Sign On: Solidarity with the Real Egyptian Revolution

The Ad-Hoc Coalition to Defend the Egyptian Revolution endorses the following petition in solidarity with the Egyptian Revolution. To sign on and join thousands around the world, visit http://egyptsolidaritycampaign.org/.

Solidarity with the Real Egyptian Revolution

One year ago brave activists in Egypt electrified the world. Sweeping into Tahrir Square in Cairo, and similar sites in other cities and towns, protesting outside government offices, and striking for living wages, workers’ rights and against corrupt managers, they overturned a dictator and drove forward a process of mass democratic upheaval that has been dubbed “the Arab Spring.” In the process, Egypt’s revolution became an inspiration to millions around the world.

Every step of the way, millions of ordinary people struck blows for women’s rights, independent unions, democracy and social justice. But every step they were also brutalized by a military apparatus intent on blocking real change. Even after the dictator, President Mubarak, was toppled, the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces (SCAF) has continued to rule via “state of emergency” law, while responding to the revolutionary process with arrests, torture, beatings, and killings. Since Mubarak’s fall, as many as 14,000 people have been subjected to military tribunals and the beatings and torture associated with them. As a result, one year later, the revolution hangs in the balance.

In recent months, attacks by SCAF on youth, women, and workers have become more ominous. Ongoing violence against women protesters has intensified. The army has been clearly linked to assaults on Coptic Christians, twenty-four of whom were murdered in October of last year. Then, in December, an alarming escalation in army attacks on peaceful protesters created more martyrs of the revolution. Meanwhile, youth activists associated with the April 6th Movement have been arrested and charged with insulting the army and trying to overthrow the state – merely for distributing anti-SCAF posters. Simultaneously, SCAF and the Ministry of the Interior launched a threatening smear campaign against activists of the socialist left, and sent soldiers to raid the offices of seventeen NGOs. In these and many other ways, SCAF has made clear that it does not intend to give up power.

But courageous Egyptians are refusing to stand down in the face of these attacks. November and December saw huge popular mobilizations, teachers’ strikes, an inspiring 10,000 strong women’s march in Cairo, and a gathering of 50,000 in Tahrir Square to inaugurate the new year. These actions are a source of great hope for the future of Egypt’s popular revolution.

As writers, trade unionists, organizers, scholars, and activists who have supported Egypt’s democratic revolution we refuse to be silent in the face of these assaults, especially in light of the silence of our governments. We publicly condemn all attacks on freedom of speech, assembly, religion and association in Egypt. We call for the release of all political prisoners. We condemn the actions of foreign governments such as those of the US and Britain that hypocritically mouth support for the Egyptian revolution while supplying SCAF with arms and tear gas to crush protests. And we proclaim our solidarity with the democratic, trade union, women’s, youth and socialist groups who insist that the Egyptian Revolution must continue on the road to genuine democracy and social justice.

Demand of Egyptian Military Junta: Hands Off Publisher Mohamed Hashem!

Image via MideastPosts.com

Please distribute widely and Sign on here!

The Egyptian military is threatening to arrest leading publisher Mohamed Hashem of Dar Merit Publishing House.

The Ad Hoc Coalition to Defend the Egyptian Revolution is urging all supporters of freedom in Egypt to call 011-202-22916227 and 011-202-2793-5000 and demand that the military stop its threats against Hashem, that it release all detainees and political prisoners, and that it stop its campaign of beatings, torture and murder against protesters (see http://www.defendegyptianrevolution.org/ for more information).

At a press conference Monday, the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces (SCAF) screened video footage of detained children claiming they saw Hashem handing out helmets and gas masks to protesters. This is part of a wave of reports in the Egyptian media about this new tactic of the military of detaining and even torturing children to force them to tell fabricated stories against protesters.

Hashem told Ahram Online that his lawyers informed him that the prosecution has issued a warrant for his arrest for alleged involvement in the recent Tahrir violence. He said he had asked Ahmed Seif, the renowned lawyer and activist, to file a lawsuit against the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces (SCAF) for slander.

In response to the allegations, Hashem stated: “Do they want to kill and injure people while we stand by and do nothing?… Those who can kill doctors healing the injured can also accuse those helping the injured.”

Hashem stressed he would continue to support the revolution, as he has since 25 January, whatever the risks. “My blood isn’t any more precious than that of Sheikh Emad Effat or Alaa Abdel-Hadi who died yesterday.”

Hesham also said that the military council has to be forced to step down since they “kill people and defame people politically.”

Hashem’s publishing house is located near Tahrir Square and has become known for its role during the revolution in offering help and aid to protesters since January. Hashem is a recipient of the German Hermen Kesten Prize for supporting freedom of expression and is well regarded amongst Egyptian and Arab intellectuals.

