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Freedom Collection

Interviews with Sally Sami

Interviewed January 5, 2011

I woke up one morning, and I was like, “Egypt is going to go through change. I don´t want to be in London when it happens. I want to be back.” Everyone thought I was crazy. “Everyone´s trying to leave the country. You´re the one who wants to come back.” I was like, “Yeah. I´m coming back.” To be honest, I didn´t expect the revolution would start. I just—[President Hosni] Mubarak was going to die.

The people would not accept Gamal [Gamal Mubarak, Hosni Mubarak’s younger son, was widely viewed as being groomed to succeed his father in office.] to come, so this would be the beginning of the change. So I came back in early September last year [2010] to work with the Cairo Institute for Human Rights Studies with Bahey el-din Hassan. And we had a big project on the elections. We were media monitoring the elections 2010 as part of a coalition.

So I was very involved with what´s happening with the 2010 elections. We were the only coalition that asked the president to dissolve the parliament. After the results, after everything, because, you know, the whole– and from the very beginning, we were saying the environment was not– this is not an environment to allow for free will elections. The will of the Egyptians were being forged. Then the whole atrocity and, you know, the 2010 elections.

Yes, and so that was early January, I think. But at that time, we were, holding so many interviews about this and people were getting angrier and angrier. And Tunis was happening at the same time, I think. Tunis was starting. And I remember—Sidi Bouzid [The city where protests began that sparked the Tunisian Revolution.] what´s– Saeed, [Mohamed Bouazizi, a Tunisian street vendor, set himself on fire on December 17,2010 in protest. His death mobilized Tunisians against the dictatorship.] when he burned himself, I saw it on al-Jazeera. I also with my human rights work, I worked on Tunisia a lot. I felt these protests were different, also. It was interesting.