Student 'Twitters' his way out of Egyptian jail

by Amy Judd | April 25, 2008 at 06:35 am
534 views | 25 Recommendations | 10 comments

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Twitter in Plain English

When James Karl Buck was arrested in Egypt, his first thought was that he needed to twitter about it. Good thing he did, because his constant Twitter updates via his cell phone are what led to his release from prison.
This confirms the value of online networking sites.

Buck, a graduate student from the University of California-Berkeley, was in Mahalla, Egypt, covering an anti-government protest when he and his translator Mohammed Maree were arrested April 10.

On his way to the police station, Buck took out his cell phone and sent a message to his friends and contacts using the micro-blogging site Twitter.

The message only had one word. "Arrested."

Within seconds, colleagues in the United States and his blogger-friends in Egypt -- the same ones who had taught him the tool only a week earlier -- were alerted he was being held.

Twitter is a social-networking blog site that allows users to send status updates, or "tweets," from cell phones, instant messaging services and Facebook, in under 140 characters.

Hossam el-Hamalawy, a Cairo-based blogger at UC-Berkeley, was one of the people who got word of Buck's arrest.

"At first I was worried about his safety," el-Hamalawy said.

Then, el-Hamalawy took to the Web and wrote regular updates in his own blog to spread the information Buck was sending by Twitter. Nobody was sure how long Buck would be able to communicate. 

But Buck was able to send updates every couple of hours saying he was still detained, he had spoken to the prosecutor, he still had not been charged and he was worried about Maree.

"Usually the first thing the police go for is the detainees' cameras and cellular phones," el-Hamalawy said. "I'm surprised they left James with his phone."

Twitter is normally used to keep groups of people connected in less urgent situations.

But Biz Stone, co-founder of Twitter, told CNN that he and others knew the service could have wide-reaching effects early on, when the San-Francisco-based company used it to communicate during earthquakes.

Stone said as the service got more popular, they began to hear stories of people using Twitter during natural disasters with a focus on activism and journalism.

Buck's urgent message is proof of the value of Twitter, Stone said. Buck's entry set off a chain of events that led to his college hiring a lawyer on his behalf.

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Jordan Yerman

I'm surprised he got to hang on to his phone. Quick thinking, though.

Jarrett Martineau
Jarrett Martineau
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 08:08 on April 25th, 2008

Wonder Twitter powers, activate!

0
Teacher Dude

Any idea about what happened to his interpreter?

0
Amy Judd

Good question, I did some digging and this is what I found:

He refused to leave for the sake of his friend and interpreter Mohammed Salah Ahmed Maree, who was arrested with him but is being held incommunicado by local authorities.

“I said, ‘No’ and I stayed for 12 more hours and we started a hunger strike at some point,” Buck told the San Jose Mercury News. “But they grabbed him and put him in a different holding area. Finally, they said they had transferred him to another prison.”

What Buck wants now is justice for his friend, who is still in jail: “I’m very angry and I’m frustrated. I’m an American and I got released and he didn’t (…) I’m not going to stop until he gets out,” he said.

His determination is real, as he opened an online petition at http://www.thepetitionsite.com/...-mohammed-maree for his friend, and further plans a demonstration is support for Maree.

“Mohammed is 23 years old and is missing in Mahalla, Egypt after having been cleared of all charges. He is being held to intimidate and punish journalists. Demand his immediate and unconditional release,” the site says.

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cynthia yoo

Thanks for updating and sharing further information, Amy. 

Rhonda J Mangus
Rhonda J Mangus
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 14:27 on April 25th, 2008

amyjudd, I like this story. It's good stuff.

Jennings David L
Jennings David L
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 14:28 on April 25th, 2008

amyjudd, great story on how technology is being used in creative and helpful ways.  Thanks for the follow up also and the link to help his translater get out of jail.

 

0
Amy Judd

As far as we know he's still in jail, so fingers crossed!

James Chutter
James Chutter
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 15:43 on April 25th, 2008

It's amazing the applications that Twitter has taken on despite being such a simple interface. Good Stuff!

0
Teacher Dude

Thanks Amyjudd for looking this up. I just signed the petition.

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Jarrett Martineau
First Flagged at 8:08 AM, Apr 25, 2008 by Jarrett Martineau
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