Free Kareem
  • Home
  • About
  • Blog
  • Media
  • FAQ
Join Now Campaign Info
The Globe and Mail on Kareem: Blogs an increasingly popular forum for political dissent March 3rd, 2007

The Globe and Mail, Canada’s largest national daily newspaper, weighs in: Young blogger jailed in Egypt; chill envelops online dissent.

Excerpts:

POSTED ON 02/03/07
Young blogger jailed in Egypt; chill envelops online dissent
Four-year prison term given to 22-year-old who attacked radical Islam, Mubarak

CAROLYNNE WHEELER
Special to The Globe and Mail

CAIRO — Abdel Karim Nabil Suleiman’s online diary was not so different from the hundreds of blogs run by the hip, young Egyptian intelligentsia railing against the system: A law student who said his goal was to form a human-rights firm, he posted a pledge to defend Arab and Muslim women against discrimination, alongside song lyrics and advertisements against censorship.

But the 22-year-old, who wrote under the name Karim Amer, also made some enemies for his harsh online criticism of radical Islam, for his attacks on the Egyptian President as a “symbol of tyranny,” and for repeated criticism of Alexandria’s Al-Azhar University, where he studied until his expulsion in March.

The Islamic school is highly respected among devout Sunni Muslims; Mr. Suleiman called it the “other face of the coin of al-Qaeda,” and called for it to become a secular institution.

Detained last November and held until his case finally came to trial last week, Mr. Suleiman got just five minutes in the courtroom — long enough for a judge to read out his sentence of four years in prison, three for incitement and insulting the Prophet Mohammed and Islam, and an extra one for defaming President Hosni Mubarak.

It’s a precedent-setting move that has cast a new fear into an otherwise spirited place of free expression for Egyptians, outside the mainstream of state-run newspapers and television.

“The message is really clear: If that is a window that has opened to freedom of expression in this country, we as a government are going to close it,” said Fadi al-Qadi, a Cairo-based regional adviser for Human Rights Watch, among several international organizations to condemn the prison sentence.

Across the Arab and Muslim world, online weblogs have become an increasingly popular forum for political dissent not normally tolerated among state-censored broadcast or print media. Writers report about demonstrations and political happenings given little attention in state-run media, debate issues of democracy and religion, and pick apart conservative social customs.

In Egypt, though, bloggers have also done groundbreaking work revealing police beatings, torture and arrests without cause, by the meticulous documenting of court hearings, first-hand accounts of torture cases and posting of photographs and video of police beatings and physical wounds left on victims, including autopsy pictures and, last year, a video of a bus driver being sodomized in a police station.

[…]

“I think it is a message from the government to us, to slow down a little,” said Mohammed Khaled, whose blog was among the first to have videos of police torture. “But we’ve already crossed the line until we can’t go back. Nobody is going to slow down from the bloggers.”

Mr. Suleiman’s lawyer, Ahmed Seif el-Islam, has promised to appeal, telling news agencies the ruling will “terrify other bloggers and will [have a] negative impact on the freedom of expression in Egypt.”

[...]

“I am worried it will have a chilling effect,” said Alaa Abd el-Fatah, 25, who with his wife Manal runs the manalaa.net blog.

He was detained for six weeks last year after a demonstration organized in part through blogs, but says he is not deterred and believes there are many others like him.

“Egypt has a very strong record of activists not accepting these limitations and struggling against them. From what I see, the number of people who are willing to engage, who are willing to accept the consequences, is growing.”

Read it all here.

COMMENTS
Posted In: Freedom of speech, Press
Previous
Next
blog comments powered by Disqus
  • Digest
  • Documents
  • Donation process
  • Donations
  • Egyptian blogosphere
  • Freedom of speech
  • General
  • How Much for the Blogger?! Campaign
  • HRINFO
  • Human rights
  • Insulting Islam in Egypt
  • Kareem
  • Kareem's freedom
  • Letter Campaign
  • Letters
  • Petition
  • Podcast
  • Press
  • Protest
  • Rally info
  • Site info
  • Special occassions
  • Translation
  • United Nations
  • Video
  • Visits
  • Worldwide rallies
Recent Posts
Kareem: I’m Grateful Message from Chris Kilmer, FreeKareem.org Treasurer Kareem Amer is free! Pictures: Free Kareem Protest in Greece How Much for the Blogger?! Help us ransom Kareem Amer!
See All
Get Involved
Write To Kareem Follow Kareem on Twitter
Latest Tweet
RT @MEYArabic: اختفاء المدون المصري كريم عامر في ظروف غامضة فجر الإثنين وصديقه سمير عشرة بعد مغادرتهما ميدان التحرير. #FreeKareem #FreeS ...
Follow Us On Twitter
© 2012 FreeKareem.org
  • Home
  • About
  • Blog
  • Media
  • FAQ
  • Mohamed Fadel Fahmy's report on Kareem
  • Release Jailed Blogger
  • Free Kareem Amer
  • Solidarity Campaign for Kareem
  • Blog Categories
  • Kareem Rallies
  • Kareem in the Press
  • Arab & Muslim Voices For Kareem
  • mideast youth sites
    • Mideast Youth
    • Baha'i Rights
    • Kurdish Rights
    • Migrant Rights
    • Israelis for Palestine
    • MEYcast
    • Mideast Tunes
    • March 18
    • Postcards for Iran
    • شباب الشرق الأوسط
    • جوانان خاورم
  • social networks
  • rallies
  • wordpress
    WordPress Plugin
  • rss
    • RSS for this site
    • RSS for all our sites 
  • mail
    Contact Us
  • facebook
    Our Facebook Group
  • twitter

    @MigrantRights: Feminization of Migration http://bit.ly/dMwPBS (by @simby) #MigrantRights #Lebanon

    25 Mar 2011

    @MigrantRights: Bahrain's Foreign Police Add to Tensions http://on.wsj.com/dHJDI9 #Migrantrights #Feb14

    25 Mar 2011

    @MigrantRights: RT @Kawdess: World TB Day: Most of these migrant women were dumped by employers http://ht.ly/4mbgW #migrantrights (via @simby) #Lebanon

    25 Mar 2011
    • Follow Us
    • Follow All
  • notification
    Notifications

    If you run a WordPress blog, don't forget to download the Free Kareem WP Plugin.

    Download it here
    close
  • minimize
    Minimize
toolbar
Maximize