Subject: [blowback] CRY CAIRO!
From: "Achilles Faliriotis" <achillesfaliriotis@yahoo.com>
Date: 12/19/11, 14:17
To: blowback@yahoogroups.com
Reply-To:
blowback@yahoogroups.com

 

Reporters Without Borders firmly condemns the Egyptian military's indiscriminate crackdown on demonstrators in Cairo's Tahrir Square and the systematic use of violence against bloggers and media personnel during the past three days. The chaos in and around Tahrir Square is obstructing access to information, so it is impossible to say exactly how many bloggers and journalists have been the victims of abuses.

The Egyptian government emulates the Greek government. Greece has become a Kangaroo Valley, violating basic human rights and Article 2 of the Lisbon Treaty, but nobody gives a damn. We cannot understand why the European Commission tolerates political persecution and freakish Kangaroo Justice within the borders of the European Union and cannot refer the Greek government to the Court of Justice of the European Union for violating the Lisbon Treaty. We cannot understand why the European Ombudsman cannot protect Greeks from appalling violations of Article 2 of the Lisbon Treaty by the Greek government. If the European Union cannot protect Greeks from the repressive Greek government, who will? http://venitism.blogspot.com

Reporters Without Borders notes the premises being used temporarily by the Cairo News Company, a TV news agency and production company, in the 8th floor of the Ismailiya Hotel (which is beside Tahrir Square) was raided on 17 December by about 30 soldiers in civilian dress, who behaved violently and threw cameras and other equipment out of the window. A CNC source put the damage at around 100,000 dollars but said no one was injured. The CNC was previously targeted by the military in 2008 and during the demonstrations in February 2011.

The governments of Egypt and Greece use charge stacking to persecute dissident bloggers. Charge stacking is the ability to charge a large number of overlapping crimes for a single course of conduct. Combining crimes enables prosecutors to get convictions in cases where there is no misconduct at all. By stacking enough charges, including treason, prosecutors jack up the threat value of a trial against a dissident blogger, even if the government's case is very weak. Charge stacking is terror. The governments of Egypt and Greece cannot terrorize the people. http://venitism.blogspot.com

Persecuting dissident bloggers, the Greek government violates Article 2 of the Lisbon Treaty, which states the European Union is founded on the values of respect for human dignity, freedom, democracy, equality, the rule of law, and respect for human rights. These values are common to the Member States in a society in which pluralism, nondiscrimination, tolerance, and justice prevail.

Tom Dale, a freelance photographer based in the same hotel, reported that he and two colleagues saw a member of the armed forces enter their room and steal two cameras.

The headquarters of the Egyptian satellite TV station ON TV was raided by the armed forces while it was broadcasting a report on the violence in Tahrir Square. Several cameras were confiscated.

CBC's broadcasting from Cairo was interrupted. Al-Jazeera's broadcasting was also interrupted by soldiers who destroyed or damaged cameras. The station's Cairo representative was arrested and held for two hours.

Two women journalists working for the independent Egyptian daily Al-Masry Al-Youm, Shima Adel and Sara Nureddin, were briefly detained while covering the events in Tahrir Square.

US journalist Joseph Mayton, the editor of the Bikiya Masr blog, was physically attacked by military police while covering the demonstrations on 18 December. In a post yesterday on the blog, he described in detail how he was roughed up and threatened while being for more than 10 hours.

Amr Saeed, a reporter for the Lebanese daily Al-Nahar, sustained an eye injury when he was attacked while covering clashes on Qasr Al-Ayni Street.

Hassan Shaheen, a journalist and activist with the 6 April Movement, was attacked by soldiers when he showed his press accreditation, and was hit in the face and several parts of his body.

Ashraf Al-Wardani, a journalist with the pro-government newspaper Al-Masaiya, was briefly detained and beaten near the parliament building.

A journalist with the Masrawy website was held for five hours by soldiers who confiscated the photos he had taken.

Reporters Without Borders points out a crew with the French radio station France Culture that had come to Cairo to interview the writer Alaa Al-Aswany was attacked by baltajiyas (pro-government militiamen). Shortly after their arrival in their hotel, the Ismailiya Hotel, they began recording the violence of the soldiers against demonstrators in the nearby Tahrir Square. Half an hour later, they were attacked and beaten by militiamen, who destroyed part of what they had recorded.

Freak! Freak! Freak! The freakish governmenst of Egypt and Greece steal computers! Robbing dissident bloggers and locking them in jail is a freakish behavior that does not belong to the European Union, not even to this galaxy! No wonder some vain Greeks boast they come from Andromeda galaxy!

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