Opinion

Why are Egyptian troops killing so many Africans?

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By WILLIAM OCHIENG'
Posted  Sunday, September 27  2009 at  17:08

I have been reading the history of Egypt and the Nile Valley, stretching some 6,000 years back, in preparation for my teaching lectures, and I must say I am thoroughly impressed.

Diehard racists can say what they like, but there is no doubt, from solid evidence, that the Nile Valley was the cradle of human civilisations.

While Western Europe was still steeped in slumber and darkness, the communities of the Nile — Egypt, Nubia, Kush, Aksum and Meroe — were teaching their children reading and writing, mathematics, philosophy, algebra, trigonometry and fine art.

For a long time, the truth about African history was hidden, because those in Europe who explained it had not put their prejudices behind them.

But the truth is that while the European civilisation was later built on the achievements of ancient Greeks, the Greeks, in their turn, owed much of what they know to the ancient Egyptians, whether in the field of ideas or practical skills.

Having said that, we must also lament that the slave trade and slavery were the darkest blot of this wonderful civilisation. Throughout the Pharaonic, Greek, Roman and Islamic eras, black folk were hunted throughout the plains of Lower and Upper Nile for sale and servitude in the Mediterranean crescent.

Some were sent to southern Europe and to the Near East, while many were used in Egypt itself for agricultural and military purposes.

In the 13th, 14th and 15th centuries AD, the Arabs from Egypt had began to infiltrate the Shilluk empire of Funj in the north and central Sudan, destroying property, capturing slaves and robbing the inhabitants of land and livestock.

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It was very similar to what has been happening in Darfur in recent decades. It was because of these Jihadist depredations that a large number of Luos left the Sudan to settle in Uganda and Western Kenya.

Slavery, by itself, might not be reprehensible, except when it was accompanied by vicious cruelty, torture and random death. Is it not sad that certain north-west Saharan African states still practise slavery to this day?

But my ire in this article is with the present day Egypt — supposedly the most advanced and enlightened of African states with preponderant Arab population.
Forgetting, or simply ignorant, of shared historic glory, Egypt has been cruel and extremely unfair to Africans who visit or attempt to pass through it.

Unlike during the era of Gamal Abdel Nasser when Egypt was a safe passageway for Africans being persecuted by the imperialists, today Egypt is incorrigibly lethal. Stray into Egypt and you are a dead man.

These are economically and politically hard times for many Africans, particularly the Somalis, Zimbabweans and Ethiopians. Some want to cross over either to Europe or to Israel, for all sorts of reasons.

Indeed, illegal border crossings in Africa are commonplace and everywhere. It could be Zimbabweans crossing into South Africa, Somalis crossing into Kenya, Sudanese crossing into Uganda, Ethiopians crossing into Eritrea, Burundians crossing into Tanzania, name it.

Illegal though most of these crossings are, they must be handled with human dignity and within appropriate international law.

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Add a comment (6 comments so far)

  1. Submitted by kuku123

    Ochie, Egyptians are doing American's dirty and trying to please the occupation forces jewish apartheid.

    Posted  September 28, 2009 09:44 PM  
  2. Submitted by Kensal

    Quick to cry racism, well you should control your borders than balme others. This should act as a deterent, why do people risk their lives going to places they are not welcome! Better forever live with your dignity than forever live begging on your knees.

    Posted  September 28, 2009 09:36 PM  
  3. Submitted by lishawish

    It is sad but what we must remember is that Egypt and all arab nations (that are in the african continet)do not consider themselves as africa. They have instead always considered themselves as better. Something to do with the food chain. We will always be at the bottom, even if one of our own is currently the one of the most powerful presidents.

    Posted  September 28, 2009 07:06 PM  
  4. Submitted by Sunburn

    It is just typically Arab racist mentality, and who are more vicious racists than even Europeans. Like you say, slavery is practised in the Maghreb to this day, so no surprises there. African leaders are to blame for this state of affairs because of their ignorance and selfish disregard for their kin.

    Posted  September 28, 2009 11:52 AM  
  5. Submitted by wuod_aketch

    It is time Africans woke up and started facing the realities courageously. Running away from one's problems is not a solution. The cost of liberty and prosperity is sometimes very expensive - many lives can be lost in the process of trying to achieve both. This is what Kenyans experienced last year after the elections. I can say it was worth while. The French say that you cannot eat an omelet without breaking the egg.

    Posted  September 28, 2009 10:13 AM  

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