AFP/Cairo

As the new academic term began in Egypt, riot police were standing guard at Cairo’s universities to quash any repeat of Islamist-led protests that turned campuses nationwide into battlefields.
The authorities have tightened security at leading universities across the country—the last bastions of protests backing ousted Islamist president Mohamed Mursi after a nationwide government crackdown crushed his supporters, leaving hundreds dead and thousands jailed.
More than a dozen students were killed in the academic year that ended in April, as pro-Mursi students fought pitched battles with security forces after the Islamist was ousted in July 2013 by then-army chief and now President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi.
Universities echoed with slogans like “Sisi is a killer!” as pro-Mursi students threw rocks at teargas-firing policemen.
Today, the newly painted buildings of the prestigious Al Azhar University and Cairo University are surrounded by tall metal fences, with private security guards checking students’ identities as they pass through metal detectors.
The new security measures ban all partisan activities on campuses and university officials are allowed to expel disruptive students.
The academic year that started on October 11 has already got off to a violent start, with clashes in universities in Cairo and Alexandria.
One student died yesterday from wounds suffered in clashes with police on October 14 at Alexandria University, a health official told reporters.  
Omar Abdel Wahab is the first student to have died in clashes since the new school year began.
Rights group Amnesty International said Egyptian security forces used “excessive force” in quelling protests at Alexandria University, injuring dozens of protesting students.
At least 110 students have also been arrested, many of them in pre-dawn raids at their homes last week, Human Rights Watch said.
The interior ministry said five universities saw protests a day after the new school year started, including at Al Azhar and Cairo University, where protesters destroyed metal detectors.
Several students AFP approached at Al Azhar refused to comment, while some at Cairo University offered only brief remarks—clearly reflecting the tension on the two campuses.
“Last year was a mess, with teargas being fired inside the university. But now there are much fewer protests and it’s much safer,” said Noha Ezz al-Arab, a third-year English literature student, as she waited to pass through a metal detector at the gate of Cairo University.
Student leaders fear the new security measures could affect their overall campus activism.
“We hope the new regulations will not limit freedoms and non-partisan political activities on campuses,” said Ahmed Khalaf, a member of the Cairo University Student Union.
Students also complained that the new restrictions are curbing their movement on campuses.
“They stopped me from entering, saying that engineering students are not allowed” inside Cairo University’s main campus, said Hossam Khalid, whose faculty is located outside the main university grounds.
“They probably think we are terrorists.”  Students backing Mursi say they are undeterred by the new security measures.
“We were expecting these measures, but they will not affect our movement and we will take extra precautions,” said Youssef Salhen, spokesman for Students Against the Coup, a pro-Mursi group blamed for most of the campus violence last year.
“If our protests are not more frequent than last year, they will definitely not be less. Protests can’t be stopped inside universities because universities are meeting grounds for youth, especially given the protest law.”
Egypt’s authorities in November 2013 adopted a law that bans all demonstrations except those authorised by the police.





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