Friday
May072010
MENA House: Sinai Liberation Day in Egypt (Baghdady)
Friday, May 7, 2010 at 18:11
During a recent conversation with a friend of mine in Egypt, I was surprised to hear she’d be enjoying a long weekend (Friday, Saturday AND Sunday); turns out that 25 April was, in fact, a public holiday.
A TV crew from a private media outlet in Egypt decided to roam the streets of Cairo asking the public this question: "Why are we celebrating today?" It was amusing or disturbing, depending on how you look at it, to find that all those interviewed had very little idea.
A majority understood it was "something to do with the Liberation of Sinai". If they passed that test, the interviewer would ask, "How was this achieved?". A resounding silence or an "I think..." was the general collective response. Whilst some blamed their lack of knowledge on the information (or lack of) passed on during their days of education, others were simply just glad to have the day off, whatever the reason.
This is the background to "Sinai Liberation Day":
The day marks the final departure of the Israeli army from the Sinai, fulfilling the mandate of the 1978 Camp David agreements. On 25 April 1982, President Hosni Mubarak raised the Egyptian flag over the Sinai.
While the first part of the Camp David agreement focused on the Israeli/Palestinian land dispute and the status of Jerusalem, the focal point of the second part was the restoration of Egyptian-Israeli relations. The Israeli army agreed to evacuate its troops and 4,500 civilians out of the Sinai, which it had occupied since the 1967 Six Day War, as well as returning the Abu Redeis oil fields in Western Sinai to Egypt.
The Result?
Firstly, nostalga, patriotic praise, and pride, even if some may not know the details of 25 April 1982. The Sinai holds both historical and religious significance. It is the "East Gate of Egypt" where Ramses II fought with the Hittites and the site where Egypt fought the 1956, 1967, and 1973 wars with Israel. It was the location for the Exodus of the Israelites and Moses' receipt of the Ten Commandments.
Secondly, more holiday destinations to promote. The Sinai Peninsula from east to west, from the Aqaba Gulf to the Suez Canal, is a total of 870 kilometres (540 miles) in length with 30% of Egypt’s coastline. The return of the Sinai meant the return of Sharm el Sheikh, Taba (returned on 29 September 1988), Safaga, Ras Mohammed, Dahab, el Arish, Taba and Nuweiba: all on the Red Sea and all essential to the tourist industry in Egypt.
Last but certainly not least, natural resources. Here lie cement, magnesium, copper, precious stones, white and black sand (used for solar energy), uranium, marble, phosphate, and other minerals. With 6% of Egypt’s total land mass, -the Sinai is a gold mine, a diamond in the rough, its holdings waiting to be extracted and produced for the financial benefit of Egypt. And, in contrast to this exploitation, the Sinai mountains have been preserved for their "natural beauty".
On 13 October 1994, Dr Gamal Ganzoury , then Prime Minister, introduced "The National Project" for the purpose of "development" in the Sinai region. A sum of 75 billion Egyptian pounds (EGP) was to support this from 1994-2017.
When television presenter Mohammed Naser interviewed Dr Hassan Rateb, Chairman on the Board of Trustees at Sinai University, in April about the progress of ‘The National Project, the analyses wasn’t very promising. The total amount of investment projects in the region have come to 110 billion EGP; these are the outcomes:
Many jobs were supposed to be created. However the growing trend is that labourers coming from Upper Egypt would start work and then be unable to return to their jobs. Coming back from holidays in Upper Egypt with the family, they are stopped at checkpoints. If they are unable to provide the sufficient paperwork, they never get back to the Sinai.
Where is the project money going? Well, just like the interviewer's, "Why are we celebrating today?", it is a question that gets few clear answers.
A TV crew from a private media outlet in Egypt decided to roam the streets of Cairo asking the public this question: "Why are we celebrating today?" It was amusing or disturbing, depending on how you look at it, to find that all those interviewed had very little idea.
MENA House: Protests “En Vogue” in Egypt
A majority understood it was "something to do with the Liberation of Sinai". If they passed that test, the interviewer would ask, "How was this achieved?". A resounding silence or an "I think..." was the general collective response. Whilst some blamed their lack of knowledge on the information (or lack of) passed on during their days of education, others were simply just glad to have the day off, whatever the reason.
