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U.S. peace activist Medea Benjamin was detained Monday at Cairo’s airport by Egyptian police without explanation. She says she was questioned, held overnight in an airport prison cell and then violently handcuffed by Egyptian officials, who dislocated her shoulder and broke her arm. She was then put on a plane and deported to Turkey, where she is now seeking medical treatment. We speak to her by telephone from the airport medical facility. Benjamin had intended to meet up with international delegates before traveling to Gaza for a women’s conference.
Transcript
This is a rush transcript. Copy may not be in its final form.
AMY GOODMAN: We turn now to U.S. peace activist Medea Benjamin, who was just detained at Cairo’s airport by Egyptian police. She was in Cairo to meet up with an international delegation before traveling to Gaza for a women’s conference, but she said she was detained upon arrival and held overnight before being deported to Turkey, where she’s now seeking medical treatment. Medea Benjamin joins us on the phone from Turkey.
Medea, how are you?
MEDEA BENJAMIN: Well, I’m in a lot of pain. I’ve gotten two shots of painkiller, but it’s not enough. They fractured my arm, dislocated my shoulder, tore the ligaments. They jumped on top of me. And this was all never telling me what was the problem. And so, it was a very brutal attack, and I’m in a lot of pain.
AMY GOODMAN: Explain what happened. You arrived at Cairo’s airport, and you were attacked there?
MEDEA BENJAMIN: No, I arrived at the airport. When I gave in my passport, I was taken aside, brought into a separate room, where I was held for seven hours without anybody ever telling me what was wrong. Then I was put into a jail cell in the airport, held overnight. And in the morning, five very scary-looking men came in and wanted to take me away. And I said, "The embassy is coming. The embassy is coming." They were supposed to have arrived. Instead, they dragged me out, tackled me to the ground, jumped on me, handcuffed my wrists so tight that they started bleeding, and then dislocated my shoulder, and then kept me like that, grabbing my arm. The whole way, I was shouting through the airport, screaming in pain. Then the—I demanded to get medical attention. The Egyptian doctors came and said, "This woman cannot travel. She’s in too much pain. She needs to go to the hospital." The Egyptian security refused to take me to a hospital and threw me on the plane. Thank God there was an orthopedic surgeon on the plane who gave me another shot and put the arm back in its shoulder. But they were so brutal, and, as I said, Amy, never saying why.
AMY GOODMAN: Did the U.S. embassy representative ever come to see you at the airport?
MEDEA BENJAMIN: No. Some of the delegates, including Ann Wright, who had already arrived for the Gaza delegation, had been calling the embassy non-stop. The CodePink people in D.C. were calling the embassy non-stop. They were always saying, "They’re supposed to show up. They’re supposed to show up." They never showed up. I was on the tarmac. The Turkish airline was forced to take me, but we delayed an hour while they were debating what to do. There were about 20 men there. And the embassy never showed up the entire time.
Egypt charges two 'Israeli agents', two Egyptians with spying
CAIRO Tue Feb 18, 2014 7:55am EST
(Reuters) - Egypt's public prosecutor charged on Tuesday two men it said were Israeli intelligence agents and two Egyptians with conspiring in Israel's interests, according to a statement from the prosecutor's office.
"The public prosecutor ordered Ramzy Mohamed, Sahar Ibrahim, Samuel Ben Zeev and David Wisemen - two officers in the Israeli Mossad - to be sent to a Cairo criminal court for spying for the interests of the state of Israel," the statement read.
The two Egyptians are already in jail pending investigation, the statement said.
The public prosecutor ordered the arrest of the two Israeli officers. It was not clear from the statement if the Israelis were in Egypt. There was no immediate reaction from Israel.
The Egyptians are accused of providing information about Egypt to the Israeli officers with "the intent of damaging national interests in exchange for money and gifts and sex."
It accuses Mohamed of "sleeping with women who work in Israeli intelligence." The Egyptian is also accused of recruiting the accused woman, Ibrahim, to work for Israeli intelligence.
The statement said that the two Egyptians had admitted that they had "committed the crime of spying for Israel" during investigations.
