D Parvaz is a Doha-based journalist for the Al Jazeera English.
Protesters camp out at the Rabaa Al-Adawiya Mosque in Cairo's Nasr City neighbourhood [AFP]
Organisers of the sit-in rallies in
support of reinstating deposed Egyptian President Mohamed Morsi
continually invite rights groups, the media and NGOs to tour and inspect
vigil sites to counter claims that participants are armed or violent.
But the visits do not always go smoothly.
On
Thursday, a delegation of the NGOs and rights groups visiting the Rabaa
Al-Adawiya Mosque in Cairo's Nasr City neighbourhood – where clashes
with security forces left at least 72 dead – had to leave after being
confronted by a sit-in participant.
Mohamad Zaree, Egypt Programme Manager for the Cairo Institute for Human Rights Studies, was among the delegation at Rabaa.
“We
went to Rabaa to assess the sit-in as the first step to be there on a
regular basis” to observe any potential for a crackdown on the vigil,
said Zaree.
“There was a sort of not clashes but tension between
[a Muslim Brotherhood supporter] and a member of the delegation, Mohamed
Adel, who he accused of having anti-Brotherhood views. This tension
made it very difficult for the delegation to continue its work, so we
had to leave,” said Zaree, adding that the NGOs did not have enough time
to do their work.
The source of the tension was Adel’s political
affiliation with the April 6 Youth Movement, although he was not at
Rabaa as a political activist, but, said Zaree, as a member of a rights
group, the Egyptian Center for Economic and Social Rights.
Adel,
whose uncle has been a participant in the vigil since its start over a
month ago, told me that Thursday was his first visit to a pro-Morsi
sit-in.
He said two men came out of the media centre in Rabaa and
verbally attacked him, accusing him of calling the Muslim Brotherhood a
“terrorist group”. The men followed him and the delegation around,
shouting at them, until they had no choice but to leave.
Adel said
he’s received many apologies from members of the Brotherhood, who have
assured him that he’s welcome in Rabaa, but he’s not sure he will
return.
“My experience in Rabaa was very bad.”
Zaree said
that the statement of apology issued by the Muslim Brotherhood suggested
that the delegation exclude anyone with political views. Zaree said, he
found this “weird” because, “the sit-in has been declared to be for all
Egyptians, regardless of their point of view.”
Such a scuffle – minor as it was – also begs the question: How can sit-in organisers rein in the more volatile among the crowd?
Zaree
said that despite intervention from both sit-in participants and the
NGO delegation, the argument still “went out of control”.
“That
makes us worry that in a critical time that maybe everything will be out
of control, that if there are clashes that they could respond
violently. This is alarming,” said Zaree, adding that he hopes that
nothing bad will happen and the government uses negotiation rather than
force to resolve the situation.
Voice and text messages left for a
Muslim Brotherhood spokesman and a vigil media spokeswoman have, so
far, been left unanswered.[al jazeera]
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