Egyptian Canadian Coalition for DemocracyThe Egyptian Canadian Coalition for Democracy (ECCD) will be present in the Peoples' Social Form in a workshop to discuss People Rights Vs Military Dictatorship

What Arab spring brought to Egypt? Is it Democracy or Military Coup?
Friday August 22 at 2:45 p.m. at the University of Ottawa LMX Room 121


More can be found in the program and on the PSF: http://www.peoplessocialforum.org
Schedule: Click here

Our guest speakers will be:

Roger Annis, writer and antiwar activist in Vancouver. He has written extensively on events in Egypt during the past year for such publications as Truthout, Rabble.ca and website 'A Socialist in Canada'. عنوان البريد الإلكتروني هذا محمي من روبوتات السبام. يجب عليك تفعيل الجافاسكربت لرؤيته.

Ovide Bastien: Author and educator. Lived in Chile through the dark years of General Pinochet. Presently managing on a volunteer basis North South Studies development projects in Nicaragua. Recently, published an ebook version of Chili: le coup divin and of Chile: Underside of Economic عنوان البريد الإلكتروني هذا محمي من روبوتات السبام. يجب عليك تفعيل الجافاسكربت لرؤيته.

Mohamed S. Kamel: Freelance writer, editor of http://forafreeegypt.blogspot.com/, co-founder, member of the executive committee and spokesperson of The Egyptian Revolutionary Council (ERC), co-founder of the Egyptian Canadian Coalition for Democracy (ECCD-CECD). He is also member of several civil society organizations, among them Quebec Antiwar movement “Échec à la Guerre”, and Coalition for Justice and Peace in Palestine (CJPP). Professionally, he is an engineer, LEED Green Associate and certified project manager. عنوان البريد الإلكتروني هذا محمي من روبوتات السبام. يجب عليك تفعيل الجافاسكربت لرؤيته. and @mskamel


Background Information
On June 30 2013, exactly one year after Mohamed Morsi was democratically elected as president, large numbers of disenchanted people gathered in Tahrir square demanding the departure of Morsi. Three days later, General Abdel Fattah El-Sisi, at the head of the armed forces forcefully deposed Morsi under the pretext of responding to ‘the call of the people’.
Since then, a brutal wide spread repression has gripped Egypt following a campaign to eliminate all opposition culminating in the massacres of Rabaa and Al-Nahda squares where supporters of Mohamed Morsi were camping (Aug14 2013). Canada and the West are turning a blind eye with the often mentioned excuse that better achieve ‘stability’ under a military dictatorship.
During this session, we will probe the issue of human rights versus ‘stability’. What have we learned from a similar situation; the coup of General Pinochet in Chile (1973)
Should we, in Canada be concerned? If so, what should our government do? What about our civil society?

We request That the government of Canada:

  • Demand the immediate and unconditional release of journalist Mohamed Fahmy, and Khaled Al-Qazzaz, permanent resident, father of four young Canadian daughters.
  • Demand an independent investigation in the shooting of Amr Mohamed Kassem, permanent resident, father of an infant Canadian daughter, killed during a peaceful protest in Alexandria.
  • Grant a special passport (diplomatic status) to Canadian journalists covering events in Egypt.
  • Refrain from selling armament and or ammunition to the Egyptian police or army.
  • Bar Egyptian officials implicated in killing protesters or human right abuses (according to Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International) from entry.
  • Monitor closely the human rights situation in Egypt and denounce abuses in accordance with international treaties signed by Canada.
  • Appoint a liaison person with Egyptian Canadian Coalition for Democracy for consultations


Join us in our struggle against the military dictatorship in Egypt.

Show your solidarity with Egyptians against the coup

The Egyptian Canadian Coalition for Democracy

About ECCDEgyptian Canadian Coalition for Democracy (ECCD) is a politically independent, non-affiliated pan Canadian organization with chapters in Ottawa, Montreal, Toronto, Quebec City, Hamilton, Winnipeg, Regina, Calgary, Vancouver, Kingston, and St. John, which advocates for democracy and human rights in Egypt.

