Egyptian authorities arrested my brother to 'silence me', says exiled activist

Egyptian authorities arrested my brother to 'silence me', says exiled activist
Activist Wael Ghonim said his criticism of Egyptian president Abdul Fattah al-Sisi prompted authorities to retaliate by detaining his brother and threatening his parents.
2 min read
20 September, 2019
Ghonem said authorities raided his parents' home and arrested his brother Hazem [AFP]
The US-based Egyptian activist whose Facebook page helped ignite the 2011 pro-democracy uprising said authorities have arrested his brother in Cairo.

Wael Ghonim, a computer engineer, said his criticism of Egyptian president Abdul Fattah al-Sisi prompted authorities to retaliate by detaining his brother and threatening his parents.

Ghonim alleged that the Egyptian Embassy in Washington sent him threats the day before the arrest.

"They told me if I did not stop speaking, something will happen," Ghonem said in a video posted on Twitter late on Thursday.

He said authorities raided his parents' home and arrested his brother Hazem, whom he described as an "apolitical person", and confiscated his parents' passports and phones.

"They threatened my dad that if I do not stop insulting them, they will escalate," Ghonim said.

The arrest came as Egyptian social media was awash with calls for anti-government protests on Friday.

Videos posted by self-exiled businessman Mohamed Aly recently claimed large-scale corruption by the military and government, allegations Sisi dismissed as "lies".

Egypt outlawed all unauthorised protests in 2013 when Sisi, as defence minister, led the military's overthrow of an elected but divisive Islamist president amid mass protests against his brief rule.

The government crackdown that followed has rolled back the freedoms won in 2011.

Tens of thousands of Egyptians have been arrested since 2013, and many had fled the country.

Wael Ghonim was one of the many activists who went into in self-exile.

He was one of the young Egyptians who had used social media to mobilise widespread protests in 2011, which brought down longtime dictator Hosni Mubarak amid the wave of so-called Arab Spring uprisings.

At the time, Ghonim was venerated by different pro-democracy groups as a revolutionary figure.

In recent days, Ghonim has reemerged to the forefront of the social media with videos voicing criticism of Sisi's government.

In his latest video, Ghonim spoke in English and called upon "the international community" to help him save his brother.

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