The Washington Post - 13.03.2020

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A6 eZ re the washington post.friday, march 13 , 2020


last month by a Valentine’s Day
concert. A popular mahraganat
duo — Hassan Shakosh and
Omar Kamal — were performing
their catchy song “Bent El Ger-
an,” or “The neighbor’s girl” in
Arabic, whose lyrics include the
line, “If you b reak up with me ... I
drink alcohol and smoke hash-
ish.”
That prompted the nation’s
musicians syndicate, which is
aligned with the government, to
outlaw mahraganat music. The
group’s head, Hany Shaker, pub-
licly declared that such lyrics
were “promiscuous and immor-
al” and therefore prohibited. He
blamed mahraganat singers for
the “moral decline” of the coun-
try’s arts and music scene.
Mansour Hendy, an official at
the syndicate, said it had sent
requests to YouTube and Sound-
Cloud to pull down mahraganat
videos, adding that “all the con-
cerned authorities support the
decision.”
“We are trying to preserve the
traditions and values of a whole
nation,” said Hendy. “We are not
fighting against art. We are fight-
ing against this decadence.”
T he ban has evoked mixed
reactions. On a recent day, a
group of artists and singers were
chatting at the musicians syndi-
cate in downtown Cairo. On the
walls were black and white pho-
tos of Egypt’s most well-known
artists from the 1950s and 1960s,
including Umm Kulthum. Soon,
the conversation turned to mah-
raganat music.
“Mahraganat can never be
compared to classical,” said one
musician. “Music is meant to
soothe your soul. This music
makes your teeth crack.”
“Bika is a pillar of Egyptian
music,” another a rtist interjected
with a laugh, eliciting grimaces
and scorn around the room.
Two days later, the debate was
repeated inside a cafe in Al-De-
keela, where young men sipped
coffee and smoked hookahs.
Mohammad Ibrahim, a 23-
year-old fan of Bika’s, jumped to
his defense. “Everyone my age
likes these songs,” he said. “They
speak about our neighborhood,
our people. This is our culture. It
represents us. They speak about
the young people who cannot
find jobs, about our living stan-
dards. The lyrics are true. I
myself cannot find a job.”
Mahraganat singers say they
are being targeted because they
have become too popular and
wealthy.
“A lot of other superstars don’t
want their lights to get dimmed
by us,” said Bika. “They see our
numbers on You Tube and they
are scared.”
As of last week, Bika’s video
and songs were still available on
YouTube and SoundCloud. And
up until last month, he was still
able to perform at weddings. But
then, the syndicate filed a com-
plaint against him for singing at
a friend’s wedding in Alexandria.
“I sang one song for the bride
because I know her father, and
they filed a report against me,”
said Bika.
For now, he’s thinking about
his concerts next month in New
Jersey and Florida, his first trip
to America. “I am praying I get
my U.S. visa. I have a lot of fans
there,” Bika said.
“But I will perform in Egypt
again one day,” he added with a
smile.
[email protected]

heba farouk mahfouz contributed to
this report.

faced by impoverished Egyp-
tians. One track speaks of how
people were desperate for money
to buy credit for t heir cellphones.
Another is about a man who
went abroad to earn enough
money t o marry his true love. B ut
when he returned, she had mar-
ried someone else.
Few, if any, mahraganat musi-
cians write explicitly anti-gov-
ernment songs, but the themes o f
economic and social p roblems do
not reflect positively on the re-
gime.
The recent ban was triggered

omy, high unemployment and
other woes. In home studios,
often based in slums, the music
was made inexpensively on com-
puters.
Some segments of society con-
sidered it vulgar. On many radio
stations, mahraganat was denied
airtime. Instead, its popularity
grew through word of mouth,
weddings and, eventually, on-
line.
It was the lyrics that made
mahraganat ultimately go viral
on sites like YouTube. The songs
detailed the everyday pressures

feelings, of people suffering ev-
eryday life in Egypt.”
To day, he drives an orange
Audi. During the interview, eight
people walked up and asked to
take a selfie with him.
Mahraganat music, fast and
loud, soared in popularity fol-
lowing Egypt’s 2011 Arab Spring
revolts, which toppled the coun-
try’s longtime autocratic leader
Hosni Mubarak, who died last
month. The music provided an
outlet for poor Egyptians frus-
trated by political turmoil, grow-
ing repression, a declining econ-

streets. He has been a butcher, a
taxi driver and a fruit seller. But
his true passion was singing.
I n 2010, he became enchanted
by a new form of music rising o ut
of the slums. It was first concoct-
ed by disc jockeys at weddings
who began mixing folk music,
known as shaabi, with electronic
dance tunes fused with reggae,
rap and hip-hop.
“We are telling what’s going
on in the streets, the reality of
our lives,” said Bika. “These are
simple songs that are made
cheaply but they express our own

