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dipsydoodle

(42,239 posts)
Sat Feb 22, 2014, 06:32 AM Feb 2014

The truth about the death of 37 prisoners at Cairo prison Abu Zaabal.

Some time after midday on Sunday 18 August 2013, a young Egyptian film-maker called Mohamed el-Deeb made his last will and testament. It was an informal process. Deeb had no paper on which to sign his name and there was no lawyer present. He simply turned to the man handcuffed next to him and outlined which debts to settle if he should die, and what to say to his mother about the circumstances of his death.

Deeb had good reason to fear for his life. He was among 45 prisoners squashed into the back of a tiny, sweltering police truck parked in the forecourt of Abu Zaabal prison, just north-east of Cairo. They had been in the truck for more than six hours. The temperature outside was over 31C, and inside would have been far hotter. There was no space to stand and the prisoners had had almost nothing to drink. Some had wrung out their sweat-drenched shirts and drunk the drops of moisture. Many were now unconscious.

Most of the men inside that van were supporters of Mohamed Morsi, Egypt's first elected president. Squashed against Deeb was Mohamed Abdelmahboud, a 43-year-old seed merchant and a member of Morsi's Muslim Brotherhood.

Following four days of mass protests against his year-long rule, the army had overthrown Morsi and the Brotherhood in early July. In response, tens of thousands of people camped outside the Rabaa al-Adawiya mosque in east Cairo to call for the president's reinstatement. Within a week, the space outside Rabaa turned from an empty crossroads to a sprawling tent city that housed both a market and a makeshift field hospital. At Rabaa's centre was a stage where preachers led prayers and firebrands spouted sectarian rhetoric. At its edges were a Dad's Army of badly equipped guards, dressed in crash helmets and tae kwon do vests, standing before a series of walls built of stones ripped from pavements. From behind these barricades, two or three times a day, protest marches would snake into nearby neighbourhoods, blocking major thoroughfares and paralysing much of the city. Clashes between armed police and protesters claimed more than 170 lives.

http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/feb/22/cairo-prison-abu-zabaal-deaths-37-prisoners

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The truth about the death of 37 prisoners at Cairo prison Abu Zaabal. (Original Post) dipsydoodle Feb 2014 OP
Pay no attention to deaths in Egypt malaise Feb 2014 #1
Me too dipsydoodle Feb 2014 #2

malaise

(269,054 posts)
1. Pay no attention to deaths in Egypt
Sat Feb 22, 2014, 07:24 AM
Feb 2014

Mostly supporters of the democratically elected ousted government are being killed and the West has no problem with that. Meanwhile pay attention in the Ukraine where the West is financing chaos. The same press that ignored all the dead in Iraq now scream about deaths in Syria. Oh dear let's have a look at Venezuela too.


I detest a lot of folks on our planet.

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