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Mohamed Aboelgheit

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Investigative journalist from Egypt
Mohamed Aboelgheit
محمد أبو الغيط
Born(1988-10-03)3 October 1988
Assiut, Egypt
Died5 December 2022(2022-12-05) (aged 34)
London, United Kingdom
EducationMedical degree
Occupation(s)Investigative journalist, writer, documentary producer
Years active2010–2022
Employers
  • Al-Shorouk
  • Al Masry Al Youm
  • Al Jazeera
  • CNN
  • Deutsche Welle
  • Global Witness
Notable work
  • Uncovering military health fraud in Egypt
  • Investigating Western arms sales violations in the Yemen War
  • Exposing secret funding networks for Sudanese RSF militia
Awards
  • Ricardo Ortega Memorial Prize – Gold Medal (2019)
  • Fesitov Journalism Award (2020)

Mohamed Aboelgheit (Arabic: محمد أبو الغيط‎; 3 October 1988,Assuit – 5 December 2022,London) was anEgyptianinvestigative journalist who was "in the vanguard of a new generation of activists and dynamic journalists that emerged from the turmoil of theArab Spring."[1] His work, which is considered "unmatched in a region widely hostile to reporters,"[2] uncovered military health fraud inEgypt,[3] howWestern countries violated bilateral arms sales in theYemen War,[4] and revealed secret funding networks forSudaneseRapid Support Forces militia.[5]

Aboelgheit died on December 5, 2022 at the age of 35, of stomach cancer, a 17 month ordeal he documented as a diary that was posthumously published asOh Light, I am Coming (Arabic: أنا قادم أيها الضوء).[2][6]

Early career

[edit]

Born inAssiut, Egypt on 23 October 1988, Aboelgheit originally trained as a medical doctor, starting his career at the publicImbaba General Hospital inGiza.[1] His first foray into writing was as an amateur, garnering third place in a Library of Alexandria short story competition in 2010.[7]

He joined the protests of the2011 Egyptian Revolution, for which he was arrested. Aboelgheit started writing straight after his release, establishing his own blog, Gedaria (Frescoe), where one of his early posts,"Al-Fuqara' Awalan ya Welad al-Kalb!" (Put the poor first you sons of bitches!),[8] went viral, criticising the political elite for squabbling over cultural and ideological issues, while forgetting the demands of the poor.[3]

Aboelgheit started writing for the blogBos wa Toll (Look and See), inspired by what he saw as the "humanising of economic issues" by journalists such as Omayma Kamal, Salma Hussein, and Wael Gamal.[7] Through Gamal, Aboelgheit applied to write as a guest columnist in Egyptian dailyAl Shorouk, and then writing for another well known daily,Al Masry Al Youm.[7]

Investigative journalism

[edit]

Aboelgheit made his mark as an investigative journalist in 2014, where in an investigative piece forAl-Shorouk, he uncovered a fraudulentEgyptian Armed Forces medical doctor who claimed he invented a device to cureHepatitis C,HIV/AIDS, and otherviruses.[9] The embarrassing debacle later became known as Koftagate, in reference to the use of minced meat skewers.[10] Aboelgheit however, felt threatened by the rise of the military regime and how it was jailing journalists, and fled Egypt for theUnited Kingdom a few months after publishing his piece when presidentAbdel Fattah al-Sisi was elected in mid 2014.[11]

Aboelgheit then worked withAljazeera media network,producing a number of documentaries including50 different Signatures, revealing the extent of Egyptian bureaucracy,[12]The Assassination ofFarag Fouda,,[13] a prominent Egyptian human rights activist, andWho Burned my City, which gathered eyewitness accounts ofthe great Cairo fire in 1952.[14]

Between 2018, and 2019 Aboelgheit and a team of journalists, researched and produced a series of documentaries about the use ofAmerican-made weapons in theYemen War, airing on CNN,[15][16][17] andDeutsche Welle.[18] He was awarded the Ricardo Ortega Memorial Prize - Gold Medal, for his work in 2019.[18]

In 2019, Aboelgheit along with Nick Donovan and Richard Kent, published an investigative article inGlobal Witness, that revealed secret funding networks forSudaneseRapid Support Forces militia, an organisation they identified then as having significant military power and financial independence that could threaten peaceful democratic transition inSudan.[19] The piece won them the Fesitov Journalism Awards in 2020.[20] Their predictions have unfortunately been proven true, as the RSF instigated the2023 Sudan conflict with other military factions in April, in an attempt to grab power.