Money, Sex and Gifts in Israeli Espionage
Cairo, Feb 18 (Prensa Latina) The Egypcian Prosecutor General today sent to court two accused, a man and a woman, who have been accused of spying Israel in exchange for money, sex, and gifts, according to an official statement.
According to leaks, two officers of the Mossad, the Israeli intelligence service, whose location has not been determined yet, are fugitives from the Egypcian justice.
The prosecutor referred to court Ramzy Mohammad, Zahar Ibrahim, both Egypcians and remand prisoners; Samuel Ben Zeev and David Wisemen, of Israeli nationality, so that they can be judged for spying for Israel, the statement indicates.
The Egypcian prisoners are accused of providing information with "the intention to damage their own country in exchange for money, gifts, and sex".
According to a reading between lines of the statement from the Prosecutor's Office, Mohammad had sexual intercourse with an Israeli woman to whom he gave information, which then was passed on to Mossad officers; the woman, Zahar Ibrahim, seems to have benefitted with gifts and cash.
The statement highlights that "during the investigations both Egypcians admitted to the crime of spying for Israel", a crime that in Egypt can be sanctioned even with death penalty.
MEDEA BENJAMIN: No, I arrived at the airport. When I gave in my passport, I was taken aside, brought into a separate room, where I was held for seven hours without anybody ever telling me what was wrong. Then I was put into a jail cell in the airport, held overnight. And in the morning, five very scary-looking men came in and wanted to take me away. And I said, "The embassy is coming. The embassy is coming." They were supposed to have arrived. Instead, they dragged me out, tackled me to the ground, jumped on me, handcuffed my wrists so tight that they started bleeding, and then dislocated my shoulder, and then kept me like that, grabbing my arm. The whole way, I was shouting through the airport, screaming in pain. Then the—I demanded to get medical attention. The Egyptian doctors came and said, "This woman cannot travel. She’s in too much pain. She needs to go to the hospital." The Egyptian security refused to take me to a hospital and threw me on the plane. Thank God there was an orthopedic surgeon on the plane who gave me another shot and put the arm back in its shoulder. But they were so brutal, and, as I said, Amy, never saying why.
AlicetheKurious » Sat Mar 08, 2014 12:14 am wrote:We got a fresh batch of them today.
stefano » Wed Mar 12, 2014 3:16 pm wrote:AlicetheKurious » Sat Mar 08, 2014 12:14 am wrote:We got a fresh batch of them today.
Interestingly, one of them was Djamila Bouhired, a heroine of Algeria's war of independence and a very long-time Palestine activist. FWIW, she says she had never previously been asked for the kind of authorisation to travel to Gaza through Egypt as she was asked for this time. Right now, though, she is lending her name to an anti-Bouteflika movement in Algeria called Barakat, which looks very April 6-ish, so there's that.
AlicetheKurious wrote:BTW, I couldn't access the article at the link you posted, without registering. It would be nice if you could copy and post the article or just the relevant segment.
Ghaza : L’Egypte refuse l’accès à Djamila Bouhired
Les autorités égyptiennes ont refoulé, hier, la moudjahida Djamila Bouhired et près de 80 femmes activistes de différentes nationalités qui tentaient, depuis mercredi, d’accéder à Ghaza via le passage de Rafah.
Un «non» catégorique de la part des autorités égyptiennes ; celles-ci exigent une autorisation préalable qui devait être déposée au niveau des ambassades égyptiennes dans les pays respectifs des activistes avant même leur arrivée au Caire, apprend-on de sources égyptiennes. L’Egypte, dans un communiqué du ministère des Affaires étrangères rendu public hier, a démenti «l’octroi d’une autorisation à ces activistes» et affirme que «l’Egypte avait expliqué, avant même l’arrivée de ce groupe de femmes, qu’il était nécessaire de reporter la visite, compte tenu de la situation sécuritaire tendue».
