Along the many years where the former president Hosni Mubarak
ruled the country we didn’t witness large scale of cases where a blogger
gets jailed for a blog-post. The first case in Egypt was in 2007 when
Kareem Amer was sentenced
for 4 years in jail based on blog-posts, he was charged for
insulting Islam and Mubarak.
On
6 April 2011, a military tribunal took place against Egyptian blogger Maikel
Nabil, 26 years-old, on charges of “insulting the military” and
yesterday 10 April the court sentenced Nabil for 3 years in prison.
Maikel Nabil is sent to prison over blog-post he wrote about
violations committed by the military offices against civilians since the
revolution and criticizing the army in Egypt.
During the past few years, Egyptian activists and journalists have broke many taboos through media platforms. The army and military forces was one of the main taboos during Mubarak’s time and is still a “red-line” in the offline media, and now the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces is threatening the online community by “punishing” netziens for practicing the right to freedom of expression and speaking about the military behavior.
The army in Egypt is sending a clear message that they don’t accept criticism and the charges against Nabil could be easily set against any other Egyptian netizen and human rights defenders to stop them from addressing human rights violations committed by military officers.
Written by Ramy Raoof
During the past few years, Egyptian activists and journalists have broke many taboos through media platforms. The army and military forces was one of the main taboos during Mubarak’s time and is still a “red-line” in the offline media, and now the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces is threatening the online community by “punishing” netziens for practicing the right to freedom of expression and speaking about the military behavior.
The army in Egypt is sending a clear message that they don’t accept criticism and the charges against Nabil could be easily set against any other Egyptian netizen and human rights defenders to stop them from addressing human rights violations committed by military officers.
Written by Ramy Raoof
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