Later in 2020, Aboelgheit contributed to another Global Witness investigation, this time exposing part of Syrian dictator,Bashar A-lAssad's financial network.[21]

Selected writing

[edit]

Investigative journalism

[edit]

With documents and pictures, Al Shorouk tracks virus C cure inventor (Arabic), Al Shorouk, 6 March 2014.[9]

Yemen and the global arms trade,DW Documentary. 4 December 2018.[22] United Nations Correspondents Association Awards, Ricardo Ortega award for best broadcast journalism, 2019 - Gold Medal.[23]

The End User: How did western weapons end up in the hands of ISIS and AQAP in Yemen? Arab Reporters for Investigative journalism (ARIJ), 28 February 2019.[24] True Story Award 2021 - Recipient.[24]

(With Richard Kent and Nick Donovan)Exposing the RSF's secret financial network,Global Witness, 9 December 2019.[19] 2020 Fetisov Journalism Awards, Outstanding Contribution to Peace - Winner.[5]

Opinion pieces and columns

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As if nothing had happened (Arabic), Al-Masry Al-Youm, 12 October 2012.[25] Mustafa Al-Husseini Award 2013 for young Arab journalism - Recipient.[26]

Season of the Living Dead (Arabic), Al-Shorouk.[27] Samir Kassir Award 2014 - Recipient.[1]

Book

[edit]

Oh Light I am Coming (Arabic), Dar al-Shorouk, 2022.

References

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  1. ^abcWhite, Aidan (2022-12-07)."Mohamed Aboelgheit: A warrior for humanity and journalism".Fetisov Journalism Awards. Retrieved2023-04-21.
  2. ^ab"Award-winning journalist Abo-elgheit continues inspiring with his accounts of his cancer fight".Global Voices. 2022-08-31. Retrieved2023-04-21.
  3. ^ab"Mohamed Aboul Gheit: Story of hope, talent and freedom of journalism".Middle East Monitor. 2022-12-09. Retrieved2023-04-21.
  4. ^"2019 UNCA Awards Winners « The United Nations Correspondents Association". Retrieved2022-12-10.
  5. ^ab"Fetisov Journalism Awards 2020 First Prize".fjawards.com. Retrieved2023-04-21.
  6. ^"TIMEP Announces New Fellowships in 2023". 16 February 2023. Retrieved2023-05-02.
  7. ^abc"ننشر آخر حوار أجراه الصحفي محمد أبو الغيط قبل وفاته".EOJM (in Arabic). 2022-12-05. Retrieved2023-04-24.
  8. ^El-gheit, Mohamed Abo (2011-06-17)."مدونة جدارية: الفقراء أولاً يا ولاد الكلب!".مدونة جدارية. Retrieved2023-09-30.
  9. ^abAboelgheit, Mohamed (2014-03-06)."بالوثائق والصور..بوابة الشروق تتتبع مخترع علاج فيرس سي: الصحة طاردت عيادته للعلاج بالأعشاب وضحاياه يشتكون".الشروق.Archived from the original on 2014-03-07. Retrieved2023-04-24.
  10. ^"Koftagate: Dashed Hopes and Wasted Resources". 4 August 2014. Retrieved2023-04-24.
  11. ^"'You don't have a country': Ten years after Egypt uprise, exiles disillusioned".France 24. 2021-01-25. Retrieved2023-04-24.
  12. ^"خمسون توقيعا".www.aljazeera.net (in Arabic). Retrieved2022-12-05.
  13. ^اغتيال فرج فودة, retrieved2022-12-05
  14. ^من أحرق مدينتي, retrieved2022-12-05
  15. ^"US arms sold to Saudi Arabia and UAE end up in wrong hands".www.cnn.com. Retrieved2022-12-05.
  16. ^Abdelaziz, Nima Elbagir, Mohamed Abo El Gheit, Florence Davey-Attlee, Salma (2019-10-18)."American weapons ended up in the wrong hands in Yemen. Now they're being turned on the US-backed government".CNN. Retrieved2022-12-05.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  17. ^US weapons arrive in Yemen under shroud of secrecy - CNN Video, 6 November 2019, retrieved2022-12-05
  18. ^ab"2019 UNCA Awards Winners « The United Nations Correspondents Association". Retrieved2022-12-10.
  19. ^ab"Exposing the financial network behind Hemedti's RSF in Sudan".Global Witness. Retrieved2023-05-16.
  20. ^"Fetisov Journalism Awards 2020 First Prize".fjawards.com. Retrieved2023-04-21.
  21. ^"Assad's Money Men in Moscow: A Syrian-Russian Money Laundering Network".Global Witness. Retrieved2022-12-05.
  22. ^Yemen and the global arms trade | DW Documentary (Arms documentary), retrieved2023-09-23
  23. ^"2019 UNCA Awards Winners « The United Nations Correspondents Association". Retrieved2022-12-10.
  24. ^ab"How did western weapons end up in the hands of ISIS and AQAP in Yemen?".True Story Award. Retrieved2023-04-22.
  25. ^أبو الغيط, محمد (2012-01-01)."كأن شيئاً لم يكن".المصري اليوم.
  26. ^"محمد أبو الغيط يفوز بجائزة "مصطفى الحسيني" عن مقاله ببوابة "المصري اليوم"".المصري اليوم. 2012-10-02. Retrieved2023-04-22.
  27. ^"موسم الموتى الأحياء - محمد أبو الغيط - بوابة الشروق".www.shorouknews.com (in Arabic). Retrieved2023-09-23.

External links

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Gedarea (Abulgheit's blog)

Writings forAl-Shourok

Writings forAl-Masry al-Youm

Writings forMada Masr

Medium (English translations of some of Abulgheit's Arabic columns)

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