In
Egypt protests against the ruling regime has once again returned and
so has the mass arrests. More
than 2,800 people have been detained during the protests. Egyptian
security forces blocked access to Cairo’s revolutionary
heart – Tahrir Square. Last week the city’s main metro stations
were closed and traffic was diverted, while police vans roamed,
their sirens echoing through the empty streets. Yet barricading
the square did not keep everyone at home – dozens of protesters
were dispersed by tear gas in several districts around and just
outside the city.
“I
don’t care about politics, but I have been struggling to have
a decent life for my children since the president came to
power,” one demonstrator told The Independent. “Their
economists say everything is improving, but how can that be if my
income has almost halved in value?..This is all happening
while al-Sisi builds palaces for his family and friends.”
A
recent report by the government estimated that some 32 million of the
country’s 100 million population are under the poverty line. With
non-governmental organisations banned from conducting any surveys,
the figure could be much higher.
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