Farouk Gouida

Farouk Gouida (born 10 February 1946) is an Egyptian poet Gouida's newspaper columns - criticising the privatization of state assets by politicians such as Atef Ebeid and Ahmed Nazif - were collected in Raping a Country (2010).[1] Writing in May 2011, Gouida characterized Hosni Mubarak's regime as guilty of "three crimes": floating the Egyptian pound in 2003; misusing public banks to grant easy loans to favoured businessmen; and indiscriminate privatization.[2]

In March 2012, he was announced as one of the members of the Constituent Assembly of Egypt.[3] He criticised the composition of the assembly, suggesting that 15 assembly members be replaced with constitutional law professors and legal experts.[4] and resigned from it in protest of the complementary constitutional declaration (November 2012).[5] In August he was reported by Al-Ahram as having turned down an offer from President Morsi to be culture secretary.[6]

Works

  • Raping a Country: Crimes of Land Pillaging in Egypt, 2010
gollark: I... don't think that actually has always been the case, or at least you didn't really have to do ridiculous stuff like heat up phones to loosen adhesives to replace any part whatsoever before.
gollark: With heat or something.
gollark: On some of them you literally have to unglue the screen.
gollark: Apparently, though, most consumers do not actually care, and thus the magic of capitalism™ has produced slightly shinier and harder to repair phones.
gollark: I would really prefer phones using technology such as "screws" and "detachable connectors" and "swappable parts".

References

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