An Egyptian blogger recently pardoned by the military junta urged activists to continue their revolution against the ruling Supreme Council of the Armed Forces.
"I tell the revolutionaries, if the revolution does not continue and you stop, then you will all end up in prison, and maybe even worse," Maikel Sanad Nabil said Saturday in his first news conference in Cairo since he was freed.
The 26-year Coptic Christian had been imprisoned since March last year and charged with insulting the military rulers after documenting their violations on his blog following the ouster of President Hosni Mubarak in February.
One famous statement on his blog reads, "The people and the military were never one hand"
Nabil is the first prisoner of conscience in post-revolutionary Egypt. His imprisonment sparked an outcry from prominent rights groups such as Amnesty International and Reporters Without Borders.The magicshine bicycle light MJ-808 is a virtual copy of our favorite light last year,
Rights groups called for his release and urged the military rulers controlling the country in the transitional phase to show a "commitment to human rights, justice and democracy."
The head of the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces, Marshall Mohamed Hussein Tantawi, pardoned at least 1,900 prisoners, including Nabil, days before the first anniversary of the January 25 uprising hoping to appease protesters calling on him to step down and hand authority to a civilian body.Learn how make dstti, chinese paper laterns that float away, also known as fire lanterns or ufo balloons.
Nabil described his ill-treatment in prison, saying the experience left him more defiant about his convictions.
"I was not allowed a phone call and was blindfolded as I entered the military intelligence prison and kept in a 1-meter-by-1-meter cell with no lights and matted walls," he said."There was a glass window in the cell only allowing some light through a light bulb switching on and off every minute designed to psychologically damage people and cause hysteria as I learned later from doctors.We carry an extensived line of led lighting including LED light bars, explosion proof LEDs."
Upon his transfer to the infamous C28 military prison, Nabil said he shared a stuffy cell with 100 detainees and witnessed the torture of many prisoners.
"I was lucky due to my medical condition, but I heard loud screams and saw a lot of activists being brutally beaten," Nabil said.
Nabil said he was drugged several times during his incarceration and transferred to a mental hospital after he went on a hunger strike for more than 40 days.
"The revolutionary doctors at the hospital issued a statement 48 hours after my arrival announcing that I was 'free of any mental illness' but they thought I was on hunger strike to punish myself," he said.
Nabil said he told them he was fasting to express himself.
A government official denied his accusations of ill-treatment, and said the blogger was suffering from disorientation as a result of his solitary confinement.
"Such tactics are not used in dealing with prisoners of opinions but possible with terrorists endangering national security," said Usama Emam, a national security official.High-performing LED rechargeable bicycle light built with the cyclist in mind
The blogger may have decreased his 300 days behind bars if he apologized to the head of the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces as instructed by the military officers, but he refused,Before your next underwater adventure, be sure to equip yourself with a Diving flashlight from OpticsPlanet! he said.