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Egypt: Derrik Sweeney, American Student Arrested In Cairo, Feared For His Life (VIDEO)

By KELLY DASCHLE   11/27/11 11:04 PM ET   AP

-- Forced to lie still for hours in the dark, the American students held during protests in Egypt were told they would be shot if they moved or made any noise, one of them said Sunday on his first full day home.

"It was the most frightening experience of my life, I believe," Derrik Sweeney said.

Speaking to The Associated Press by Skype from Jefferson City, Mo., Sweeney said the evening of Nov. 20 started peacefully in Cairo, with Tahrir Square "abuzz with ideas of democracy and freedom."

The three wandered the streets and wound up in a large group of protesters outside the Interior Ministory, Sweeney said. The demonstrations escalated, with the protesters yelling and perhaps throwing stones, he said.

"Eventually the police shot back something, I'm not exactly sure what," he said. "We didn't wait to see. But as soon as we saw some sort of firing coming from the gun and heard it, the whole crowd stampeded out and we sprinted away."

He said they fled to an area that seemed calmer and were approached by four or five Egyptians in plain clothes.

The Egyptians offered to lead them to safety but instead took them into custody, Sweeney said.

They were threatened to be force-fed gasoline, beaten and forced to lie in a near-fetal position in the dark for six hours with their hands in cuffs behind their backs, Sweeney said. He said they were told: "If you move or make any noise, we will shoot you."

"They were hitting us in the face and in the back of the neck," he said. "Not to the point of bleeding or I can't say I have any lasting major scars at this point, but they were hitting us."

Sweeney is 19 and studies at Georgetown University. He was arrested along with Luke Gates, 21, who attends Indiana University and is from Bloomington, Ind., and Gregory Porter, 19, who studies at Drexel University and is from Glenside, Pa.

The students flew home Saturday after an Egyptian court ordered their release two days earlier. The three were studying abroad at American University in Cairo, which is near Tahrir Square.

A popular uprising earlier this year forced out Egypt's longtime autocratic leader, Hosni Mubarak. But the democratic age that Egyptians hoped for has not followed. The military is in control, and protesters want it to hand power to civilians.

At least 43 protesters have been killed since Nov. 19 and 2,000 wounded, most of them in Cairo. Landmark parliamentary elections will start Monday.

Egyptian officials said they arrested the three students on the roof of a university building and accused them of throwing firebombs at security forces fighting with protesters.

But Sweeney denies doing anything to harm anyone and said he and the other Americans weren't ever on the roof or handling or throwing explosives.

"I don't know where that rooftop idea actually came from," he said. "We were never on a rooftop, we never entered a building. The American University campus building on that street where we were arrested – there were a lot of people that had broken in there, it was swarmed with protesters – but we were not on there. We were on a street."

In an earlier telephone interview with the AP after he arrived at St. Louis' international airport, Sweeney said he and the other students' treatment improved dramatically after the first night. He spoke with a U.S. Embassy official, his mother and a lawyer. He said he denied the accusations during what he called proper questioning by Egyptian authorities.

"There was really marked treatment between the first night and the next three nights or however long it was," Sweeney said. "After that first night, we were treated in a just manner ... we were given food when we needed, and it was OK."

The students took separate flights out of Egypt, and Porter and Gates declined to recount details of their experience after arriving in Philadelphia and Indianapolis, respectively.

"I'm not going to take this as a negative experience. It's still a great country," Gates said.

Porter said only that he was thankful for the help he and the others received from the U.S. Embassy in Cairo, administrators at the university they were attending, and attorneys in Egypt and the U.S.

"I'm just so thankful to be back, to be in Philadelphia right now," he said.

___

Associated Press photographers Jeff Roberson in St. Louis and Michael Conroy in Indianapolis contributed to this report. AP writers Kathy Matheson in Philadelphia, Bill Cormier in Atlanta and Andale Gross and Erin Gartner in Chicago also contributed.

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An Egyptian woman shows her ink-stained thumb after voting at a polling station in the Manial neighbourhood of Cairo on November 28, 2011. Post-revolution Egypt headed to the polls for a chaotic election clouded by violence and a political crisis, the start of a long process to bring democracy to the Arab world's most populous nation. (MAHMUD HAMS/AFP/Getty Images)
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-- Forced to lie still for hours in the dark, the American students held during protests in Egypt were told they would be shot if they moved or made any noise, one of them said Sunday on his first fu...
-- Forced to lie still for hours in the dark, the American students held during protests in Egypt were told they would be shot if they moved or made any noise, one of them said Sunday on his first fu...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ruhaba
10:01 PM on 11/30/2011
You think Mobarak was bad ??? wait until they become Islamic country... Second Iran is coming...I am so sorry for the real people who fought for democracy and Islamic brother hood grabbed it from them..
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quixmar
You may not agree with me, but you know I'm right.
05:09 AM on 11/29/2011
Maybe these guys shouldn't have been throwing firebombs at the police.
Common sense tells me -- American? Foreign country? Riot outside? Better order dinner in.
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10:35 PM on 11/30/2011
Maybe you shouldn't believe everything you read? Just because you don't want to leave your house doesn't mean the whole world should cower in fear.
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quixmar
You may not agree with me, but you know I'm right.
12:17 AM on 12/01/2011
We're not talking about me leaving my house, but being in a foreign country where there is widespread unrest and placing yourself, and by default your national compatriots in peril.

