Egyptian
President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi's speech on Wednesday was meant to
staunch uproar over the transfer of two islands to Saudi Arabia, but his
reprimand to an audience member ignited a furor over free speech. Parliamentarians,
ministers and senior editors were invited to the presidential palace,
where Sisi tried to reassure them that he had not sold the Red Sea
islands of Sanafir and Tiran. But
the impromptu, televised two-hour address lasted so long one MP had to
excuse himself to use the bathroom. At the end, he tried to ask a
question and was silenced by Sisi, who retorted: "I did not give
permission for anyone to speak." State
television severed live transmission immediately after the outburst,
which stunned viewers and set off a social media frenzy over the
encroachment on free expression in Sisi's Egypt. The
hashtag "speech does not need permission" trended on Twitter, with
Egyptians mocking the fact that Sisi had invited people to a debate in
which only he aired his views. "This
is a country, not a school and those are two islands not two cheese
sandwiches," tweeted one commentator, reflecting what some Egyptians see
as the government's casual handling of a sovereignty issue. Egyptian
media has been in uproar since the government announced on Saturday the
signing of a maritime demarcation accord that puts the uninhabited
islands in Saudi waters. Tiran and
Sanafir lie between Saudi Arabia and Egypt's Sinai peninsula, at the
narrow entrance to the Gulf of Aqaba leading to Jordan and Israel. Saudi
and Egyptian officials say they belong to the kingdom and were only
under Egyptian control because Saudi Arabia asked Egypt in 1950 to
protect them. "THE MAN WHO SOLD THE LAND" The furor has put Sisi, who once enjoyed widespread support, under renewed pressure. Once-fawning
newspaper editors no longer hide their disappointment as a crackdown on
dissent has spread from the Muslim Brotherhood to liberal and secular
activists. Critics say the
government has mishandled a series of crises from police abuses to an
investigation into the killing of an Italian student in Cairo. About
30 people protested outside the press syndicate as Sisi spoke, some of
them chanting "the man who sold the land should go". The
demarcation accord requires parliamentary ratification and many
Egyptians are furious that parliament was not consulted in advance of
the accord. Even the chairman of state-owned mass-circulation Al Ahram newspaper condemned the government's handling of the issue. "Tiran and
Sanafir... Egyptian forever," wrote Ahmed al-Naggar on his Facebook page
on Tuesday night, adding that he would publish a column on the topic
the next day. The column did not appear in Wednesday's newspaper. Though
he appeared calm and adopted an avuncular tone, Sisi's choice of words
suggested criticism had stung a leader once so popular bakeries sold
cakes emblazoned with his face. "I
brought you here to reassure you about the man you entrusted with your
land and honor. I did not take the issue personally ... Please let's not
talk about this issue again," he said. Mohamed
Koloub, the silenced MP, said he was not offended and Sisi had listened
to his question off air. "I asked how MPs can communicate more directly
and cooperate with the presidency," he told Reuters.
Sisi stirs uproar on free speech after Egypt transfers islands

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