Egyptian blogger presses for a revolt
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CAIRO — An activist in a police state should know when to sprint. Mohamed Abdel Aziz has bolted from trouble a number of times, including dashing from security forces closing in on a
demonstration in the port city of Alexandria. His less mercurial moments have three times landed him in police stations, but upon each release he has returned to his computer, opened his
blog and conspired in cyberspace to end President Hosni Mubarak’s 27-year rule of Egypt. That’s an unlikely prospect. But Aziz, a thin man in black clothes with a wristwatch shimmying up and
down his arm, is a founder of the 6th of April, a protest movement that draws from a Facebook group of nearly 76,000 people, mostly high school and university students. The movement opines,
plots and Twitters, though it has yet to generate feet in the street: Three of its calls for nationwide strikes drew more police than protesters. “No one knows when the trigger of
revolution will be pulled. The state is oppressive, but ordinary Egyptians from all over sympathize with us,” said Aziz, who likes to recall the passions that roused his countrymen’s 1919
revolution against the British. “When we started using Facebook it was a novelty,” he said. “Calling for a national strike was a novelty. It was like lighting a candle in a dark room. But
this is still an oppressive state, and people are scared.” Human rights groups say the public’s fear is a testament to mass arrests, torture and other violations of civil liberties against
political opponents in a nation that has been under a state of emergency for nearly three decades. The Mubarak government, which receives about $1.2 billion in U.S. military and economic aid
annually, is blamed for inflation and corruption and for allowing public services such as schools and hospitals to deteriorate into brittle artifices. Young Egyptians see a nation scoured
of opportunity and run by patronage and connections. “The generation born since 1981 came into the world during the worst period of Egyptian history,” said Aziz, 23, an aviation engineer.
“We can see how dynamic the rest of the world is, but we feel alienated, as if we are living outside of time. We’ve spent years in schools and learned nothing. We have diplomas that are
useless.” Mubarak’s opposition hums with disparate voices -- nationalists, unionists, leftists and the Muslim Brotherhood -- that have been unable to unify around a single message. The
Muslim Brotherhood is the strongest movement, but despite Egypt’s increasing religious tilt, the Brotherhood’s Islamist ideals are viewed by many as too radical to form strong alliances with
secular parties and organizations. The 6th of April speaks to an anxious, rebellious youth, but at times the movement has been tugged in too many directions, including demonstrating for
better wages for textile workers and protesting discrimination against the minority Nubian community. Such efforts have won it a measure of universal appeal, but have not seriously
challenged the Mubarak government. Aziz’s organization and other bloggers and Facebook activists, however, have expanded the debate into cyberspace, a new challenge for security forces that
at times have been outflanked by organizing tactics and videos of protests and police brutality appearing on the Internet. Police have detained nearly 500 bloggers nationwide. But within
five days of its founding last year, the Facebook group aligned with the 6th of April had registered 40,000 members. “No one expected it to spread so quickly,” Aziz said. He sat the other
day in an office along the Nile, where fishermen glided past and the sounds of traffic filled open windows. He tweaked his words, fine-tuned his phrases, striking the pose of many young
activists, a blend of intensity and laid-back aloofness. Aziz is a returnee, the son of teachers who left Egypt years ago to raise their son amid the prosperity of the United Arab Emirates.
It is a common trek on a shared map. For generations, hundreds of thousands of Egyptians have moved to the Persian Gulf, sending money home every month and growing accustomed to -- if not
accepting of -- a more rigid form of Islam than is practiced in Egypt. It was this environment, Aziz said, that stirred a self-reflection that would later inspire his political awareness. “I
was raised in the religious conservatism and tribal tradition of the Persian Gulf,” he said. “I read a lot and I began writing essays on freedom and political poetry. Then I turned to
Egypt. Egyptians. Who was I? I started to read about our history. I was fascinated by the revolution against the British and our independence. But I wanted to know: Why have we retreated?
Why have we gone backward?” His parents stayed in the Emirates, but Aziz came home to Cairo to live with his grandfather and attend school. His first major demonstration was in 2003, joining
tens of thousands of Egyptians in the streets to protest the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq. Aziz walked home from the rally an activist. He later took a job in information technologies and
began a blog called the Free Egyptians, describing himself as “a young man who got fed up with what’s happening in his country.” He found like-minded blogs, scrolled through similar
manifestoes and discovered the Internet could be used for more than visiting chat rooms, watching YouTube and downloading music. “We’ve broke the silence and we’ve started stuff,” he said.
“We’ve motivated the youth and we’re spreading the culture of disobedience and strikes.” The police have yet to budge. -- [email protected] Noha El-Hennawy of The Times’ Cairo
Bureau contributed to this report. MORE TO READ