Le Caire veut, entre-temps, jouer la carte de la diplomatie. Ce communiqué, en fait, s’adresse directement à la moudjahida Djamila Bouhired pour lui assurer qu’elle est et sera «toujours la bienvenue dans son deuxième pays, l’Egypte, mais sa demande d’accéder à Ghaza ne peut en aucun cas être acceptée en l’absence d’une autorisation». «Djamila Bouhired, ajoute le même communiqué, a été, à deux reprises, invitée par les mêmes autorités, au lendemain de la révolution égyptienne, mais elle n’y a jamais répondu.»
Selon une source sécuritaire de l’aéroport du Caire, les autorités égyptiennes ont bloqué ces activistes dès leur arrivée, mercredi, et les ont tout de suite refoulées, l’une après l’autre, vers leurs pays d’origine, à savoir l’Algérie, la Belgique, la France, l’Autriche, la Suisse, la Grande-Bretagne, l’Irlande et les Etats-Unis. «Nous avons été auditionnées pendant huit heures par la police égyptienne avant qu’elle notifie son refus catégorique de nous permettre d’accéder à Ghaza», témoigne Mairead MacGuire, activiste irlandaise, âgée de 70 ans, et prix Nobel en 1976, dans une déclaration à la presse égyptienne. «Le régime égyptien insiste encore pour qu’il soit le régime le plus sale de l’histoire de l’Egypte.
Pourquoi ce régime refuse à des activistes dont une militante et une grande moudjahida comme Djamila Bouhired l’accès à Ghaza et leur demande d’y accéder par l’Israël. Il s’agit alors de leur collaborateur», dénonce Aïda Seif El Dawla, une militante égyptienne des droits de l’homme. En zone internationale à l’aéroport, un sit-in a été observé par ces femmes qui voulaient soutenir les Palestiniennes en répondant à leur appel, particulièrement les Ghazaouies, et en leur rendant visite à l’occasion de la Journée internationale de la femme.
Nassima Oulebsir
AlicetheKurious wrote:I hate to break it to you, stefano, but the reports claiming that Djamila Bouhired was one of them, and was turned back by the Egyptian authorities are yet more lies. [...] she never arrived at Cairo Airport and she was never prevented from entering Egypt. Seriously, I advise you to readjust your bullshit meter, especially when approaching any "news" about Egypt: it's set far too low.
Sounder » Fri Mar 14, 2014 12:56 pm wrote:It seems quite sad sometimes, to consider how easily or often so many of us (all of us?) are being used for psy-op purposes.
or a certain something in us is getting used.
maybe its a major road to discrimination, I don't know, but it sure is a rocky road.
«Le régime égyptien insiste encore pour qu’il soit le régime le plus sale de l’histoire de l’Egypte.
All of us. I'm still reeling from the discovery of just how much crap I've been fed by the media over so many years, and I considered myself quite the savvy skeptic.
Just to cite one example, that Mavi Marmara thing that I was so worked up about a few years ago was largely a psyop orchestrated by Erdogan and Hamas and Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood to establish their creds as champions of the Palestinian people and enemies of Israel, and to position NATO member Turkey and Erdogan as the (fake) new "leader of the Arabs and Muslims". Turkey's regional popularity did indeed soar, as did Erdogan's (the reports that Turkey and Israel's mutual trade and military relations subsequently escalated and became even closer didn't make a dent in Erdogan's new image). Turkish products, Turkish retail chains and even dubbed Turkish soap operas flooded our markets, helping to fuel Turkey's economic boom. Turkey became a highly popular destination for Arab tourists, and many purchased summer homes there. As for the Muslim Brotherhood, that marked the beginning of a new defiance on the part of Egyptian media, which provided them with a lot of fawning exposure in violation of the government's ban. A lot of us fell for it, including many experienced journalists who have bitterly regretted it. And don't even get me started on the fakery about Syria, which many people didn't recognize until the exact same tricks were used against us. The very outrageousness of the lies, and the reputation for "respectability" of the sources make it almost impossible to appreciate just how much we are being coldly and professionally -- and totally -- manipulated.
The very outrageousness of the lies, and the reputation for "respectability" of the sources make it almost impossible to appreciate just how much we are being coldly and professionally -- and totally -- manipulated.
