Dictatorship, popular revolution and coup: Egypt

Dictatorship, popular revolution and coup: Egypt
Date: 3.7.2022 11:30

Egypt, one of the most precious countries of the Islamic world, witnessed a brutal military coup on July 3, 2013, in which the conscious Muslims in the country were directly targeted.

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It has been 9 years since the military coup in the Islamic country of Egypt. On July 3, 2013, the commanders of the Egyptian army under the guidance of the Zionists pointed the state's weapons at the nation in order to realize their treacherous ambitions. The Egyptians, who experienced the relief of getting rid of the dictatorship, liberation and human rights during the 1-year rule of President Mohammed Morsi, were again dragged into a dark vortex with the July 3 coup.
 
Just as the foundations of civilianization, liberation and a humane life were laid under the leadership of the late Mohammed Morsi, who was elected president for the first time in the country's political history in the 2012 elections, the July 3 military coup brought Egypt back into the darkness of the Middle Ages. In the past 9 years, things have not gone well in Egypt at any level, from economy to politics, from the legal system to social functioning, and Egypt has always gotten worse under the rule of coup plotters. Since 2013, the supporters of the Muslim Brotherhood, who opposed the coup, were subjected to the most brutal persecution, while state institutions were completely under the control of the putschists.
 
Since the day the coup took place, Brotherhood leaders such as President Mohammed Morsi, Muhammed Mahdi Akif, Dr. Safwat Khalil, Abu Bakir al-Qadi, Tareq Gandur, Farid Ismael Abdulhalim, Tareq Khalil, Abdulfattah Hadar have been left to die in the unhealthy conditions of the prison.
 
While many unnamed heroes who resisted the persecution of the putschists sipped the sherbet of martyrdom on the gallows, the climate of fear continues to surround Egypt day by day.
 

THE LAW GO BANKRUPT DURING THE PERIOD OF THE COUP

 
During the rule of the cruel dictator Sisi, "the law of the superiors" began to be applied, not the "rule of law" in Egypt. Egyptian judges, who took a decision on Sisi's orders, sentenced thousands of Brotherhood members to death on baseless accusations. Almost all of these decisions were signed by Sisi and thousands of Brotherhood members were executed. With the coup, the "Ikhwan Muslim Movement" was declared a terrorist organization with an unjust accusation, and the heaviest punishments were imposed on the Ikhwan leaders and members. In the legal system of the coup plotters, who took their instructions directly from Sisi, the victims and opponents of the coup were not given the right of defense in any way. Lawyers who tried to defend the victims of the coup were silenced at gunpoint, many of the lawyers defending human rights were arrested, and many were forced to leave Egypt due to the oppression they were subjected to.
 

TEN THOUSANDS OF EGYPTIANS HAD TO ESCAPE FROM THE COUNTRY

 
Tens of thousands of Egyptians, whose life, property and honor were not safe due to the cruel practices of Sisi, left their country with the coup. Tens of thousands of Egyptians against the coup, especially members of the Muslim Brotherhood, had to leave their homelands, where they were born, grew up and earn their living, and seek refuge in other countries. Dissidents fleeing Sisi's violent policies dispersed all over the world and moved to countries where they felt safe. The putschist Sisi, who could not stand the opposition formations in the country, proved many times that he followed the path of dictator Hosni Mubarak, who was overthrown by the popular coup in the Arab Spring, with the empire of fear he founded.
 

FREE PRESS DIED IN EGYPT SINCE THE COUP

 
Unfortunately, the human rights violations in Egypt cannot be served to the world because the coup regime did not grant the opposition media the right to broadcast. In Egypt, where publishing any publication criticizing the government is subject to heavy penalties, the media is strictly controlled and censored. While hundreds of media organizations were shut down during Sisi's 9-year rule, almost all of these organizations are newspapers and televisions broadcasting along the lines of the Muslim Brotherhood. Right after the coup plotters took over the administration, the Ikhwan channel Egypt 25, as well as Al Jazeera, Al Hafiz, and Al-Nas channels were shut down one by one, and many of the employees of these channels were arrested for opposing the regime. Hürriyet ve Adalet Newspaper, which bears the same name as the ruling party, was one of the press organs whose doors were locked during the coup days. Opponents of the coup against Sisi are trying to continue their media activities outside of Egypt from countries where they have the opportunity to broadcast.

YEREL HABERLER

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