BY SUDARSAN RAGHAVAN

ALEXANDRIA, Egypt — Hamo
Bika rose up from the slums of
this northern coastal city to be-
come one of Egypt’s most popu-
lar musicians. He has amassed
millions of followers on YouTube
and SoundCloud. He has played
concerts across the Arab world.
Next month, he is scheduled to
perform in New Jersey and Flori-
da.
Bika, though, cannot perform
in his own country.
Egypt’s authorities have
banned his shows and outlawed
his music — and those of every
musician who performs the vi-
brant blend of folk and electron-
ic dance music known as mahra-
ganat, which translates as “festi-
vals” in Arabic. Since February,
clubs, hotels, music venues and
even Nile cruise boats have been
ordered not to book mahraganat
musicians, unless they want to
face stiff fines and be taken to
court.
“I had a big concert and
45,000 fans showed up. The
authorities g ot scared,” s aid Bika,
a tall, stocky 31-year-old who
favors skinny jeans, pricey
sneakers and who wore two gold
rings on his left hand.
In a nation that p rides itself o n
producing some of the most
famous Arabic singers, mostly
notably the sultry songstress
Umm Kulthum, authorities
claim mahraganat music is con-
tributing to Egypt’s “moral de-
cline.” The lyrics, they say, pro-
mote drugs, violence and pro-
miscuity. Last month, the
spokesman for Egypt’s parlia-
ment declared that the nation
was in a war over its cultural
identity.
“Egypt used to export art to
the Arab world, but now some-
one takes off his clothes onstage
and sings about being the best,”
Salah Hasaballah, the spokes-
man, told a prominent television
host on his show. “If we fear a
virus called corona ... then this
virus, that is falsely classified as
art, is even more dangerous to
Egypt than corona.”
The ban is the l atest chapter i n
an ongoing battle for the c ultural
soul of Egypt and the image it
presents to the world. It is also
an indicator of how censorship
and assaults on the freedom of
speech and expression are reach-
ing new heights under President
Abdel Fatah al-Sissi.
Belly dancers and actresses
have been sued for immoral
behavior or for wearing gauze
dresses. Poets and writers have
been sentenced to prison over
Facebook posts deemed blasphe-
mous. Soap operas have been
ordered to omit scenes consid-
ered immoral or political and to
depict police and other security
figures in a positive manner.
Under Sissi’s government, le-
gal protections for artistic ex-
pression are routinely over-
looked.
“It worries any repressive re-
gime that such singers are be-
coming more famous as time
goes by,” s aid Mahmoud Othman,
who runs Freedom of Thought
and Expression, a Cairo-based
law firm that works on free
speech issues. “Because it means
that at some point they might
express themselves politically.”
Bika grew u p in t he Al-Dekeela
neighborhood, a bustling warren
of darkly lit alleyways and crum-
bling buildings in the northern
Egyptian city of Alexandria. He
never went to school, and swiftly
learned how to find work on the


The World


geRMANY


Wing of far-right AfD


i s deemed ‘extremist’


German authorities are
formally placing a part of the far-
right Alternative for Germany
party u nder surveillance after
classifying it as extremist, the
domestic intelligence agency said
Thursday.
Thomas Haldenwang, the head
of the intelligence agency BfV, said
that after more than a year of
examination, his office has
concluded that a radical faction
within Alternative for Germany
known as “the Wing” meets the
definition of a “right-wing
extremist movement.”
Alternative for Germany, o r
AfD, criticized the move, which
allows authorities to use covert
methods to observe the Wing and
its estimated 7,000 supporters.
They m ake up about 20 percent of


