Comment: Counter-revolution may have taken hold across much of the region, but the uprising in Sudan shows the revolutionary flame will never go out, writes Hossam el-Hamalawy.
Comment: Sisi's brutal crackdown off and online uses the 'War on terror' to justify violence, and has instilled a climate of fear among the population, writes Hossam el-Hamalawy.
Comment: Egyptian citizens leave police stations in body bags, while Mubarak regime figures leave court with their freedom. This is Egypt today, says Hossam el-Hamalawy.
In less than ten years, Egypt’s judges have gone from icons of democracy to the counterrevolution‘s aggressive hounds. It is, boasts Egypt’s new regime, a golden age of unity… between the judges, police and army.
The 25 January 2011 revolution is the product of a long process of dissent accumulation over decades in Egypt led by workers and students, argues Hossam el-Hamalawy.
The US Senate’s recent report into CIA practices has not exposed anything new. Nor should it be forgotten that these methods did not arise after 9/11, but over a century of colonial wars around the world.
Egyptian authorities have reacted in predictably knee-jerk reaction to an Islamist call for a day of protests. But Islamist leaders cannot escape blame for Egypt’s parlous situation.
Sisi's regime has strangled protest and dissent, but revolutionaries must consolidate what they have left to prepare for an inevitable change in the tide.