Egypt: My Name Was Khaled and I Was Not a Terrorist · Global Voices
Marwa Rakha

Photo by Mourid Barghouti
Demonstrations and rage continued in Egypt following the death of a young Egyptian, allegedly at the hands of police. The anger on the street is evident online, where citizen journalists speak out.
My Name was Khaled and I was not a Terrorist is the name of a new Facebook page condemning police torture and the use of the Emergency Law to terrorize citizens. “The emergency law is a tool in the hands of the executive power to storm many basic rights and freedom guaranteed by the Egyptian Constitution,” explains the International Federation for Human Rights. Khaled Said's death enraged many Egyptians, who went out on demonstrations protesting his brutal murder; Amnesty International urged the Egyptian government to investigate the killing of this young man; and the government claimed he was a criminal.
Khaled's murder is summarized again on the Facebook English page:
The story began on 7th June 2010 when Khaled Saeed went to his usual Internet cafe in Sidigaber – Alexandria Egypt.
Then two wild detective cops – Mahmoud Alfallah and Awaad Elmokhber/the detective – ambushed that cafe asking people for their IDs which is totally out of their authority and without legal permission He – Khaled – did reject that way of inhumane treatment and conequently was attacked so viciously, was kicked in his chest and belly severely, and his skull was smashed with the marble bar before all people and witnesses in the cafe while khaled was bleeding. Then savage cops abducted khaled and put him inside the police vehicle to continue torturing him to death in the police station. Finally, they had thrown his corpse in the street to claim that he was attacked by some strangers in order to avoid responsibility.
All of this is a result for the oppression system that Mubarak control Egypt under emergency law which gives the police the upper hands to treat the residents as slaves.
Shadowy added:
Eyewitnesses –cyber café clients and street pedestrians- asserted that the whole beat thing had carried on constantly for 20 minutes, and had been executed in full view of everyone, accompanied by Khaled´s screams, tears, and cries for help.
Another witness, Mahmoud Ali, reported that the two policemen had taken the victim´s body to “Seidy Gaber” police station, and brought it back 15 minutes later to the crime scene, and called an ambulance in order for them to get away with their crime.
Khaled´s brother certified to “Shorouk Newspaper” that Khaled had never been detained that particular night in any police station or elsewhere, and that he was very well-behaved, well-liked, and admired by his neighbors and friends. He also mentioned that he´s from a virtuous family, whose sons aren´t prison birds. “As soon as I had heard the police station´s conviction of my brother, I headed straight for the American Embassy and informed them of the incident, since I´m American citizen; I thought my American passport would safeguard me, in lieu of the Egyptian one, which is the main reason for his holder´s dishonor” He added.
The victim´s attorney, Waleed Saeed, had filed a complaint to the public prosecutor, accusing the two policemen of beating and torturing Khaled to death, and dragging his corpse all the way to the police station.
Who could have ever thought that the price Khaled would pay for asking “why” his basic rights were violated was going to be his life?! Well, as it turns out, this is the case under emergency law; every Egyptian should think twice, before he goes too far and decides stand up for his civil rights, assuming he is Martin Luther King of his age.
Traveller Within highlighted how the police handled the crime scene:
Policemen subsequently returned to the scene in search of any recording devices  or phones that could’ve reported the incident. They failed however to prevent  the news from being covered and widely shared via Twitter and other social media  tools, which detailed accounts of the events, shared photos of the deceased  before and after his death, and began to organize for demonstrations and civil  actions to bring the alleged perpetrators to justice and to protest the use of  Emergency law, in place since 1981 and extended  just last month for a further 2 years, with the explicit declaration by the  state that it would only be used “in cases of terrorism and drug  trafficking”.
Photo by Sarah Carr
Will E. went to the June 13th demonstration and gave the following account
The Traveller Within posted videos, photos, live clips, and wrote:
There were several demonstrations across Cairo  yesterday, demanding justice for Khaled Mohamed Said and for his assassins to be  judged – all the way up to the Minister of Interior, Habib El Adly. As one of  the slogans chanted said–
“If that were  Israel (or anywhere else, for that matter), El Adly's head  would be gone”
Not in Egypt. Not when, as, once again, people  chanted, the main purpose of the Police's existence is to protect the regime  from the people.
