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Freedom Collection

Interviews with Sally Sami

Interviewed January 5, 2011

I´m Sally Sami. I´m turning 32 this year to my unliking. But I´ve been involved in the human rights field since 2001. I really don´t understand or remember why I got involved but there was something about injustice that I felt that needed to be fought against. I graduated from the American University in Cairo as studying political science, international relations, but I had a strong interest in human rights. I started working with several organizations in Cairo, mainly focusing on freedom of expression issues.

Then I traveled to London, where I stayed for three years working with Amnesty International as their regional campaign coordinator. And in 2010 the Khaled Saeed [Khaled Saeed was a young Egyptian who was beaten to death by Egyptian security forces in 2010. His death helped rally opposition to the Mubarak government.] case, I don´t know if people still remember him, which was a major public opinion case.

A young man beaten to death by police officers in Alexandria kind of sparked a movement that suddenly Egyptians are against torture really, physically. They´re going down to the streets calling for an end to torture and impunity. And that kind of encouraged me to come back to Cairo to be involved. I felt there was change coming. I felt I wanted to be part of it. I came back August 2010 to find my place again within the human rights movement in Egypt, after being away for three years.