When will the government of Egypt put  an end to police brutality and utter disregard for human dignity and  security of persons? Today, I read the story of a 28-year-old Egyptian  who was tortured to death by plain-clothes Egyptian security forces in  the City of Alexandria, also known as the "Pearl of the Mediterranean".  His name was Khaled Mohammed Said.
Although there are  varying accounts of his death, all accounts point to the fact that  Khaled Mohammed Said was killed in a cyber cafe in the city of  Alexandria.
According to Amnesty International, the killing took place  on 6 June 2010. Khaled was brutally beaten by two plain-clothes security  forces in a cyber cafe in Alexandria. He was later dragged out of the  cyber cafe, and tortured to death. Police later told his relatives that  he died from an overdose of narcotics.
Other sources  reveal that Khaled was brutalised in the full glare of shocked  eyewitnesses.
An investigation into the death of Khaled  Mohammed Said is on-going, and Amnesty International has called on the  government to move quickly to bring the perpetrators of this brutal  killing to justice. Failure to carry out a thorough investigation will  send a wrong message to perpetrators of such barbarism and gross  disrespect for human life.
Khaled Mohammed Said is, unfortunately,  another casualty of Egyptian police brutality. It remains to be seen  whether the government of Egypt will end the culture of impunity enjoyed  by abusive Egyptian state agents - many of whom abuse the people they  should protect. Impunity can be brought to an end by cracking down on the two security  forces who engineered the premature death of an unsuspecting citizen -  Khaled Mohammed Said.
Shocking images of the battered corpse of Khaled Mohammed Said have surfaced, and can be viewed, here. Viewer discretion is advised.
Egypt  clearly has an appalling human rights record.
By the way, Abdel Kareem Nabil Suleiman, a young human rights activist, and many other activists are  still locked away in Egyptian jails.
Olly, Juli: Questa domenica
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Remarks: For good or ill, this is the #1 song in Italy right now, as of 
November 2nd 2025, according to both Billboard and Spotify. It came out at 
the end ...
1 day ago

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