A Dutch reporter in Cairo spent Monday night in jail after the owner of a cafe detained her on suspicion of âspreading European cultureâ and endangering Egypt's national security by looking for subjects to interview for a story about youth unemployment.
The freelance journalist, Rena Netjes, told The Lede in an Internet chat that she was handed over to the police after the citizen's arrest. As she reported on Twitter herself, she was only freed on Tuesday after the Dutch ambassador, Gerard Steeghs, intervened with Egypt's prosecutor general, who agreed to drop the charges.
Ms. Netjes was also assisted by the activist lawyer Ragia Omran, who found out about the case through updates posted on Twitter by Ms. Netjes's colleagues.
On Tuesday, Ms. Netjes told The Lede that the incident had begun the afternoon before in the Cairo neighborhood where she has lived for more than two years. While shopping, she started speaking to two young men who were hanging around outside the cafe, asking them âif they happen to know anyone who may have lost his jobâ and âwould be willing to speak with me about it.â Then, she said, the cafe owner âinterfered and took over (very bossy) and asked me what I was looking for. He said, âI will help you to find someone, a good one you could speak to.' â Then, she continued,
he asked for my passport and my press card, and I - stupidly enough - gave him my passport and said that I had only my press card from last year with me, because I wasn't planning on doing an interview that late afternoon, but I just bumped into a group of boys that might be interesting to speak with. (They seemed so bored⦠A lot of unemployed hide, out of shame.)
So he took both, offered me a drink in the cafe, and then I asked for my passport back and he refused. From then, I knew it was like a trap.
I said, âI want it back, really.â Then he started to say: âIt is very inappropriate that one makes journalistic stories about Egypt now. If you consider the current circumstances in Egypt, you cannot write about it. You have to stop your work.â
He didn't want to give me my passport. He said the police will come. But they didn't show up, so he said we are going to the police - him, his wife and me. He and his wife were, by the way, staring at me like crazy, like I was a real spy both of them had just revealed.
It was obvious for me then that he, like many other Egyptians, is so scared for some bad news to be shown to the world - after all, it is a shame culture. So what he did was to stop me working, and then he made up a whole lot of extra stuff, together with two of the four police officers. One âgood guyâ officer told me: âYou should never have given your passport to him. Then you would have been at home already.â
As The Associated Press's Cairo correspondent Sarah El Deeb reported, âAn official in the state prosecutor's office last month encouraged citizens to arrest lawbreakers and hand them to the police, setting off a political storm at a time when reports of vigilantism were already on the rise.â
Ms. Netjes said the âscary thingâ was that the citizens who arrested her seemed so glad to take on police powers. The cafe owner âwas so excited to cause me trouble and so proud he handed over a âdanger,' â she said. âHe said all the time, âI fear for this country.' â
The fear that foreign powers want to destabilize Egypt âis a national disease here,â Ms. Netjes said.
Her arrest came 10 months after a series of public service announcements broadcast on Egyptian state television stoked xenophobia. One ad in that campaign specifically warned that foreign visitors who strike up conversations with young Egyptians about the nation's problems might be spies seeking to undermine the government by fomenting unrest.
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As The Lede reported last year, that ad was eventually withdrawn, in part because of fears that demonizing foreign visitors on state television might not be good for the tourist industry the Egyptian economy relies upon so heavily.
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