This is the background to "Sinai Liberation Day":
The day marks the final departure of the Israeli army from the Sinai, fulfilling the mandate of the 1978 Camp David agreements. On 25 April 1982, President Hosni Mubarak raised the Egyptian flag over the Sinai.
While the first part of the Camp David agreement focused on the Israeli/Palestinian land dispute and the status of Jerusalem, the focal point of the second part was the restoration of Egyptian-Israeli relations. The Israeli army agreed to evacuate its troops and 4,500 civilians out of the Sinai, which it had occupied since the 1967 Six Day War, as well as returning the Abu Redeis oil fields in Western Sinai to Egypt.
The Result?
Firstly, nostalga, patriotic praise, and pride, even if some may not know the details of 25 April 1982. The Sinai holds both historical and religious significance. It is the "East Gate of Egypt" where Ramses II fought with the Hittites and the site where Egypt fought the 1956, 1967, and 1973 wars with Israel. It was the location for the Exodus of the Israelites and Moses' receipt of the Ten Commandments.
Secondly, more holiday destinations to promote. The Sinai Peninsula from east to west, from the Aqaba Gulf to the Suez Canal, is a total of 870 kilometres (540 miles) in length with 30% of Egypt’s coastline. The return of the Sinai meant the return of Sharm el Sheikh, Taba (returned on 29 September 1988), Safaga, Ras Mohammed, Dahab, el Arish, Taba and Nuweiba: all on the Red Sea and all essential to the tourist industry in Egypt.
Last but certainly not least, natural resources. Here lie cement, magnesium, copper, precious stones, white and black sand (used for solar energy), uranium, marble, phosphate, and other minerals. With 6% of Egypt’s total land mass, -the Sinai is a gold mine, a diamond in the rough, its holdings waiting to be extracted and produced for the financial benefit of Egypt. And, in contrast to this exploitation, the Sinai mountains have been preserved for their "natural beauty".
On 13 October 1994, Dr Gamal Ganzoury , then Prime Minister, introduced "The National Project" for the purpose of "development" in the Sinai region. A sum of 75 billion Egyptian pounds (EGP) was to support this from 1994-2017.
When television presenter Mohammed Naser interviewed Dr Hassan Rateb, Chairman on the Board of Trustees at Sinai University, in April about the progress of ‘The National Project, the analyses wasn’t very promising. The total amount of investment projects in the region have come to 110 billion EGP; these are the outcomes:
- In the fishing industry in the Sinai region, they have reached 30% of their target.
- In projects relating to petrol in the region, they have reached 66% of their target.
- In projects relating to tourism, they have reached 38% of their target.
- In housing projects, they have only completed 5% of their target.
Many jobs were supposed to be created. However the growing trend is that labourers coming from Upper Egypt would start work and then be unable to return to their jobs. Coming back from holidays in Upper Egypt with the family, they are stopped at checkpoints. If they are unable to provide the sufficient paperwork, they never get back to the Sinai.
Where is the project money going? Well, just like the interviewer's, "Why are we celebrating today?", it is a question that gets few clear answers.
Reader Comments (4)
Thank you for this interesting post.
Christina,
I was wondering what your opinion of this article is, in particular:
Many young Egyptian anti-government protesters seem impassioned, but they appear to lack the strategy, tactics and resolve to pressure President Hosni Mubarak's police state to give in to demands that include amending the constitution and ending 29 years of emergency law.
......................
The lack of organization and experience among young opposition movements has led to questions about their ability to pressure the government for reforms and wider freedoms. It takes more than Twitter messages, leftist slogans and the indignant musings of bloggers to challenge a regime with a history of crushing dissent.
"It will be immensely difficult to bring democratic changes or oust the current regime through demonstrations like these," political analyst Emad Gad told The Times.
http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/babylonbeyond/2010/05/egypt-youth-activists-hindered-by-political-immaturity.html" rel="nofollow">http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/babylonbeyond/2...
Catherine,
The link doesn't work : s
The 'strategy' and 'tactics' cannot be there in a system that is restrictive for 'security' purposes (the only 'legitimate' reason). In addition to the fact that currently there is no better alternative-something that the US admin. are aware of.
So..the cycle continues...daily protests in the hope to bring about change on any small level.
Catherine,
Emad Gad's point is valid. There is definately a lack of organisation and experience. More importantly there's no other valid alternative govt.
They're trying to make a point in their protests but with little organisation, it's all abit self-defeating.