While using Twitter to narrate events in Tahrir Square on Friday, people in Egypt described tires burning in the street, protesters blocking traffic and hurling rocks, and police officers launching tear gas in an effort to break up crowds that had gathered to protest against the Muslim Brotherhood and the countryâs new Islamist president.
Many of the actions described on Friday appeared to hew to a script that has become familiar over the past two years, but some in the crowds of protesters appeared to be using new tactics, dressing from head to toe in black, covering their faces with bandannas or kerchiefs and brandishing black flags as they skirmished with security forces.
âAsked one of them who they are they said we donât talk to media but we are black bloc,â wrote âthe British-Egyptian journalist Sarah Carr, adding that a member of the group had âmentioned anarchism.â
Shubra march is full of young men wearing wrestling masks.
â" a href="http://www.twitter.com/Sarahcarr"> أب٠Ùار (@Sarahcarr) 25 Jan 13
Saw a winning ski mask and spectacles combination. Weâre banned from photographing them.
Asked one of them who they are they said we dont talk to media but we are black bloc. Mentioned anarchism.
An article filed on Thursday by The Associat! ed Press reported the presence of a âpreviously unknown group calling itself the black block.â The article continued, âWearing black masks and waving black banners, it warned the Muslim Brotherhood of using its âmilitary wingâ to put down protests.â
Egyptâs new Black Bloc (self-proclaimed anti-MB militia) has female members too-just saw one running wearing niqab & angle-length skirt.
Although largely new in Cairo, the term âblack blocâ has been used for years in the United States and Europe to describe a tactic commonly used by anarchists and anticapitalists during large-scale political demonstrations that occasionally devolve into street fights with the authorities.
Participants in the bloc typically dress in lack to foster a sense of unity and to make it difficult for witnesses to differentiate between individuals. Members of the bloc often blend in with larger groups of protesters, then break away, linking arms as they rush down streets.
In the United States, at least, black bloc members usually eschew violence against people but have few compunctions about damaging property.
The tactic received attention during the 1999 protests in Seattle against the World Trade Organization, when youths dressed in black broke windows and spray-painted graffiti on buildings.
In St. Paul, during the 2008 Republican National Convention, black bloc members roamed through the city smashing bank windows and using hammers to batter a police car.
It is unclear whether there are any connections between American and Egyptian black bloc participants, but the site anarchistnews.org posted! a messag! e about occurrences in Cairo, quoting the blog Even If Your Voice Shakes.
Last night, anarchism left the graffitied walls, small conversations, and online forums of Egypt, and came to life in Cairo, declaring itself a new force in the ongoing social revolution sparked two years ago with multiple firebombings against Muslim Brotherhood offices. Later, the government shutdown the âBlack Blocairoâ and âEgyptian Black Blocâ Facebook pages, but they were soon re-launched.
The site went on to say that Egyptian anarchists had firebombed the Shura Council.
As my colleague Robert Mackey reports, an Egyptian journalist, Sarah El Sirgany, wrote on Twitter, âVendors tell me it was the Black Block groupthat attempted to storm the Ikhwan Online building sparking the fight.â
Later, she added, âNow those who had continued the fight are heading to Tahrir, flag of Black Block flying high.â
Opinion on the black bloc in Egypt was not united. In a place where sexual assaults and gropings have become common, one Twitter user, Ghazala Irshad â@ghazalairshad, seemed to sound an admiring note: âEgyptâs new Black Bloc (self-proclaimed anti-MB militia) has female members too â" just saw one running wearing niqab & angle-length skirt.â
Egyptâs new Black Bloc (self-proclaimed anti-MB militia) has female members too-just saw one running wearing niqab & angle-length skirt.
But the activist bloggers Gigi Ibrahim â! and Adel ! Abdel Ghafar were more skeptical.
This black bloc is just trouble even if they have good revolutionary intentions but it definitely will be used against the revolution
Black Bloc: anarchist revolutionaries or 18 year olds who live with their moms & wear black masks thinking life is a video game #egypt
This week a man named Ahmed Ibrahim, who has previously posted YouTube videos that appear to be from Egypt, posted a video titled âBlack Blc Egypt.â
Accompanied by driving music the video shows masked people marching while holding aloft black banners, a black flag with an anarchy symbol and an Egyptian flag.
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