Tosson evictees demonstrate in front of Agriculture Ministry

Sarah Carr
7 Min Read

CAIRO: Around 70 people forcibly evicted from their homes in Alexandria protested outside the Ministry of Agriculture on Thursday, demanding they be given the right to buy the land they have been living on for between five and 10 years.

On the morning of May 1, 2008, central security trucks surrounded Tosson, home to some 500 families, and proceeded to use teargas and police dogs to force some of the inhabitants out of their homes, before the houses were razed to the ground.

Protestors told Daily News Egypt that they were given no prior notice of the eviction.

“I told a policeman, ‘I have three children and no source of income. What do you expect me to do?’ He said, ‘I don’t care, I’m going to put you in the street,’ Samia Basheer told Daily News Egypt.

Central security troops then returned on May 19, 2008, and used the same techniques to remove other residents. Lawyer Mohamed Ramadan told

Daily News Egypt that 48 security trucks were used during the operation.A mobile phone video taken after the eviction shows residents sitting in front of piles of rubble and the possessions they managed to salvage from their destroyed homes.

A total of 52 people were arrested during the course of the evictions.

Nine people were charged with obstructing the implementation of the eviction order but were cleared of these charges by the public prosecution office.

Twenty-two others were accused of damage to, and theft of, public property, illegal assembly of more than five people, and chanting anti-police slogans. But Ramadan claims that they were chanting ‘laa illaha illa Allah’ (There is no God but God).

On the May 19, a total of 19 people were arrested and charged with preventing a public official from carrying out his duties as well as the illegal assembly of more than five people. Ramadan told Daily News Egypt that they were held for several days before being released.

Mohamed Ahmed, an engineer who lived in Tosson told Daily News Egypt that these are trumped up charges.

“The police lit fires on the ground and photographed them in order to substantiate the fabricated charges against us, Ahmed said.

Residents of Tosson built their homes there 10 years ago.

Ramadan told Daily News Egypt that the land is officially categorized as agricultural reform land and belongs to the state.

He said, however, that under Law 148 (2006) inhabitants of such land have the right to buy it from the state – a right which the protestors outside the Ministry of Agriculture were invoking on Thursday.

Ahmed also questioned why the state provided them with services if they were supposedly on the land illegally.

“The state provided electricity, water, telephone lines and installed a sewage system and now claims that this is Agricultural Reform land and that we have no right to be here. It’s illogical, Ahmed said.

“We just want to enter into negotiations with the government in order to buy our land and live on it again, Abdallah Abdel Razeq Abdallah told Daily News Egypt.

The case has been transferred by the State Security Prosecution Office to the State Commissioning Body. Ramadan says that residents object to this because it could take years for the body to issue a ruling and they desperately need a fast resolution.

Mohamed Zeitoun worked as a laborer in Kuwait for 10 years before returning with his savings to Egypt.

“I put all my money in the house I built on this land, and now I have nothing. Am I meant to start again?

Ahmed told Daily News Egypt that some 100 people remain in Tosson but that the authorities have cut off electricity and water to drive them out.

Evicted residents say that they are prevented from entering the site of their destroyed homes by a private security firm, Care Services which patrols the area.

Ramadan alleges that a contract exists between the company and the governorate of Alexandria.

While it is unclear why residents of Tosson have been evicted, and why they have so far not been offered the land to buy, Al-Masry Al-Youm newspaper reported Wednesday that the area will be used for the construction of housing forming part of the Mubarak Youth Housing Scheme.

Residents say that there is housing as part of this Scheme next to Tosson, but that it is empty.

An activist from Alexandria who requested anonymity told Daily News Egypt that he suspects the land has been seized for business interests.

He explained that the area in which Tosson is located has undergone a process of gentrification and has increased in value.

Forced, often violent, evictions are a routine occurrence in Egypt, in violation of its obligations under international law to consult with residents before evictions, to evict them without using violence and to provide them with alternative housing.

“How can the state use teargas against us? Are we their enemies? Am I not a citizen of this country? schoolteacher Nagwa Farouq said.

“We haven’t asked the state for anything except that they leave us be. If I want to buy a house in Egypt, what am I supposed to do? Adverse possession is widespread in Egypt, she said.

“One of my sons said ‘I want to be a police officer when I grow up’. My other son said to him, ‘What, so you can destroy people’s houses and throw them in the street?’ This is how he sees his country. -Additional reporting by Tamim Elyan.

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Sarah Carr is a British-Egyptian journalist in Cairo. She blogs at www.inanities.org.
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