"تم القبض على مع ثلاثة آخرين من ميدان التحرير الساعة 4 ظهرا يوم الأربعاء 26 يناير 2011، ووضعنا في عربة ترحيلات مع مجموعة من 30 متظاهر تم تعرضهم للاعتداء العنيف ومعظمهم تم القبض عليهم من أمام دار القضاء العالي.
القسم رفض استلامنا، فذهبوا بنا إلى معسكر للأمن المركزي بمعسكر السلام (طريق مصر-إسماعلية)، وأخذوا بياناتنا، ثم دخلنا زنزانة مساحتها 4x4 متر، تم الإبقاء علينا لمدة ساعتين، ثم تم التحقيق معنا من قبل أمن الدولة .
ثم تم ضمنا إلى مجموعة أخرى من المقبوض عليهم، كنا حوالي 300، تم تقسيمنا إلى مجموعتين، 50 شخص من النشطاء المعروفين وذوي التاريخ السياسي من ضمنهم محمد واكد وأمين اسكندر، والباقي حوالي 250 شخص من المتظاهرين والنشطاء غير المعروفين، وتلك المجموعة أعلنت الإضراب عن الطعام منذ الخامسة عصر هذا اليوم حتى يتم الإفراج عنهم، وان لم يفرج عنهم بحلول الغد سيقومون بالإضراب عن المياه أيضا.
من معسكر الأمن المركزي بمعسكر السلام أيضا تم الإفراج عن 20 متظاهر أمس من القاصرين تحت 18 سنة أو من مزدوجي الجنسية. واليوم صباحا أفرجوا عن حوالي 20-30 متظاهر ممن لديهم امتحانات.
بعض المقبوض عليهم من مظاهرات أمس كانوا مصابين بجروح شديدة نتيجة تعرضهم لاعتداءات شديدة العنف علي ايدي افارد الامن، تم علاجهم علاجات خفيفة بالمعسكر، ثم تم تجميعهم وترحيلهم من المعسكر ولا أحد يعلم أين هم الآن."
Testimony from a demonstrator released from the Salaam Camp
I was arrested with three others from Tahrir Square at 4 pm on Wednesday, January 26, 2011, and put in a police deportation van with a group of 30 demonstrators who were subjected to violent assault and beating, and most of them have been arrested in front of the Supreme Court.
The police station refused to receive us, so they took us to Salaam Central Security Camp (located in Cairo-Isamlia road) and took our statements, and then let us into a 4x4 meters prison cell, where we have been retained for two hours, then interrogated by state security.
Then we joined another group of arrested protesters, we were about 300, they divided the whole 300 protesters into two groups, 50 people of known activists and those with political history, including Muhammad and Amin Iskander, and the rest, about 250 people who are non-activists or not well-known activists. The latter group started an open hunger strike since 5 pm on Wednesday until they are release. They announced that if they weren't released by tomorrow, they will stop drinking water as well.
20 arrested demonstrators were released yesterday from the Central Security Salaam Camp, mostly minors or of dual nationality. This morning other 20-30 arrested were released for having exams.
Some of the arrested who arrived to the camp yesterday were severely wounded as a result of the severe violence by the security forces. They were offered light treatments at the camp, and then deported and no one knows where they are now.
I was arrested with three others from Tahrir Square at 4 pm on Wednesday, January 26, 2011, and put in a police deportation van with a group of 30 demonstrators who were subjected to violent assault and beating, and most of them have been arrested in front of the Supreme Court.
The police station refused to receive us, so they took us to Salaam Central Security Camp (located in Cairo-Isamlia road) and took our statements, and then let us into a 4x4 meters prison cell, where we have been retained for two hours, then interrogated by state security.
Then we joined another group of arrested protesters, we were about 300, they divided the whole 300 protesters into two groups, 50 people of known activists and those with political history, including Muhammad and Amin Iskander, and the rest, about 250 people who are non-activists or not well-known activists. The latter group started an open hunger strike since 5 pm on Wednesday until they are release. They announced that if they weren't released by tomorrow, they will stop drinking water as well.
20 arrested demonstrators were released yesterday from the Central Security Salaam Camp, mostly minors or of dual nationality. This morning other 20-30 arrested were released for having exams.
Some of the arrested who arrived to the camp yesterday were severely wounded as a result of the severe violence by the security forces. They were offered light treatments at the camp, and then deported and no one knows where they are now.