The Israeli embassy protest was one of the focal struggles on Egypt’s “Friday of correcting the path” which took a serious turn when a group of protesters broke into the apartment building housing the embassy and threw scores of documents from the window.
Demonstrators gathered in the streets, trying to collect the flying papers, some of which are reported to contain sensitive information, before central security forces bombarded them with tear gas.
Later on, the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces (SCAF) and Prime Minister 'Isām Sharaf’s cabinet reactivated the emergency law that had been suspended in the wake of the 18-day uprising.
The GCHR said re-activating the emergency law constitutes a step back on the road to progress spurred on by the events of 25 January.
The committee also lamented the decision to hold exceptional trials, arguing Egypt would thus slide back into the draconian order which stifled the country for several decades.
“No for retreating from freedom and for the return of the loathsome emergency law,” reads a statement distributed by the committee.
The emergency law was frequently criticized during the tenure of toppled President Husnī Mubārak because it gave unfettered authorities to the police.
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[Reviewer's note: a similar story was covered in al-Misrī al-Yawm, September 12, 2011.]