529 Brotherhood Supporters Sentenced to Death in Minya
Mar 24 2014
by Mada Masr
Minya Criminal Court in its second session sentenced 529 Muslim Brotherhood supporters to death for violence following the dispersal of the Rabea al-Adaweya and Nahda sit-ins last August.
The defendants were handed down the sentences for storming and burning the Matay police station in Minya, killing a police officer, attempting to kill two others, stealing weapons and releasing inmates, state-owned newspaper Al-Ahram reported.
A report by the Associated Press said that more than 400 defendants in the case were tried in absentia, quoting defense lawyer Khaled al-Koumi.
The sentence is awaiting the grand mufti's ratification. The Minya Criminal Court will issue the final verdict on 28 April, Al-Ahram reported, following the mufti’s ratification.
Ahmed Shabeeb, a member of the defense team on the case, told Mada Masr that they will appeal the verdict.
He described the ruling as a “judicial fumble that will not be forgiven.”
“We do not even consider it a ruling,” he told Mada Masr, “it does not carry the truth, it wastes it and conceals it.”
Local media reported that this is the largest number of defendants handed down death penalties in Egypt’s modern history.
Seventeen others were acquitted in the case.
Sherif Agaiby, an activist from Minya, told Mada Masr that there were minor skirmishes outside the court by defendants’ families following the verdict, but that security forces soon dispersed them.
He added, however, that the ruling has sewed panic among residents in Minya, with parents rushing to schools to pick up their children in anticipation of a possible backlash by Muslim Brotherhood supporters.
Earlier state media reported that protesters set fire to a school in Minya, however this report was quickly denied by the Interior Ministry, MENA reported.
On Tuesday the same court will start trying 683 defendants facing similar charges, including Muslim Brotherhood Supreme Guide Mohamed Badie.
Defense lawyers had filed a case against the presiding judge Said Youssef for turning down a request to postpone the case and allow time to review case documents, which is in violation of the law, state-owned news agency MENA reported.
Shabeeb questioned how the court could reach a verdict in a case with over 4,000-page documents in just forty-five minutes, citing several irregularities that occurred during today’s as well as Saturday’s court hearing, including not listening to all witnesses’ testimonies.
On Saturday, when the first hearing for the case took place, Shabeeb said the judge vowed that he would rule on the case in the next session, ignoring requests by the defense team to stand before another court, which would have suspended any ruling in the case.
He added that the judge on Saturday had asked security to surround the bench, preventing anyone from approaching it.
Shabeeb lamented that the “those who insult and violate the law are the judiciary themselves.”
Nonetheless, he explained that the defense team can only resort to the law and will appeal the verdict.
"This is the first time in my information in history to have this number of people sentenced to death in the same case, after almost no hearings and with such an imbalance in the number of victims. It is a catastrophe," Gamal Eid, lawyer and executive director of the Arab Network for Human Rights Information (ANHRI), told Mada Masr. "Even though there can be appeals and processes through which the ruling may change, the disaster will remain that there was a judge who issued this ruling after a quick hearing."
Eid called the ruling "political but also a stupid political move," one that could be seen as a "gain" for the Brotherhood. "This will be used to show how Egypt is associated with the lack of any proper judiciary," he claimed. Eid added that ANHRI has lawyers defending Muslim Brotherhood political prisoners on other cases but not on this one. "We have that many lawyers and countless cases. We cannot handle all of them."
A wave of violence gripped Minya after former President Mohamed Morsi was forcibly removed from power. Violence then spiked after the August dispersals. The governorate’s churches and Christian residents have repeatedly come under attack, on top of state institutions.
Hundreds were arrested in the governorate following the dispersals on 14 August.
In this case, the crime itself was pretty horrific. In mid-August 2013, in the town of Minya, in Egypt's South (Upper Egypt), following the dispersal of the terrorist camps in a suburb of Cairo, a large mob of armed fanatics went on a rampage of terror. For around three days, they burned Christian homes, businesses, 10 churches, and schools. They destroyed a museum of ancient Egyptian antiquities, desecrating mummies and smashing irreplaceable artifacts thousands of years old. They murdered 15 police officers and 40 civilians, including some who were burned alive in their homes or churches, and wounded 448 innocent people. They looted and torched the police station.
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