For more information:
www.eccd.ca
عنوان البريد الإلكتروني هذا محمي من روبوتات السبام. يجب عليك تفعيل الجافاسكربت لرؤيته.

Samaa Elibyari: عنوان البريد الإلكتروني هذا محمي من روبوتات السبام. يجب عليك تفعيل الجافاسكربت لرؤيته.
Ahmed Abdel Kader: عنوان البريد الإلكتروني هذا محمي من روبوتات السبام. يجب عليك تفعيل الجافاسكربت لرؤيته. 514-928-8887

Egyptian Canadian Coalition for Democracyبيان التحالف عن تشكيل ((المجلس الثوري المصري))

8 أغسطس 2014
أوتوا

 يعرب ((تحالف المصريين الكنديين من أجل الديمقراطية)) عن تثمينه لجهود المشاركين في إجتماع أغسطس 2014 في مدينة إسطنبول بتركيا. إن انشاء المجلس الثوري المصري يعد معلماً مهماً على درب نضال مواطنينا ضد النظام العسكري المستبد الذي أطاح بالرئيس محمد مرسي، أول رئيس مصري ينتخب ديمقراطياً.

إن التحالف على ثقة بان المجلس الوليد سوف يلعب دوراً بارزاً في توحيد جهود المعارضة المتبنية لمباديء ثورة 25 يناير، جهاتاً وأفراداً، على إختلاف انتماءاتهم السياسية، كما ذكر محمد كامل المتحدث باسم المجلس الثوري المصري وأحد الموسيسن لـ((تحالف المصريين الكنديين من أجل الديمقراطية)).

كما أن ((تحالف المصريين الكنديين من أجل الديمقراطية)) يعلن عن استبشاره بمشاركة الأطياف السياسية المختلفة وتنوع خبرات ومؤهلات المشاركين فضلاً عن ما أبدوه من علو همة. ومما زاد هذا الاستبشار تلقي رموز المعارضة داخل وخارج مصر لتدشين المجلس بالمباركة والترحاب. إن ((تحالف المصريين الكنديين من أجل الديمقراطية)) يستشرف للمجلس الوليد دوراً فعالا ومهماً في توحيد جهود المعارضة على الساحة الدولية. والتحالف هنا يعلن دعمه لآهداف ومبادئ المجلس ويتطلع الى لعب دور فعالٍ في إستكمال الياته وتحقيق اهدافه.

 

 عن التحالف: ((تحالف المصريين الكنديين من أجل الديمقراطية)) هو منظمة سياسية كندية مستقلة غير منتسبة لأي فكر ولها فروع في مدن أوتوا، مونتريال، تورونتو، مدينة كويبك، هاملتون، وينيبيج، ريجينا، كالجاري، فانكوفر، كنجستون، و سانت جون، تدافع عن الديمقراطية و حقوق الإنسان بمصر.

 من أجل المزيد من المعلومات:

 www.eccd.ca
عنوان البريد الإلكتروني هذا محمي من روبوتات السبام. يجب عليك تفعيل الجافاسكربت لرؤيته.
محمد كامل: +15148639202
سماء الإبياري: +15142888609

Egyptian Canadian Coalition for DemocracyCommemorating the Massacres of Peaceful Protesters to the Military Coup in Egypt: 
Rabaa and El-Nahda squares August 14 2013, Nasr City July 27 2013

August 7 2014
Ottawa

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Egyptian Canadian Coalition for Democracy (ECCD) is holding a series of events to honour those who lost their lives while peacefully camping in two open squares to protest the military take-over of President Mohamed Morsi and his government under the orders of Field Marshal Abdel Fattah El-Sissi, July 3rd 2013.

