Egypt Releases Students Detained over Rallies against New Education System

Egyptian students attend a secondary school class. (AFP file photo)
Egyptian students attend a secondary school class. (AFP file photo)
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Egypt Releases Students Detained over Rallies against New Education System

Egyptian students attend a secondary school class. (AFP file photo)
Egyptian students attend a secondary school class. (AFP file photo)

Egyptian authorities released a number of secondary school students, who were detained for several hours after protesting against the new education system.

Security sources confirmed that Interior Minister Maj. Gen. Mahmoud Tawfiq “ordered the immediate release of all the students who were arrested and called for defusing the crisis,” which had provoked social anger.

Dozens of students demonstrated on Wednesday in Cairo, Suez, Gharbia and Ismailia, in front of the offices of the Ministry of Education and a number of schools to protest the failure of the electronic exam, calling for the abolition of the new education system.

Security forces arrested a number of these students to halt the demonstrations, which sparked widespread controversy, and great resentment among parents.

The number of students who were detained was unknown.

Some videos and pictures circulated on social media showed members of the security forces arresting students, amid the cries of their colleagues and parents.

Local media quoted security sources as saying that the interior minister had ordered the release of all the detainees to preserve students’ interests and in respect for human rights.

The exams for first-grade secondary students took place on Sunday in the first experiment of the electronic exam system using tablets. However, in many schools, the system was disrupted and the exam was postponed for an hour before some reverted to paper exams.

The Ministry of Education said it had taken the necessary precautions to compensate for the system’s failure, including the paper exam.

Education Minister Tariq Shawqi said: “There was a simple problem that was solved.”

Exams will continue until May 30.

On Wednesday, the second foreign language test could not be held electronically on the tablets, because the platform in several schools also failed. The schools resorted instead to the paper exam.

Students who participated in the protests said that the electronic exam system exposed them to injustice and wasted their time as they had to sit for the exam twice.



US Military Says It Strikes Iran-Backed Militia Facility in Syria

A convoy of US military vehicles near Qamishli, Syria, February 2020. (SANA/via Reuters)
A convoy of US military vehicles near Qamishli, Syria, February 2020. (SANA/via Reuters)
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US Military Says It Strikes Iran-Backed Militia Facility in Syria

A convoy of US military vehicles near Qamishli, Syria, February 2020. (SANA/via Reuters)
A convoy of US military vehicles near Qamishli, Syria, February 2020. (SANA/via Reuters)

US forces conducted strikes in Syria against Iranian-aligned militia groups for a second day in a row Tuesday in response to further attacks on US personnel, US Central Command said late Tuesday.

In the latest retaliatory strikes, US forces hit a weapons storage and logistics facility after militia groups launched a rocket attack on US personnel at Patrol Base Shaddadi in Eastern Syria.

Earlier Tuesday, Pentagon press secretary Maj. Gen. Pat Ryder said that over the weekend the militias had also targeted US personnel with a drone attack and indirect fires at another base, Green Village, where US troops are operating — which prompted the US to strike nine militia targets on Monday in self-defense.

There are about 900 US troops deployed in Syria. No US troops were injured in either attack.