Today,
as I post this there seems to be violence, civil unrest and
repression everywhere – Iraq, Egypt, Bahrain..... Have I left
anyone out?
The
People Of Cairo Haven’t Seen Violence Like This Since The 2011
Revolution
29
March, 2013
Tahrir
Square is where the Egyptian revolution took place and continues to
play an important role for everyone who demanded change two years
ago. Wednesday morning at 2 a.m it was attacked and people’s tents
burned to the ground.
It
was rebuilt and burned to the ground again 16 hours later, and three
hours after that, things genuinely got ugly.
No
one here seemed to know what exactly happened over the last 24 hours,
but dozens of people I spoke with had pieces of a story. One high
ranking government court worker in the take-out restaurant he
inherited from his father asked my translator if he knew who was in
charge of the area now.
What
he told him, we’d learned from the 22-year-old pizza shop worker,
Walid (not his real name), at the spot a few doors down. Walid moved
to Cairo from the country three-and-a-half-years-ago, to find work.
The shop is open 24-hours, and what he told us pulled together more
elements of what I’d seen over the past 24-hours than anything
else.
On
Wednesday evening a man was attacked in the square, injured baldy and
rushed to the hospital (we posted pictures of that Wednesday
morning). Walid knew the man from the shop and told us he was from
Abdeen, a town about 70 miles away.
At
4 a.m. Wednesday, about 13-hours after the attack, Walid said he saw
a group of Abdeen men guys ride in on motorbikes and attack the
square. They beat its occupants, and burned the flags and tents
to the ground. Aside from one elderly man called “the father of the
revolution” I’m told the square was largely filled with
criminals, former prison inmates freed during 2011 prison breaks, and
drug dealers.
I
could not get near Tahrir Square without being confronted, and was
told repeatedly not to go at all after dark. I went with the
translator. It was hostile, even before the attacks.
Throughout
the day, the people living in the square brought in more tents, put
up new flags and had settled back in. At 4 p.m. a mob formed at the
mall a couple blocks away, and marched past my hotel calling for
shopkeepers to join them in clearing the square.
Walid
thought that group began with more people from Abdeen, maybe it did.
My translator, believed there was a significant Muslim Brotherhood
presence after 4 p.pm when we were in the square. The Muslim
Brotherhood is Egyptian president Morsi’s party, and my translator
believed these men were a group, carrying large slabs of wood or
metal pipe. Many of them confronted me, one with hostile intent, and
they did not look like the people staying in the square. But no one I
spoke with can say for sure who they were.
At
7 p.m. the people who’d now twice been attacked at the park took
action. All they’d heard was the call for shopkeepers to join the
mob that formed at the mall. A mall employee who’d been punched in
the face trying to stop the crowd from tearing down “the father of
the revolution’s” tent confirmed that’s where he joined the
group.
By
7:10 p.m., the Tahrir Square residents had looted and shattered glass
windows and doors in as many stores and restaurants as they could, on
the street my hotel’s on before employees hauled the sliding steel
doors down for protection. The only spot nearby without a
safety door is the pizza place where Walid works.
Walid
was returning to the shop with supplies from a store when he saw the
crowd smash through his employer’s doors and windows. He saw the
thick glass smash onto the sidewalk as the chef ran through the
broken door.
When
he spoke with us at 10:00 p.m. tonight shards of glass filled two
garbage cans, and still covered the sidewalk. He’d spoken to the
owner’s wife. She’s 55, her husband is in the hospital, she said
she had no idea what to do.
Aside
from the chef, Walid is the only other employee and he plans on
staying in the restaurant protecting what he can. That’s his only
plan for now.
When
he called the emergency military number at 7:30, no one answered.
The
local police station is just several blocks away and no one has seen
them anywhere near the square. Neither my translator, who lived in
the park during the 2011 revolution, or Walid have seen violence like
this in the past two years.
Walid’s
nervous, and told us there is a “million-man” gathering of the
revolutionaries who were in the park during 2011, tomorrow. He thinks
he’ll be fine, but has no idea what’s going to happen.
He
just can’t lose that job.
Egypt struggles with climate change
Egypt
has been struggling with social, economic and political problems
since the fall of Hosni Mubarak.
But
now it seems we can also add climate change to the list.
Sorry, You left out Myanmar where Buddhists are at war against Muslims.
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