It's that
time of day - just before 6 p.m. to be exact - when Ahmed Maher must leave his
family and spend the night in a tiny room in the local police station. It's a
grim routine that will likely define the life of the iconic
"revolutionary" for the next three years.
In his final
moments at home, Maher quickly put on sneakers and a tracksuit. He took the
dinner packed for him by his wife, Riham. He assembled a bag with books, a
transistor radio with extra batteries and a clock.
Then he
rushed to kiss his wife, hug his 5-year-old son Nidal and briefly disappear
into the children's bedroom to say goodbye to Miral, his 9-year-old girl.
His nightly
detention is a potent example of how far the government of President
Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi is willing to go to not just to crush dissenters but also
ensure their silence.
Maher was
released in early January after serving a three-year prison sentence for
breaking a law that effectively banned street protests - a law under which
dozens of secular, pro-democratic activists have been jailed. Most of that
sentence he spent in solitary confinement.
Now he must
serve three years of "police observation." Normally, that means the
convict must report to a police station each day, sign a log and leave.
But
authorities imposed on Maher the harshest version. He must stay in the station
every night from 6 p.m. until 6 a.m. Failing to show up or arriving late could
bring full detention, criminal charges and possibly imprisonment.
"My
children have been really happy since my release, but they are frightened every
time I leave home," Maher, 36, told The Associated Press in an interview.
"It is because when I left home three years ago, I did not come
back." He was alluding to the day in late 2013 when he surrendered to
prosecutors for questioning over an unauthorized protest only to be immediately
arrested.
Maher, a
founding member of the pro-democracy April 6 Movement, was an icon of the 2011
uprising that toppled autocratic President Hosni Mubarak. He then was part of
the protest campaign calling for the removal of Mubarak's successor, Islamist
Mohammed Morsi. After the military, then led by el-Sissi, ousted Morsi in 2013,
Maher and other activists quickly turned against what they saw as increasing
authoritarianism.
"We
opposed and rose against Morsi because we felt that his Muslim Brotherhood
wanted to create a theocracy when we wanted more democracy," he said.
"But what's happening now is worse than everything that the Brotherhood
did."
"We did
not remain silent and that's why I and others were jailed."
After
Morsi's ouster, security forces killed hundreds of Islamist protesters and
arrested thousands more. Hundreds of secular activists were jailed, dozens more
have been banned from traveling abroad.
El-Sissi and
government officials frequently argue that now is not the time for dissent,
that all must buckle down while the country tries to rebuild a deeply damaged
economy and fight Islamic militants. The president and loyal media constantly
warn that Egypt could fall into the sort of chaos seen in Syria and Libya and
that foreign powers and domestic agents are weaving conspiracies to destabilize
the country.
The April 6
Movement, established in 2008, has been banned by court order, accused of
illegally receiving foreign funds and threatening national security. Its first-
and second-tier leaders have all been jailed or fled the country, and the rest
have largely gone silent.
They are
"vulnerable to being detained at any time for whatever reason," Maher
said.
"We are
all captives here," said Negad Borai, a rights lawyer who last month
joined the ranks of those banned from travel.
"Today,
the lowest-ranking policeman can just walk in here now, arrest me and take me
to the station. Just like that," Borai said.
Maher spent
most of his three years in prison in solitary confinement. To survive it,
"I tried to cheer myself up with little things, like listening to a song I
like, reading a letter from my wife that was smuggled to me, eating a good meal
I received during her visit or working out," he said.
It left him
with a fear of crowds. When he visited a mall with his wife after his release,
he had to rush out in a panic.
Now he tries
to fit his life into the 12 hours of freedom he has every day before he must
submit to the police station of the Cairo suburb where he lives. There, he is
confined each night in a tiny room underneath the stairs.
In January,
Borai and several other lawyers visited the station to lobby for an improvement
in Maher's conditions.
Maher
appeared nervous and disoriented when brought to the office of the station's
commander. The commander gave chocolates to his visitors and ordered tea and
coffee for everyone, as senior policemen explained to the lawyers how they are
doing everything they can to make his nightly stays comfortable.
"We've
made it like a five-star hotel for him," said one officer. "He is one
of us between sunset and sunrise," chipped in another.
After the
pleasantries, Maher spoke up with some requests. "Can I have a wall socket
in my room?"
"Granted,"
a senior Interior Ministry official answered over the commander's objections.
"A
laptop?" Not allowed. "A mobile phone?" No.
Nearly a
month later, Maher said he never got access to a wall socket. The commander did
reluctantly meet his request for some leeway in detention hours so he can have
time in the evening for medical checkups needed after his time in prison.
But they
added a new indignity. Now he has to ask for permission to use the bathroom.
"A
policeman escorts me to the bathroom and if I am too long, he knocks on the
door and asks if I am using a mobile phone," Maher said.
The prison
time and police observation have colored Maher's life. His mother's cancer had
been in remission but it recurred, and he's convinced that is because of stress
over his imprisonment.
Maher, a
civil engineer, has searched in vain for a job. "No one seems to want to
give a job to someone like me," he explains.
And he has
stayed well away from politics, which is likely the ultimate aim of the
punitive measures.
But he has
not given up. He is holding off, waiting to see what the red lines are.
"I need
to know what is allowed," he said. "Party politics? Social activism?
Or is the public sphere completely blocked."
(AP)
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