Get News & Views Updates
Most Popular This Week
- Condemning the U.S. Postal Service’s Move to End Saturday Delivery
- Seattle Teachers Spark Rebuke of School Standardization and Privatization
- Study Finds 80% of All Antibiotics in US Used for Big-Ag
- High Time for Hemp
- DOJ Kill List Memo Forces Many Dems Out of the Closet as Overtly Unprincipled Hacks
Popular content
Today's Top News
Egypt's Military Rulers Clamp Down on Civil Society
CAIRO - Raids on the Cairo offices of civil society organisations accused of receiving unauthorised foreign funds are part of a wider campaign by Egypt’s ruling military council to silence its critics, say rights groups.
Riot police stand guard at a counting centre after voting closed during the last day of parliamentary elections at Shubra in El-Kalubia, on the outskirts of Cairo, January 4, 2012. (REUTERS/Mohamed Abd El-Ghany) "The goal of this campaign is clear to everyone, which is gagging us from exposing the violations and oppressive practices which are still being committed until this moment," the Arab Network for Human Rights (ANHRI) said in a statement.
Egyptian security forces raided the offices of at least six non-governmental organisations (NGOs) last week. The operation targeted the Arab Centre for the Independence of the Judiciary and Legal Profession (ACIJLP), and the Budgetary and Human Rights Observatory (BAHRO) – two Cairo-based NGOs that were compiling evidence of corruption and rights abuses by Egypt’s military rulers.
Prosecutors also seized mobile phones, laptops and documents from the offices of German political foundation Konrad-Adenaeur Stiftung and three U.S.-based organisations: the National Democratic Institute (NDI), International Republican Institute (IRI), and Freedom House. The rights and pro-democracy groups were among those observing Egypt’s ongoing parliamentary elections.
David Kramer, president of Freedom House, described the raids as "an escalation of repression unheard of even during the Mubarak regime." He accused the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces (SCAF), which assumed control of the country in February, of "attempting to scapegoat civil society for its own abysmal failure to manage Egypt’s transition effectively."
Activists who participated in the revolution 11 months ago claim Egypt’s military rulers have continued – and in some cases exceeded – the repressive tactics that Hosni Mubarak employed during his 30-year rule. They accuse SCAF of brutally suppressing peaceful demonstrations, prosecuting its critics in unfair military trials, and expanding the scope of Mubarak-era emergency laws.
The generals have also come under fire for the treatment of women during protests. Military police were recently caught on video viciously beating women in the streets, while a court ordered the army to cease using humiliating "virginity tests" on female detainees.
"Since the revolution, the military has attacked anybody who goes into the streets to protest against the regime," says Negad El-Borai, a prominent Cairo-based lawyer and rights activist.
The raids last week are part of a long-running smear campaign against NGOs working in the field of human rights and democratic empowerment, he says. They follow a spate of allegations by government officials that a number of NGOs and political groups operating in Egypt received unauthorised funding from foreign entities attempting to destabilise the country.
SCAF officials have gone so far as to say the violence on the streets of Cairo both during and after the 18- day uprising that toppled Mubarak was incited by saboteurs paid with funds channelled through NGOs.
Earlier this month, justice minister Adel Abdel Hamid announced that a judicial investigation found that over 300 NGOs received direct foreign funding in recent years. Some of the entities did not have permits to operate in Egypt.
Legislation passed in 2002 requires all civil society organisations to obtain a permit from state authorities before receiving funds from abroad. The government tightened NGO registration procedures in 2006, passing a draconian law in 2010 that further restricted their activities and gave state security the final say on foreign funding.
"Egypt does not oppose foreign funding of NGOs as long as it complies with Egyptian and international laws. However, the funding must be for development, not political purposes," Fayza Aboul Naga, minister for planning and international cooperation, said in November.
Aboul Naga, who was appointed by Mubarak and has survived four cabinet changes since his ouster, accused the U.S. government of directly funding 14 American and 12 unlicensed Egyptian NGOs.
Washington has admitted to as much. In June, U.S. Ambassador to Egypt Anne Patterson said the United States had spent 40 million dollars in Egypt to promote democracy since the revolution. She said 600 Egyptian NGOs had applied for funding.
El-Borai argues that the military is less concerned about organisations receiving foreign funds than it is about limiting the reach and resources available to NGOs engaged in supporting principles that threaten its rule.
"It’s very clear that this is a campaign against civil society groups calling for democracy, citizenship and a civil state," he told IPS. "When (security forces) raided offices, it was these groups and not organisations receiving money from the Gulf (Arab states) that got shut down."
