Five years on, Egyptians take to Twitter to mark the 2011 revolution

Published January 24th, 2016 - 07:17 GMT
Demonstrations have been banned, but people are still taking to streets on the eve of the anniversary. (AFP/File)
Demonstrations have been banned, but people are still taking to streets on the eve of the anniversary. (AFP/File)

Tomorrow marks the five year anniversary of Egypt's 2011 revolution. Journalists and activists have commemorated the date with tributes to the fallen and bittersweet thoughts on what has—and hasn't— changed since hopeful Egyptians filled Cairo's Tahrir Square and spearheaded the toppling of former president Hosni Mubarak.

On the ground, the Egyptian government has promised crackdowns on protests—military vehicles were already lining up at Tahrir on Friday in anticipation of the anniversary. Some media outlets report Egypt under president Abdel Fattah el-Sisi is worse than it was under Mubarak five years ago. 

Meanwhile, reports of massing Egyptians planning to arrive at the square tomorrow are already hitting headlines.

And on Twitter, the debate is just as fierce. Social media users tweeted under the hashtag #Jan25 about police crackdowns, the fate of 2011 activists and what's in store this year.

See some of the reactions below, via Twitter.

 

Subscribe

Sign up to our newsletter for exclusive updates and enhanced content