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Saturday 5 February 2011

QUIET HEROINES WHOSE COURAGE HAS HELPED KEEP UPRISING GOING

QUIET HEROINES WHOSE COURAGE HAS HELPED KEEP UPRISING GOING


By Donald Macintyre in Cairo

Saturday, 5 February 2011


Asked in Cairo's Tahrir Square if she was scared about what might happen, Mona Seif reflected for a moment before saying yesterday: "You know, I was scared last Thursday night, but once you're here among the people you don't feel scared. I hope I don't die here, but even if I do I'll have spent 10 days here with all these people and felt this is my country, and I have never experienced that before."


If this is a revolution, then 24-year-old Ms Seif is one of its quiet heroes. A post-graduate student in cancer biology at Cairo University, she is one of the leading figures who used blogs and Twitter to help spread the call for the first protest on 25 January.

Protest runs in her family: her father is a well-known human rights lawyer, Ahmed Seif el-Islam, who was serving in a Mubarak jail when she was born and is among more than 20 lawyers who have been arrested.

When Egypt cut the internet last week, she was one of 20 activists who took their laptops to a private house and started the "Twitter Centre of the Revolution", getting messages to the outside world thanks to one of their number being connected to an ISP which Egypt did not initially shut down because it almost exclusively serves financial services. "I use Facebook, and I have a blog but Twitter is my favourite tool for political issues," she says.

Ms Seif believes that the immediate catalysts for the escalating protests were the death of Khaled Said – the young man allegedly beaten to death by secret police in Alexandria last year – the uprising in Tunisia, and "the build-up over years of all the small scale strikes and protests".

She pays tribute to the still-unknown creators of the "We are all Khaled Said" Facebook page.

But while she never imagined it would grow to this, what kept her going as the protest day approached was the memory of another demonstration she had taken part in last year. Her group managed to elude the police by not coming to Tahrir Square but another street downtown. A march of around 50 rapidly grew to around 1,000 before the police crushed it with some brutality. "For maybe 35 minutes we felt that the street was ours, which was incredible."

What outcome does she hope for? "I want Mubarak to leave and the regime to fall. Then a transitional government, which will hold proper democratic elections and whoever wins I will accept it."

Another woman from a very different background is also surprised to be taking part in such a huge protest. Middle-aged single mother, Safa Hamis Mohammed, has had trouble making ends meet as a home Koran teacher after losing her journalism job 17 years ago. But after Wednesday's attack on the square by pro-Mubarak supporters, she found herself carrying stones to be thrown by those defending it. Would she vote for the Muslim Brotherhood? "We didn't know about them from Egyptian television and I respect them for being here and because they are Muslims. I will think about it."

Gigi Ibrahim, 22, a secular US-educated politics major at The American University in Cairo, will not be casting her vote for the Brotherhood. The self-described "revolutionary socialist" says she has had continuous arguments with her upper middle class family – and especially her garment factory owner father – about the protests.



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