Egyptian Canadian Coalition for Democracy also honours the journalists who were deliberately targeted while covering the tragic events unfolding at Rabae and El-Nahda camps and other protests.

List of events commemorating Resilience Day, August 14th 2013:
Toronto
When: Saturday August 16th, 2:00 pm -5:00 pm
Where: Dundas Square, Toronto, (Yonge and Dundas)
Contact Person: Yasmeen Youssef (647-287-5010)

Vancouver
When: Saturday August 9th, 7:30 pm – 9:30 pm, Candle Vigil
Where: Vancouver Art Gallery
Contact Person: Tarek Ramadan (604-721-4555)

Calgary
When: Thursday August 14th, 6:00 pm-9:00 pm
Where: Calgary City Hall, 800 Macleod Trail Southeast
Event Link: https://www.facebook.com/events/440557646086910/
Contact Person: Mohamed Hassanin (403-470-3687)

Ottawa
When: Thursday, August 14, 4:00pm - 8:00pm
Where: Andrew Haydon Park, 3169 Carling Avenue, (Stage) 4:00pm - 8:00pm
Event Link: https://www.facebook.com/events/243588912518653/
Contact Person: Sherif ElKholy (613-295-3994)

Montreal
When: Friday August 15th, 5:30 pm
Where: Rally from Place Emilie Gamelin, Montréal, Corner Berri & Maisonneuve - Metro Berri UQAM to Old Port of Montreal at 

When: Sunday August 17th, 3:00 pm
Where: Rally from Israeli Consulate to Egyptian Consulate in Montreal, at 3:00 pm

Contact Person: Ashraf Fouad (514-984-3235)

 

 

Background Information
On June 30 2013, exactly one year after Mohamed Morsi was democratically elected as president, large numbers of disenchanted people gathered in Tahrir square demanding the departure of Morsi. Three days later, General Abdel Fattah El-Sisi, at the head of the armed forces forcefully deposed Morsi under the pretext of responding to the call of the people.
Supporters of the deposed president replicated by occupying two squares — Rabaa al-Adawiya in Nasr city, Cario and al-Nahda in Giza — to protest his ouster, vowing to remain until Morsi was reinstated.
On July 27, 2013 about 100 protesters gathered in Nasr City, were mowed down by special police forces under the pretext that they were attacking police headquarters. Political analyst Larbi Sadiqi writes ‘July 27, 2013 will go down in the annals of history as an infamous day not dissimilar to June 4, 1989, when the Chinese government used disproportionate force in Tiananmen Square, snuffing out a peaceful protest with violence’. And he rightly predicted that this was just the beginning as Internal and external reconciliation attempts failed to resolve the crisis peacefully.
On 14 August 2013 Egyptian security forces raided the two camps of protesters in what was described by Human Rights Watch as the most serious incident of mass unlawful killings in modern Egyptian history.
By 8:00 the smaller Al-Nahda camp — near Cairo University in Giza — was cleared of protesters, but it took about 12 hours for police to take control of the main sit-in site near the Rabaa al-Adawiya Mosque that has served as the epicenter of the pro-Morsi campaign. The police in riot gear used tear gas, rubber bullets, birdshot and live ammunition to disperse the protesters while being supported by bulldozers to clear barricades and covered by armored vehicles and snipers on rooftops.
According to the Egyptian Health Ministry, 638 people were killed on 14 August, of which 595 were civilians and 43 police officers, with at least 3,994 injured. The Muslim Brotherhood and National Coalition for Supporting Legitimacy (NCSL) claimed that number of deaths from the Rabaa al-Adawiya Mosque sit-in alone at some 2,600.
Among the dead was Asmaa, 17 the daughter of Mohamed el-Beltagy, a prominent figure of the Muslim Brotherhood.
Egyptian state television aired images purporting to show weapons confiscated from the sit-in protester's camps, including automatic rifles and thousands of rounds of ammunition. However, various journalists and news agencies discredited these claims as multiple independent journalists had visited and inspected the camps for weapons prior to the attacks, finding none of the purported weapons caches.
During the dispersal, journalists covering the event were targeted. According to the Committee to Protect Journalists, it was the deadliest day for journalists in Egypt since the organization began keeping records in 1992. Veteran Sky News camera operator Michael Deane, 61, was killed although he was wearing a helmet that clearly identified him as a journalist. Also killed was Egyptian journalist Habiba Ahmed Abd Elaziz, 26, working for Gulf News publication XPRESS newspaper,and Egyptian reporter Ahmed Abdel Gawad, who was with the Al-Akhbar state-run newspaper and was an editorial manager for the Muslim Brotherhood television satellite channel Misr 25, as well as Rassd News Network (RNN) photojournalist Mosab El-Shami. Among the journalists most seriously injured were Al-Wataneditor Tariq Abbas, who was shot in the face, and Al-Masry Al-Youm photojournalist Alaa al-Qamhawy, who was shot in the foot. Among the detained journalists were Al-Jazeera journalist Abdullah al-Shami and Al Jazeera Media Network's Mubasher Misr photographers Emad Eddin Al-Sayed and Abdulrahman Al-Mowahhed-Bellah, and Freedom and Justice Party (Egypt) journalist Radwa Al-Selawi.
On 10 December 2013, thirteen Egyptian and international human rights organizations urged Cairo's interim authorities to probe the mass killing of protesters in the capital on 14 August. To this day, there has been no independent investigation.