the AfD’s overall membership but
hold significant sway over its
direction, according to former
party m embers.
The Wing is led by the AfD’s
regional chiefs in the eastern
states of Thuringia and
Brandenburg, Bjoern Hoecke and
Andreas Kalbitz.
Haldenwang described Hoecke
and Kalbitz as “right-wing
extremists,” noting Hoecke’s
historical revisionism, his anti-
Islamic and anti-immigrant
rhetoric, and his close ties to
extremists outside of the party.
“We mustn’t j ust keep an eye on
violent extremists but also watch
those who use words to spark
fires,” s aid Haldenwang, adding
that anti-Semitism, hatred of
Islam and racism spread online or
in political arenas p rovide the
“breeding ground” f or violence.
Germany has been shaken by
far-right killings in the past year.
— Associated Press

MYANMAR

Remains of suspected
WWII dead sent to U.S.

The U.S. military on Thursday
repatriated what may be the
remains of service personnel who
were lost in action in Myanmar
during World War II.
The remains from Myanmar’s
central Sagaing r egion were
recovered in a mission carried out
by the Defense POW/MIA
Accounting Agency of the U.S.
Defense Department, the U.S.
Embassy said.
The remains will be flown to
the agency’s laboratory in Hawaii
for analysis and potential
identification.
There are 505 U.S. service
members still unaccounted in
Myanmar, which was known as
Burma during World War II. The
remains of 23 have been identified
after three recovery missions

carried out in 2003 and 2004 and
nine since 2013.
The remains repatriated
Thursday are thought to be
related to a B-25G bomber with a
crew of seven that was lost in
February 1944. Myanmar was
then a British colony occupied by
Japan’s a rmed forces.
The plane’s w reckage was
located in 1946, and some possible
remains were recovered last year
in the same region but have not
yet yielded an identification.
According to the Defense POW/
MIA Accounting Agency, m ore
than 72,000 Americans in all
remain unaccounted for from
World War II, more than 7,
from the Korean War and 1,
from the conflict in Vietnam.
— Associated Press

Pakistani anti-graft body arrests
media mogul: Pakistan’s a nti-
corruption body ordered t he
arrest of the o wner and editor i n

chief of Pakistan’s l argest
independent group of newspapers
and TV s tations in a decades-old
case related to allegations of tax
evasion in a real estate purchase.
Mir Shakilur Rehman’s Jang
Group o f Newspapers, w hich
includes Geo TV, has been critical
of the government. Rehman’s
arrest drew condemnation from
the country’s journalism
community, w ith Geo News
calling the arrest “political
victimization.” The arrest comes
amid increasing pressure on
journalists in Pakistan by state
institutions and security agencies.

Turkey blames Kurdish fighters
for deadly blast in Syria: A car
bombing at a checkpoint manned
by Turkish-backed opposition
fighters in northeastern Syria
killed at l east four people, local
officials and Syrian opposition
activists said. The office of the
governor of Turkey’s s outhern

Sanliurfa region said one
gendarmerie corporal and three
local s ecurity p ersonnel were
killed. It b lamed Kurdish
militants for the blast. Ankara
views the Kurdish fighters as
terrorists for their links to a
Kurdish insurgency inside Turkey.

5 killed in thunderstorms in
Egypt: Thunderstorms packing
heavy rains and lightning caused
widespread flooding across E gypt,
killing at l east five people and
injuring five, o fficials said.
Authorities closed s chools,
government offices and Luxor
International Airport, a key hub
for tourists. Three seaports — the
Mediterranean port of Alexandria
and the Red Sea ports of Sharm el-
Sheikh and Hurghada — also were
closed, and several key highways
were shut down. Railway
authorities suspended train
service nationwide.
— From news services

Digest

In Egypt, a vibrant brand of street music is silenced


As the government fights for control of the nation’s cultural identity, Hamo Bika and other mahraganat musicians find their artistic avenues outlawed


Photos by sima Diab for the Washington Post
TOP: Hamo Bika’s manager, who goes by Dolsika, 21, speaks on the phone with clients inside the mahraganat musician’s recording studio
in Alexandria, Egypt. ABOVE: The studio is adorned with posters from Bika’s past shows. The popular singer has played concerts across
the Arab world, but authorities recently banned him from performing in Egypt, calling his style of music “promiscuous and immoral.”

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