In solidarity with Hashem, prominent Egyptian figures in the arts world released a statement expressing their “full appreciation of the role played by the Egyptian publisher Mohamed Hashem and Merit Publishing House in the 25 January Revolution in Egypt. We all denounce the accusations against Hashem by a member of the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces that is currently ruling Egypt.

“These accusations are aimed at the values advocated by Merit Publishing House since it started to promote enlightenment in the face of oppression and dictatorship. Merit Publishing House represents a haven of freedom,” added the statement.

The Egyptian Publishers Union is also backing Hashem.

A number of Egyptian intellectuals marched in support of Hashem, starting at the Dar Merit office, carrying signs supporting the revolution and opposing military rule, and another such march is planned for December 30th.

All supporters of freedom in the Arab world should stand by Mohamed Hashem, said the statement, to defend the values of the Egyptian Revolution, and to stand against all plots to destroy it.

Hashem was born in Tanta in 1958. He has worked as a reporter and is the author of a number of novellas and short stories, as well as the novel Open Playgrounds (2004).

In 1998, he helped found Dar Merit. Since then, Hashem has both led the vibrant publishing house and been instrumental in the founding of Kefaya and its affiliated “Writers and Artists for Change” movement. As a publisher, Hashem has fostered a number of new currents in Egyptian literature, including popular and pioneering novels by Ahmed Mourad, Alaa al-Aswany, Mohamed Mansi Qandil, Hamdy Abu Golayel, Mohamed al-Refai, Miral al-Tahawy, and others. Dar Merit — through its stance against social and governmental censorship — has opened up new possibilities for Arabic literature. In 2006 he received an award from the Association of American Publishers’ International Freedom to Publish Committee for his work, an award presented at the annual gala of PEN, the foremost international organization working for writers’ freedom of expression. Since the arrest threats were made, US and international publishers’ associations have spoken out for him.

Please Support Mohamed Hashem! Endorse this statement, and call General Tantawi’s office to demand:

Hands Off Mohamed Hashem and all Egyptian protesters!

Sources:
http://english.ahram.org.eg/~/NewsContent/1/64/29798/Egypt/Politics-/Egyptian-publisher-says-govt-ordered-his-arrest-ov.aspx
http://english.ahram.org.eg/~/NewsContentP/18/29766/Books/Union-backs-Mohamed-Hashem-against-SCAF.aspx
http://mideastposts.com/2011/12/20/a-defence-of-literary-force-of-freedom-mohamed-hashem/
http://www.pen.org/page.php/prmID/142
http://www.publishers.org/press/55/

Sign on here!

*(denotes required field)

Signatories

Abdos Oliman, MO, USA
Ann Grant, Canada
Behnam Karimi, Denmark
Billy Kelly, An American Combat Veteran For Peace and Justice, Stockholm, NJ, United States
Brian Campbell, Vancouver, Canada
Charlotte Kates, Vancouver, Canada
David Letwin, NY, USA
Eleanor Jean Wesley
Gabrielle Verdier, Paris, France
Howard Pflanzer, CUNY, New York, New York
Jeanne Mirer, International Association of Democratic Lawyers, New York, New York, US
Jeremy Saunders, East Greenbush, New York, United States
Karem Said, East Palo Alto, CA, USA
Kate Cameron-Daum, Crowthorne, UK
Kevin O’Neill, New York, USA
Khaled Barakat, Vancouver, Canada
Labor for Palestine
Maralena Murphy, New York, NY
Michael Letwin, Former President, Assn. of Legal Aid Attorneys/UAW Local 2325; OWS Labor Outreach Committee, Brooklyn, NY, USA
Mirna Miranda, U. S. Campaign to End the Israeli Occupation, LaPorte, CO, USA
Moira Meltzer-Cohen, Brooklyn, NY, USA
New York City Labor Against the War
Nick Pearson, Weston, MA, USA
Omar El Shafei, New York, United States
Philip Althouse, Cleveland, Ohio, USA
Sarah Saez, San Diego, CA, United States

TAKE ACTION: UPDATE! DETAINED STUDENTS RELEASED….Call-Ins work – Keep Up the Calls!

UPDATE: Mostafa and Islam have been released as of 5:30 PM EST, December 20, 2011. The calls are working. Please keep calling and demand that all prisoners be freed and that the repression stop!

Please take 2 minutes to call 011-202-22916227 and 011-202-2793-5000 and DEMAND:

(1) the release of all political prisoners,
(2) the beatings, abuse, detainments of protesters be stopped immediately,
(3) the release of Mostafa Nasr & Islam Kamel (two students that were beaten/interrogated and now detained in unknown location).

Emphasize that you are tracking and monitoring the SCAF’s human rights violations and abuses. If you speak Arabic and/or English…please call once or several times. Flood the lines!