References:
"Egypt: Security Forces Used Excessive Lethal Force". Human Rights Watch. 19 August 2013. Retrieved 23 August 2013.
"Global condemnation of Egypt crackdown". Al Jazeera. 15 August 2013. Retrieved 7 September 2013
"Charred bodies lie in Cairo mosque, unrecognized by Egyptian state". Al-Ahram. 15 August 2013. Archived from the original on 19 August 2013. Retrieved 19 August 2013.

More Information:
Nasr City: El Sisi's Tiananmen?
Abdel Fattah El Sisi, the chief of the Egyptian military, has made two costly miscalculations By Larbi Sadiki.
Last Modified: 28 Jul 2013 15:18
http://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/opinion/2013/07/2013728115713723250.html


Who is Egypt Rabaa-Al-Adwaya
By Ramsy Baroudi
http://english.alarabiya.net/en/views/news/middle-east/2013/08/24/Who-is-Egypt-s-Rabaa-al-Adawiya-.html

 

The Egyptian Canadian Coalition for Democracy

About ECCDEgyptian Canadian Coalition for Democracy (ECCD) is a politically independent, non-affiliated pan Canadian organization with chapters in Ottawa, Montreal, Toronto, Quebec City, Hamilton, Winnipeg, Regina, Calgary, Vancouver, Kingston, and St. John, which advocates for democracy and human rights in Egypt.

For more information:
www.eccd.ca
عنوان البريد الإلكتروني هذا محمي من روبوتات السبام. يجب عليك تفعيل الجافاسكربت لرؤيته.
Samaa Elibyari: +1 (514) 288-8609
Ehab Lotayef: +1 (514) 941-9792

  Resilience Day - August 14th
يوم الصمود
لنجعل يوم الرابع عشر من أغسطس من كل عام "يوم الصمود"

نداء من التحالف المصري الكندي من اجل الديموقراطية 


شهد يوم الرابع عشر من اغسطس ٢٠١٣ مذبحة ميدان رابعه العدويه والتى تُعد بحق أبشع مذبحه فى تاريخ مصر المعاصر.  فى هذا اليوم أظهر أبناء هذا الشعب المصري شجاعه وصمود منقطع النظير فى وجه وحشية وإجرام قوات الأنقلاب.  

هذه دعوه لكل المصريين لجعل يوم الرابع عشر من أغسطس من كل عام "يوم الصمود" ، يوم نتذكر فيه الدماء الغاليه التى أُريقت فى لا لشئ الا لقول كلمة حق.

