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Egyptian authorities round up hundreds after rare protests

Egyptian security forces rounded up hundreds of people following small but rare anti-government protests, rights lawyers said Monday, as authorities moved to take harsh preventive measures against more unrest. Hundreds of protesters took to the streets in several Egyptian cities including the capital, Cairo, over the weekend, calling for President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi to step down.

Reuters WORLD
Published September 23,2019
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Egyptian authorities rounded up about 400 people in response to an outbreak of protests against President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi over to weekend and security forces have stepped up their presence in central Cairo, human rights monitors said on Monday.

In a rare pubic display of dissent, hundreds of people demonstrated in the capital and other cities on Friday in response to calls for protests against alleged government corruption. The protests spread to the Red Sea city of Suez on Saturday, residents said.

Defying a ban on protests, the demonstrators shouted slogans calling on Sisi to relinquish power.

In the past few days, 373 people have been arrested in Cairo, said Mohamed Lotfy, director of the Egyptian Commission for Rights and Freedoms (ECRF).

Gamal Eid, director of the Arab Network for Human Rights Information, said the number of detentions had risen above 400.

"Our lawyers can't keep up," he said.

Sisi, a former army chief who came to power after the overthrow of President Mohamed Mursi, an Islamist, in 2013 has overseen a crackdown on political dissent that has targeted liberal activists as well as Islamists.

His supporters say the crackdown was necessary to stabilise Egypt after the 2011 uprising that toppled former strongman Hosni Mubarak.

The new unrest hit Egyptian financial markets. The EGX 30 and EGX 100 stock markets both fell by more than 5% on Sunday, their biggest single-day drops in several years.

Losses slowed on Monday, with the EGX 100 falling 1.72% and the EGX 30 dropping 1.47%. Egyptian dollar bonds issued by the government and the Egyptian pound in forward markets both slipped.

Demand for 10-year Egyptian bonds also dipped slightly.

The events over the weekend would "give cause for investors to re-price near-term political risks in Egypt", Farouk Soussa, senior economist with Goldman Sachs, said in research note.

"We think that the impact in external and domestic bond markets in the coming day or two may be more acute, given the high participation of international investors in these markets."

ROUND UP
Security forces moved in to disperse the scattered protests on Friday and Saturday and have reinforced their presence in central Cairo.

Prominent human rights lawyer Mahienour El-Massry was arrested late on Sunday as she walked out of the state prosecutor's office in Cairo, where she was representing detainees, said Nour Fahmy, a lawyer with the ECRF.

"She was talking on the phone next to the national security prosecution, I passed by her..then I heard her shouting 'I am being arrested' so I turned and saw three plain clothes police pushing her into a microbus and then they drove off," he said.

Plain clothes security officials have been stopping people in central Cairo and checking social media content on their mobile phones, several witnesses said.

Internet monitoring group Netblocks said there had been disruption starting on Sunday to social media platforms and news sites, which appeared to target the Arabic language editions of international media.

Spokesmen at the interior and communications ministries could not immediately be reached for comment.

The protests took place after a former civilian contractor for the military, Mohamed Ali, posted videos accusing Sisi and the military of corruption. Sisi dismissed the claims as "lies and slander".

Ali has called for mass protests on Friday.