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Saturday, 05 February 2011 16:22

April Davis: A friend's view of Egypt Featured


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April Davis' friend took this photo of a tank in Cairo. April Davis' friend took this photo of a tank in Cairo. Contributed

Ahmed Maklad is an Egyptian born in America.

2511daviscrop

Maklad with Davis.

On Friday he was with his friend April Davis in Roanoke Rapids, checking his cell phone for word on the fate of Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak’s regime. At one point there was word on Facebook Mubarak stepped down.

It wasn’t true.

Maklad awaits word on when he can go back to American University in Cairo. He also checks to make sure his father is OK.

Egypt is not the country it appears to be in tourism marketing, Maklad says. “This was bound to happen,” he said of the unrest.

He thought it would happen years ago. “The government is corrupt and it is denying the rights of the poor.”

Police take bribes because they are underpaid. Maklad paid a cop about 30 pounds to get out of a seat belt ticket and noticed other crumpled bills in his wallet from other presumed bribes. To process an insurance claim for a crash takes three months.

College graduates can’t find work and if they do they are low paying jobs. “If the wages are less than your rent how do you pay?”

The Police Day holiday where the protests started was Mubarak’s way of honoring them instead of paying them, Maklad said. “He gave them their own holiday so they could be glorified. The police in Egypt are not to be admired.”

Now, Maklad waits for news on when the university will be reopened. His father has armed guards at his gas station.

While some media say the unrest in Egypt will lead to Sharia Law, Maklad disagrees. “They want Democratic elections. This isn’t about Al Qaeda, this is not about terrorism. This is about 30 million students who want to find a job.”

 

Lance Martin

Lance Martin

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comments  

 
+2 #19 Mike 2011-02-11 21:29
Give this one year, and I guarantee the following:

- There will not be a democratic government in Egypt.
- The ruling party will end up anti-American, against us and our interests.
- The peace with Israel that Mubarak sustained for so long will be over.
- These stupid students will learn the real meaning of oppression and lack of freedom.

I predict they'll be begging Hosni to come back.
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0 #18 Anthony Finney 2011-02-10 22:00
I agree with Huh?!?. Michelle, if our rights and liberties are still in place, why are we told that people who are arrested re innocent until proven guilty, and the best judgment for someone who did NOT commit a crime is "Not Guilty"? Because if the courts deemed him "innocent" that would be an admission that they were in violation of his rights to have arrested him wrongfully, and could therefor be held accountable for their actions and transgressions against his Inalienable Rights!! A verdict of "not guilty" means that there was some "probable cause" to consider him a likely suspect, and therefor had to be taken into custody and brought before trial. Just another way our government works our "rights" right out of the way. Freedom of Speech is no longer allowed in public either. Try going and voicing your opinion at a city council meeting ... You will have to fill out some paper work to be APPROVED by the council to be heard! Doesn't sound so "free" anymore does it.
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-2 #17 Michelle 2011-02-10 20:17
P.S. On a side note, I too am Christian and I also feel that way. Political Correctness has taken over and the very morals our country was founded on by our forefathers is being forgotten.
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-3 #16 Michelle 2011-02-10 20:13
Actually Huh? your Civil Liberties and your Civil Rights are protected. Your Civil Liberties are protected by the Bill of Rights better known as the first 10 amendments of the Constitution. Your Civil Rights are protected by the 14th Amendment of the Constitution. All of which have been enacted for well over 100 years and highly unlikely to ever be repealed. I do not however disagree with you on your view point on financial, medical and educational help. I too have been denied many benefits, many times. Does the system work. Not all the time. I just don't know if I agree that it is discriminatory towards blue collar workers, such as us, as it is more of certain demographics have learned how to work the system and take advantage of it. If you could not work, sit home and take care of kids and have your housing, lights, food paid for and get a check every month would you?
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+1 #15 Huh?!?!? 2011-02-10 19:48
Equality is the key building block of this country. Yet as Christian, I have to be "tolerant" of other religions, and they are not required to be tolerant of my religion. My children were not given a free education because their great great grandparents were immigrants. When I lost my job in 1985, I was denied food stamps and government help because "I was able-bodied to return to the work force" as the denial letter so stated. Yet look how many draw on unemployment and welfare and food stamps that are able-bodied but LAZY. Look how many millions of dollars this country gives in tax credits and breaks to legal immigrants to entice them to come here and open businesses and seek further education with free college tuition. Look how many ILLEGAL immigrants claim welfare and food stamps and get free medical coverage while I can sometimes barely make ends meet in my household. And I should not feel like a 3rd class citizen in my own country? Where is my free ride at? It is overdue!
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+1 #14 Huh?!?!? 2011-02-10 19:43
Well, Michelle, I never said you weren't allowed certain privileges. For one, your Civil Rights are not rights. They are privileges, and at any time an official of the government or law enforcement sees that they need to revoke your "rights" it is done without reprimand by the law. Next, let me point out that while you may be free to speak and own possessions, this is not what this country was based upon. It was formed with the intent of all men equal! Not that all men were equal, unless they refused to get a job or go to work, that way the tax payers would support them indefinitely. It was formed so that those peoples of the world who felt oppressed and held back by their government could come here and seek freedom, not come here and own businesses without paying taxes, or paying a largely reduced tax rate to see them successful while the Americans paid MORE taxes to help see them to success. Where is my free education and medical coverage, where is my government funding?
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+6 #13 Mike 2011-02-10 19:13
Ever hear the phrase, "A man cannot have two masters?" Anyone who claims dual citizenship is not a loyal American. This country gets taken for what it can offer to these people, but they fall back to their other citizenship when it's convenient. Running away from the danger and then telling us we should be supporting these protesters (against their LEGITIMATE government) is just hypocritical.
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-7 #12 Michelle 2011-02-10 16:04
While each of you have very valid points, why attack Mr. Maklad personally? Why is it when someone on here does not see another persons point of view instead of arguing your point and trying to make someone understand why you feel the way you do the attack gets personal. I do not know Mr. Maklad, but I'm sure he would much rather be with his family right now than over here worried about them. It would not surprise me if his parents sent him away for protection. I too agree that the current President may not be the right choice but I do not feel he should resign today without a plan of succession to keep the Muslim Brotherhood from taking over. As far as us being 3rd class citizens, I totally disagree with that statement and find it racist. I am white, born and raised in the South, fyi. I have the freedom to get on here and say what I want, express myself how I want, own what I want, work where I want. How is that 3rd class? Live with no Civil Liberties and Rights, then complain.
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+5 #11 Mike 2011-02-09 19:25
Ahmed,

If this is so important, what are you doing here? You should be in Egypt supporting the revolution!

As an American, I hope Mubarak stays in power. He's been a friend to the U.S. and a good ally. I'd rather see him running the country than some Muslim Brotherhood or other anti-American radical candidate. Ever hear the phrase, "The devil you know is better than the devil you don't know?"
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-4 #10 T. O. 2011-02-09 19:11
Wowwwww.
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