المصريون فى جميع أنحاء العالم مدعوون لأقامة تظاهرات وفعاليات للفت أنظار العالم لتلك الجريمه البشعه ولجعل ذكراها تعيش فى ضمير الانسانية الى الابد
.

التحالف المصري الكندي من اجل الديموقراطية 
 

Egyptian Canadian Coalition for DemocracyECCD Statement on the Anniversary of Egypt's Bloody Coup of July 2013

July 2 2014
Ottawa

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

July 3rd marks the first anniversary of the military coup that overthrew the democratically elected Egyptian president, Mohamed Morsi. The past year has been a nightmare, thousands died in the Rabaa and Alnadha massacres, the worst incidents of repressive violence in modern Egyptian history. Dissent has been crushed, including mass killings, jailing of journalists, rape and torture of detainees, and mass death sentencing against regime opponents. Abdel Fatah el-Sisi, the coup leader, stepped down from his post as the minister of defense and installed himself as president in an ‘election’ where he received 97 per cent of the low voter turnout.

Canadian Citizen Mohamed Fahmy received a seven year sentence for being Aljazeera Bureau Chief for three months prior to his unlawful imprisonment. The verdict and the bizarre trial that preceded it sparked international outrage, while Canada stayed silent. Fahmy chose not to appeal his verdict as it would be entertaining “ their theatrical performance aka "trial", as he recently tweeted. Khaled Al-Qazzaz, Canadian resident and husband of Canadian born wife Sarah Attia, has been jailed without a charge for a full year.

Canada was the first major western country to call what happened in Egypt on July 3rd 2013 a coup. Shortly after, and in an incredible about face, the Conservative government refused to condemn the anti-democratic coup in Egypt. Mr. Baird, Canada’s foreign minister, visited Egypt prior to the staged presidential election. "Mr. Baird endorsed an illegitimate regime of terror", said Samaa Elibyari, a member of the Egyptian Canadian Coalition for Democracy (ECCD). Incredibly Canada became one of the first Western countries to support El-Sisi’s self-installation to presidency and described it as “a key step along Egypt’s path to democracy.”, as Minister Baird commented on the sham presidential election.

“The Conservative government has betrayed its long standing commitment to supporting democracy, human rights, and freedom of the press”, said Ehab Lotayef, the Chairman of ECCD. Mr. Baird has ignored all ECCD requests for a meeting to disucuss Canada’s foreign policy in Egypt, a position that Mr. Lotayef perceives to “undermine Canadian citizens’ right to directly communicate their concerns to their elected officials.”

On the anniversary of the bloodiest coup in Egypt’s history, The Egyptian Canadian Coalition for Democracy calls upon the Conservative government and our elected officials to discontinue endorsing general El-sisi and the Military Junta’s regime of terror. ECCD calls upon the government to forcefully demand an immediate restoration of true civilian democracy, the revocation of all politically motivated jail sentences, and the immediate release of Mohamed Fahmy, Khaled Al-Qazzaz, and all the Egyptian and foreign nationals unlawfully jailed in the most horrific conditions in Egyptian prisons. 

 

The Egyptian Canadian Coalition for Democracy

About ECCDEgyptian Canadian Coalition for Democracy (ECCD) is a politically independent, non-affiliated pan Canadian organization with chapters in Ottawa, Montreal, Toronto, Quebec City, Hamilton, Winnipeg, Regina, Calgary, Vancouver, Kingston, and St. John, which advocates for democracy and human rights in Egypt.

For more information:
www.eccd.ca
عنوان البريد الإلكتروني هذا محمي من روبوتات السبام. يجب عليك تفعيل الجافاسكربت لرؤيته.
Samaa Elibyari: +1 (514) 288-8609
Ehab Lotayef: +1 (514) 941-9792