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After the coup: Egypt's media landscape in crisis

A new era of repression: Egypt's media landscape after the coup
5 min read
Egypt - Cairo
30 June, 2022
States of Journalism: Since Abdel-Fattah El-Sisi seized power in a 2013 military coup there has been a ruthless crackdown on press freedoms, with only a few voices left attempting to survive the hostile environment.
Award-winning journalist Lina Attalah is one of the remaining free voices dedicated to her pursuit of offering free, independent media. [Getty]

This article is part of °®Âţµşâ€™s States of Journalism series, a sustained exploration of freedom, repression, and accountability in MENA and global media landscapes. Read more of the series' articles .

In the not-so-distant past, there existed media outlets in Egypt that paved the way towards seizing at least a margin of freedom in a country run for almost seven decades by .

Several privately-owned, independent, or partisan online newspapers and magazines, together with privately-owned TV channels, operated during the last decade of long-time dictator Hosni Mubarak's rule that for the first time criticised the government.

Yet little did Egyptians know at the time that what seemed like a promising phase would soon come to an abrupt end, specifically after the

Before and after

The state of the media and journalism in Egypt deteriorated sharply after then-defence minister Abdel-Fattah El-Sisi overthrew the country's first democratically elected president, Mohamed Morsi, on 3 July 2013.

One year later, after Sisi was officially elected president, there was an unprecedented crackdown on freedom of expression as he governed the country with an iron fist.

Following the events leading to the protests against Morsi's rule on 30 June and his ouster on 3 July, Egyptian media narratives, even of independent and privately-owned outlets, aligned behind the state, becoming mouthpieces of the government.

This often involved direct over what journalists and editors could say, whether they agreed or not.

“The narratives of every outlet and TV station in the country are first approved by a state security officer assigned to the place before being released to the public,” a senior journalist, who works for both a state-run magazine and a private TV channel, told °®Âţµş, on condition of anonymity.

“This has become the reality of Egyptian media, only God knows when or how it can change,” he said despondently. 

Before 30 June, some outlets would freely criticise both the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces (SCAF), that took over the country after the of long-time dictator Hosni Mubarak in 2011, and the Muslim Brotherhood group to which Morsi belonged.

“What we have been seeing since 2013 is closing up much of the relatively-free media that evolved before and during the 25 January revolution, either because of direct government control or indirect control through censorship. This has led to fewer media freedoms than the past nine years,” award-winning Lina Attalah told °®Âţµş.

“During the Mubarak era, there was an economic liberalisation that came with a free media margin,” , also the editor-in-chief of the independent online newspaper, said.

“The vision of the [current regime] doesn’t seem to realise why there should be independent voices, opposition [forces] or political players. The regime seems to see the media as a tool to serve its interests. It’s a question of vision,” she added.

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An ongoing crackdown

by the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) in 2021 as the world’s third-worst jailer of journalists, Egypt has in recent years witnessed some of the most severe global restrictions on the media. 

Around 60 journalists are currently  and over 600 websites of both international organisations and media outlets are blocked, including that of .

Journalists who violate the unannounced manifesto imposed by the security apparatus usually face terrorism-related charges, sometimes even for just their opinion on social media.

Sisi's Egypt is the world's third-worst jailer of journalists. [Getty]

Recently several journalists, including Safaa Al-Korbigi, appeared before the courts days after being enforced disappearances or by state security police.

Not only that, journalists have also been explicitly banned from discussing multiple topics.

In 2020, the Supreme Council for Media Regulation (SCMR), loyal to the regime, journalists and social media users from reporting on sensitive political and economic issues. Other restrictions were imposed over the following years on reporting about subjects such as or .

“Eventually, journalists found themselves in a position where they just copy or present to the public the government’s statements or social media posts,” the unnamed senior journalist told TNA.

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Against all odds

Nevertheless, there is still a dim light at the end of the tunnel, with some voices fighting to be heard. Attalah is among the few remaining journalists who have been attempting to swim against the authoritarian current.

In 2020, Attalah was  by the US-based Time magazine as among the most 100 influential people in the world.

In the same year, she also received the ICFJ Knight International Journalism Award. Blocked in Egypt since 2017, Attalah’s Mada Masr online news outlet has been offering its readers quality journalism including news, analysis, features, and investigative reports in both Arabic and English, among them an  about Sisi’s son, senior intelligence agency officer Mahmoud El-Sisi.

Since then, the feud between the authorities and Mada Masr has escalated. In the same month the report was published, plain-clothed security forces raided the Mada Masr office and three senior journalists inside the premises, including Attalah, after confiscating their laptops and mobile phones, for several hours.

Almost one year later, Attalah was subjected to an act of intimidation when she was detained while interviewing mathematics professor Laila Soueif, the of jailed prominent Alaa Abdel-Fattah, outside Tora maximum-security prison in Cairo.

After being held in custody for about 24 hours, during which local and international rights groups strongly denounced her detention, Attalah was released and the case against her was withheld.

“I can’t deny that sometimes I feel afraid," Attalah says.

"But [at the end of the day], I’m doing my job as a professional, independent journalist in a professional, independent medium in a country [run by a regime] that doesn’t like us much.”

Thaer Mansour is a journalist based in Cairo reporting for °®Âţµş on politics, culture, and social affairs