Archive for Mamdouh Hamza

Presidential candidate and former Prime Minister Ahmed Shafiq did not appear in court Monday to testify in the “Battle of the Camel” case, in which 24 former officials and businessmen stand trial for allegedly plotting the bloody attack in Tahrir Square last year.

Both Shafiq and ruling military council member Major General Hassan al-Roweiny, who had been scheduled to testify, did not attend the session presided over by Judge Mostafa Hassan Abdallah. Activist Mamdouh Hamza, however, did show up to give his testimony.

Assailants riding camels and horses attacked protests against former President Hosni Mubarak on 2 February last year, killing at least 11 people and injuring dozens. The attack became known as the Battle of the Camel.

Talk show host Tawfiq Okasha is also scheduled to appear before court during today’s session after not attending Sunday. His lawyer cited security fears and asked the court to ensure Okasha’s security before he attends.

During Sunday’s session, the Cairo Criminal Court heard testimony from Sayed Ali, a media host at Mehwar satellite channel and a managing editor of state-run Al-Ahram newspaper. Ali said he did not have any evidence implicating the Muslim Brotherhood, Egypt’s largest political group, in the killing of protesters during the attack.

The suspects’ lawyers had recently accused the Brotherhood of killing protesters during the 18-day uprising that led to the toppling of Mubarak. The court on Saturday issued a subpoena for pro-Brotherhood Islamic preacher Safwat Hegazy and Brotherhood MP Mohamed al-Beltagy.

Ali said he watched developments in Tahrir on 2 and 3 February on TV.

“The regime, which had been bragging [about its] use of technology, is today fighting its sons with camels and horses,” Ali quoted himself as saying on his TV show after watching the attack.

Ali said he had a phone-in from Fouad Allam, former deputy chief of the now-dissolved State Security Investigation Services, who leveled a scathing attack against Mubarak-regime officials, accusing them of orchestrating the assault on protesters.

Allam in particular named Safwat al-Sherif, the former secretary general of the previously ruling National Democratic Party, as well as former party member Ibrahim Kamel.

He said his crew failed to reach Sherif for comment but managed to contact Kamel, who denied Allam’s accusations and said that during the attack, he was in Mostafa Mahmoud Square, a gathering venue for Mubarak supporters.

The court ordered the prosecution to provide copies of the ruling issued in Mubarak’s recent trial, as well as former Vice President Omar Suleiman’s testimony. It also requested devices to screen CDs that had been submitted by the defense during Saturday’s session.

Edited translation from Al-Masry Al-Youm

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Talk show hosts Khairy Ramadan, Tawfiq Okasha and Sayed Ali are scheduled to testify Sunday in the “Battle of the Camel” trial.

Cairo Criminal Court summoned the three on Saturday after requests by the suspects’ defense.

Testimonies from presidential candidate and former Prime Minister Ahmed Shafiq, member of the ruling military council Major General Hassan al-Roweiny and activist Mamdouh Hamza are to be heard Monday.

Islamic preacher Safwat Hegazy and Freedom and Justice Party MP Mohamed al-Beltagy have been summoned to give their testimonies on 12 June.

The suspects include 24 figures of the disbanded National Democratic Party, businessmen and former members of Parliament.

They are accused of involvement in killing protesters on 2 and 3 February last year during the uprising that ousted Hosni Mubarak.

On 2 February, peaceful pro-democracy demonstrators were attacked by assailants in Tahrir Square, some of whom were mounted on horses and camels. The attack became known as the Battle of the Camel. At least 11 protesters were killed.

The court ordered the prosecution to provide copies of the ruling issued in the trial of Hosni Mubarak, and former Vice President Omar Suleiman’s testimony. It also requested devices to screen CDs that that had been submitted by the defense during Saturday’s session.

The suspects’ defense claimed the incidents were planned by the Muslim Brotherhood.

Edited translation from Al-Masry Al-Youm

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Cairo International Airport authorities on Wednesday arrested a political activist accused of inciting violence before her departure for the United States.

The state-run MENA news service quoted sources at the airport as saying that Julia Milad, 35, was put on a travel ban by the attorney general.

Milad was accused, along with Mamdouh Hamza, a leading activist and prominent civil engineer, by the Supreme State Security Prosecution of inciting strikes and civil disobedience.

She denied the charges saying that they are all fabricated, MENA reported on Wednesday.

Last February, Hamza, along with number of revolutionaries, were accused of incitement and working to bring down the state. He was placed under a travel ban, but last month Egypt’s State Security prosecutors lifted the ban.

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The accusations directed against engineer Mamdouh Hamza and a number of revolutionaries of incitement and working on bringing down the state are nothing but a smear campaign against revolutionary and patriotic icons, movements and coalitions aiming to demonize the revolution, said the National Association for Change (NAC) and the National Council (NC) on Wednesday.

In a joint statement read against a background of recordings of Hamza calling for people to participate in civil disobedience, the NAC and NC said the accusations were alarming and that those being targeted are only ‘guilty’ of calling for the continuation of the revolution and the completion of its goals.

The statement described the accusations as a “deliberate political and social assassination, aimed at quashing people’s rights to express their opinion and protest against the ongoing security vacuum and the delay in bringing corrupt individuals and killers of protesters to justice.”

The statement continued: “These suspicious campaigns are similar to the tactics of the former regime, as lies are mobilized in the media and through public campaigns in order to turn public opinion against those who called for the revolution and who supported and continue to support revolutionaries.”

The statement noted that this systematic and recurring strategy of “demonizing the revolution and criminalizing the revolutionaries is being used to defame these citizens and paralyze their ability to impact change.”  

The revolution has not yet exhausted all of its options, but there will come a time when civil disobedience is inevitable, as long as there is national support for it, the statement said, adding that the effects of civil disobedience are limited without national consensus.

The NAC and NC accused Field Marshal Hussein Tantawi, head of the ruling Supreme Council of the Armed Forces, of “ pitting the people against each other with his statements following the Port Said football massacre.”

The April 6 Youth Movement, Democratic Front, Revolution Youth Coalition, Free Front for Peaceful Change, Youth for Justice and Freedom, Free Egyptians, the Second Revolution of Anger and a number of other movements announced their support and solidarity with Hamza and Kamal Fayoumi, a leading labor activist in Mahalla. They say these figures are being targeted by a smear campaign and fabricated charges as part of a plot to tarnish the reputations of all of those who supported the revolution and continue to fight for its continuation.

The movements accused the SCAF of attempting to abort the revolution, eliminate the revolutionaries and punish the Egyptian people for revolting. 

The movements released a joint statement saying: “The security and media services currently controlled by the SCAF are more oppressive and deceptive than those of the former regime.”

Translated from Al-Masry Al-Youm

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