispersed a sit-in by protesters demanding a return to civilian rule and swifter prosecution for Mubarak.
Two weeks ago, a blogger was handed a jail sentence for criticizing the army. Maikel Nabil, 26, was charged with insulting the military establishment and "spreading false information," the New York-based Human Rights Watch said.
"The methods used by the Egyptian military do not seem to have evolved since Hosni Mubarak's fall," Jean-Francois Julliard of Reporters Without Borders said of the sentencing.
Parliamentary and presidential elections due later this year will be a major test of Egypt's democratic credentials. Seasoned politicians and untried novices are setting up coalitions in anticipation of a free and fair vote -- a rarity in Egypt.
One party taking full advantage of the right to campaign publicly is the once banned Muslim Brotherhood, whose leaders feature regularly in newspapers and on television.
More radical Islamists like the fundamentalist Salafists have also gained prominence, raising fears among secular Egyptians that their country may become an Islamic republic like Iran.
Professor Abdulla welcomed the diversity of views. "Now that the dictator is gone, it's natural to be divided by individual politics," she said. "That's what politics is all about: welcome to the game."
Shortly before Mubarak quit, Egypt's spy chief and briefly vice president, Omar Suleiman, told ABC News that Egyptians were not ready for democracy.
Bassem Youssef, a surgeon who now hosts a popular online comedy current events program likened to U.S. comedian Jon Stewart's "The Daily Show," urged Egyptians to prove Suleiman wrong by accepting everyone's right to freedom of speech.
"The shoe that was pressing down on all our necks for 30 years has gone," Youssef said in a recent broadcast. "It's natural that once this shoe disappeared, we hear a lot of noise and shouting. This strange phenomenon is called democracy. Let's not destroy it just because we're scared."
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