According to Al-Akhbar state newspaper, the Ansar Al-Sunnah Al-Mohamedeya group received over 50 million dollars from Qatari and Kuwaiti institutions since the revolution, making it the biggest recipient of foreign aid in the country. The paper alleged that the donations went to promoting the ultra-conservative Islamic Salafi movement in Egypt.
Al-Akhbar also reported that an institution created in memorial of Mubarak’s deceased grandson received nearly 15 million dollars from the United Arab Emirates and Oman. The opaque charity is believed to be controlled by the "feloul", that is, the remnants of the old regime.
El-Borai says the idea that NGOs should not be funded from abroad is absurd when the Egyptian military itself receives about 1.3 billion dollars a year in U.S. aid. He asks if Washington will continue to approve this funding when it sees how it is used to intimidate and imprison civil society.
Comments
Note: Disqus 2012 is best viewed on an up to date browser. Click here for information. Instructions for how to sign up to comment can be viewed here. Our Comment Policy can be viewed here. Please follow the guidelines. Note to Readers: Spam Filter May Capture Legitimate Comments...

6 Comments so far
Show AllThe article left out the important phrase: "The US backed Egyptian military." Sure the US gives a few dollars to some NGOs the military finds offensive so they can posture, but the US gives billions to the Egyptian military and will continue to do so because the US wants a military dictatorship in Egypt and the US gets what it wants. The protestors will learn what that US has tried to teach the world for decades now -- might makes right.
"Aboul Naga.....accused the U.S. government of directly funding 14 American and 12 unlicensed Egyptian NGOs.
Washington has admitted to as much. In June, U.S. Ambassador to Egypt Anne Patterson said the United States had spent 40 million dollars in Egypt to promote democracy since the revolution. She said 600 Egyptian NGOs had applied for funding."
So the US is releasing the names of those that applied? What am I missing here?
The US government is funding NGOs counter to the Egyptian law, then releasing the names of those they funded?
Tom Carberry: While the article did not literally say, 'U.S.-backed Egyptian military', the point is firmly made in the final paragraph. Of course you're right, the U.S. does not want democracy in Egypt any more than it wants it anywhere else, including in the U.S. But in the end, which is REAL GODDAMN CLOSE, it will cease to matter what the terrorist fascist state of the U.S. wants, because it won't get it. While any number of people may regard it as naive, including possibly you, sir, the people are going to fuck the United States out of its precious penis-driven agenda. Stick around. Just watch. The United States will come under increasing attack for its evil foreign as well as domestic policy, and unless they are dead, which I aver is a distinct possibility, even the sheep in the U.S. will eventually wake the fuck up, rise the fuck up and burn Washington to the fucking ground, if need be, to reclaim their country. At least I bloody hope they will, unless it can be achieved before hell freezes over by peaceful means.
The people of Egypt are STILL in the middle of teaching the U.S. what it means to demand and die for democracy, for anyone who isn't paying attention. And while there's no way democracy anywhere will survive the asaults of hypercapitalism, or just capitalism, it is clear that people are gradually waking up to the realization that he choice is between democracy, with socialistic aspects, or flat-out, take no prisoners capitalism, with the murder and slavery that goes with it. I do believe Egyptians have made their choice, and have demonstrated that hey're prepared to die for what they want. So, in the end, fuck the United States, unless it can stop deterring and destroying democracy, and functioning under an ideology that has as its root contempt for human beings.
The official results of the 'Arab Spring' and the public protests they entailed:
Hundreds of thousands marching in the street
+
Military and police killing dozens and brutalizing thousands
+
'Popular' regime change of hated US backed Dictator for almost identical political situation hailed as 'positive change'
=
NOTHING HAS CHANGED!
I don't know if you have figured this out yet, but peaceful public protest has NEVER changed ANYTHING.
That's NOT a call to start violent action against the PTB. That's just declaring a true and verifiable documentary fact.
All of the suffering and bloodshed on ALL sides of the recent public uprisings has accomplished is the exchange of one brutal dictatorship for another. No matter how many marches you have, no matter how often people get arrested or 'disappeared' by the Government, nothing will change until you are willing to go the entire distance, to commit to radical action.
"He asks if Washington will continue to approve this funding when it sees how it is used to intimidate and imprison civil society."
Of course we will! That's what we do best.
What I don't understand is why the Egyptian military is engaging in a witchhunt against unarmed. seemingly law abiding Egyptian citizens for their political views when in fact it should be trying to relinquish power and hand over to a popularly elected government.
Does'nt the Egyptian military realize harassing people for their political views is a waste of time and unnecessarily breeds resentment against the military ?