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Freedom Collection

Interviews with Namees Arnous

Interviewed August 3, 2012

I studied mass communication and journalism. I believe in freedom of expression. I started work as a TV reporter in one of the famous channel satellite in Egypt – independent channel, private channel; it’s not a state channel in 2006. I was a TV reporter for a very well-known talk show. Made reports about political issues and social issues, economic issues, everything in the talk show. And actually we haven’t independent media in Egypt. We haven’t – we hadn’t and we haven’t freedom of expression in Egypt.

And sometime when I decided to do something about the political situation and the people who don’t like the regime and suffer from the regime, suffer from the police, the management of my channel refused because of the relationship between the owner of this channel and the regime. But during the revolution, I was a demonstrator as individual citizen, Egyptian citizen. But my channel decided to be the side of the regime.

And they paid for girl to be on air and said the people on – in Tahrir Square, the guys and the girls and they boys, they out in Tahrir Square, were trained by the Mossad and were take money from U.S. and Europe to make all this issues in the streets. And I knew it’s not true, and I knew it’s someone who – someone in the channel – paid for her. And then I wrote on my Facebook and Twitter account, it’s not true what going on in El Mehwar channel. El Mehwar, it’s the name of my channel. And it’s – don’t believe them. I know the story; it’s not true story.

And then all the staff in my channel decided to attack me: You are an agency, you are taking money from foreign countries to do that, and so on. And then I decided to resign because we are – we were in the revolution, and you must choose. You will be with the regime, the dictatorship regime, or you will be with the streets, the people. I decided to be in the streets and Tahrir Square and left the channel because I respect myself.