On the protest, Zeinobia wrote:
The best photo I found for the protest was this photo from Assad.
Also here  is another photo from Affet
I do not know how the regime dares and opens its mouth in front of the photos  showing the brutality of the police against peaceful protesters.Just see the  videos and slide shows below to understand what I mean.
Blogger and journalist Sarah Carr was also a witness to the Rule of Boars [detailed pictures]
More blundering, crass stupidity from the police yesterday, as they responded to  demonstrators protesting police violence with violence, again.
Some 150 people assembled in Lazoghly Square – home of a state security  headquarters – at 5 p.m. This number quickly grew as protestors prevented from  gathering outside the main gate of the Interior Ministry – as had originally  been planned – converged on the square. They managed to circle the square twice  before the police were able to get their shit together. The usual black cordon  of cannon fodder was quickly formed and we were hermetically sealed in.
We were  well and truly kettled.
Amr Salama posted more pictures of the protests HERE
Kareem El Beheiry posted videos of the police crackdown and assaults on protesters HERE
So why did Khaled really die? Tabula Gaza answered:
Over the past few months I have been working on a video project about torture, so when I heard about the public beating and murder of 28-year old Khaled Sayed Thursday night it came as no surprise. According to blogger Mfatta7, Khaled had either filmed or obtained a video that reveals a number of police officers involved in a drug deal. This is the video provided by his sister [exposing police corruption and a drug dealing incident]
Amr Salama wrote down the conversation in the video
Sandmonkey wrote:
When the story went out, and people saw the pictures, they were of course  enraged. About a 1000 people gathered after the  Friday prayers to protest in front of the police stations, and there are  plans to do sit ins and demos this entire week, demanding that people take  action, before they become the next Khaled. The Ministery of Interior swiftly  responded, by stating that Khaled was a criminal and a womanizer and a drug  dealer and responsible for 9/11, and that he died from Asphysxiation, and  the picture is simply after his body was diagnosed by the Coroner. And that  really, really, we should be glad that such a menace to society at large is not  with us anymore.
On the 12th of June 2010 the department of  media and public relations of the Egyptian ministry of interior issued a  statement denying the content of the testimonies of eyewitnesses as well as  reports by human rights organizations regarding the killing of Khaled Said in  Alexandria, accusing those statement of inaccuracy, flagrant falsification, and  crossing the line in dissemination of lies etc. and Tabula Gaza shared Al Nadeem Center‘s official statement [full statement here]
The MOI [Ministry Of Interior] statement then concluded that it will  not “back down no matter how much the allegations”. Nor shall we, no matter how  much MOI spread their lies and terror. We shall continue to expose crimes of  torture, reach out for the victims, provide legal, psychological and media  support as well as all other forms of support until the torturers are brought to  justice.. As long as there is no public apology.. as long as there is torture..  as long as the perpetrators are not brought to justice.. we shall not back  down
Clearing up Khaled's image, Zeinobia wrote
The people are very angry in Alex especially in Sidi Gaber with the false reports about Khalid that led his friend and journalist Bahaa El-Tawil to write an Op-ed about late Khalid , the other Khalid the MOI did not know who refused to leave this county because he loves this country !! The other Khalid who did not escape from his military service as the MOI has claimed , the other Khalid who did not smoke a cigarette.
She also posted videos of his neighbors defending him and the owner of the internet cafe's testimonial
And even if Khaled was a “pot-head”, a sexual offender, or a terrorist as the Ministry of Interior claimed, Zeinobia wonders
Do the police plain clothed agents have the right to search other citizens !!?? If No – which is the answer – then why they were searching the people !!??
Was there an official investigation warrant issued to search anyone in that street!!??
How did those agents know that Khalid was a dangerous con !!??
If we believe the MOI statement, shall we wonder how Khalid knew that the two men walking in the street in plain clothes were actually police agents !!??
Sandmonkey concluded his post saying:
Egypt likes to refer to itself as the land of Security and Safety. Please note that we always put the word Security first. We like to think we are safe, that we are better than those evil western countries, where a woman is raped every 48 seconds or whatever, but we are not. We are not Safe. None of us is. Not n this country, not in this world. Any one of us could lose that spark of life at any minute, and the lucky ones get it quickly and painlessly. The unlucky ones suffer. The really unlucky ones end up like Khaled.