If there were unrest near my house, I'm pretty sure I'm ready to assume a defensive posture right on my front porch if I had to, and would again not be venturing into the crowd or up on a roof with rags and gasoline cans nearby.
03:37 AM on 11/29/2011
Gee, who'd have thought that hanging out in a city where people are being shot to death and riots are a daily occurence my be the least bit dangerous. The word "stupid" comes to mind.
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10:36 PM on 11/30/2011
You're right, but not everyone can get out of the US easily...
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02:34 AM on 11/29/2011
Ya gotta do what ya gotta do. God Loves You.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Brian Workman
02:14 AM on 11/29/2011
They didn't go to Egypt for school, so they're not students!!!!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
fine7760
03:51 AM on 11/29/2011
They were studying at the American University. They were students.
12:20 PM on 11/29/2011
I believe they were students. The A.U.C is full of foreign students and it is an American institution but those three should have stayed put. Instead they thought perhaps they were Ernest Hemingway in 1925 Spain...Idiots to say the least.
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10:34 PM on 11/30/2011
You have NO idea what they "thought," and the only idiocy around here is people claiming that they do.
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pslcitizen
Intelligence is the ability to adapt to change.
01:04 AM on 11/29/2011
Jailed in a foreign country? You better fear for your life doofus.
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02:46 AM on 11/29/2011
Inability to read an article in English? You better fear for your brain, genius.
11:46 PM on 11/28/2011
The statements given by these students is complete BS!!!

These so called students, went to Egypt with the sole idea of taking part in the demonstrations, riots, etc. Their parents should be ashamed for allowing them to partake in demonstrations in another country and for footing the bill!!! These are the type of people who think that anything that they do is OK! It is all about "me" and what "I want."
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02:47 AM on 11/29/2011
What the HECK is wrong with you, woman? You have NO idea what was in these kids heads, and trying to say you did is just sick, sick, sick. STOP, start minding your own business and put an end to this garbage of trying to figure out what's in other people's minds. You should be ashamed of insulting people without knowing a darn thing about them or their parents.
03:40 AM on 11/29/2011
I know what was in their heads - nothing at all. Since this kid is being interviewed by international media, there is no reason why someone cannot comment or speculate in public about public information, so your complaint is pretty excessive and completely mistaken. Stupid people who make a spectacle of themselves are not protected from public comment. The kid's behavior says it all. Why would you try to defend them? They are as stupid as those idiots who "went hiking" on the Iran/Iraq border a year ago.
12:47 AM on 11/30/2011
I tend to agree with many in that not much was going on in their heads! Sick? Sure, on the part of their parents!!! What parent in their right mind would send their son or daughter to a country where there is so much strife?

Excuse me, I have as much right to an opinion as you do! I didn't have to insult them, they did that all by themselves. They were students here in the US, went to Egypt to join the rebellion and accomplished what? Not one thing except to most likely run up huge bills for our already burdened country! How much did it cost to bring them back? They were on international television, insulting themselves with their foolish explanations!
10:58 PM on 11/28/2011
Book and T.V. movie are already said to be in the developmental stages.
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tiredofpc
retired: RN,Adult NP,USAR
10:42 PM on 11/28/2011
These young men were exceptionally lucky to escape relatively unscathed and it was only due to the media attention that they're home, safe and sound. American tourists and students abroad must get a clue about the fact that they're not in the United States. They do NOT have the protections of US standards of civil rights and justice. Age does not seem to be a factor, because both older and younger citizens seem to be equally oblivious. If you're going to be a student or a tourist abroad in a country that is experiencing unrest and/or that is known for it's lack of attention to the details of due process, then you MUST keep a very clear, and defense minded head on your shoulders, because the nation you're in just may not give a darn.
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hapytrkr
It's a comment board , get over it
06:12 AM on 11/29/2011
There release was due to the fact taht we are backing the military with millions of our $$$$. You can bet someone from the state department made a call.
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f1nesse101
freedom with peace and prosperity
10:21 PM on 11/28/2011
The boys are very lucky to be alive. Your 15 minutes of fame are over. I'm not so sure you would have been granted so much leniancy had you been in any other country that is in the middle of a civil war over democracy. Don't expect me to be reading any of your books. You should be ashamed for what you did, or did not do, and that is leave the country months ago when it all started. Shame on your parents for bad parenting. You're all way out of line.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ramon Moreno
Read below.
11:52 PM on 11/28/2011
You're just a coward. Our country was not made with your type, yet you sit and crow about it.
03:41 AM on 11/29/2011
I'd say you are mistaken. This country was made up of people who have the guts to speak their minds. Why would you make such a sweeping, judgemental statement?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
freshie
industrial designer changing the world
09:57 PM on 11/28/2011
Lucky they were American.. Egyptians may not be so lucky
09:33 PM on 11/28/2011
At least 43 protesters have been killed since Nov. 19 and 2,000 wounded, most of them in Cairo.

"Hey guys, I have an idea, let's go and see what the protesters are doing."
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02:48 AM on 11/29/2011
Heck of a lot more guts than you've ever been accused of having, that's for sure.
03:42 AM on 11/29/2011
It's not about guts. They are spoiled dillettantes. They want to dabble at dangerous things - and when reality set in, they ran like chickens.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
danglingm
09:13 PM on 11/28/2011
Gates says..."I'm not going to take this as a negative experience. It's still a great country,".........Seriously? I would like to know what Gates considers a bad experiance? I personaly would consider what happened to them as being pretty bad. This is why people just don't learn.
08:33 PM on 11/28/2011
Did these kids just wonder into the masses like the kids did in Iran ?
Just cannot believe their story----
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02:49 AM on 11/29/2011
Just can't believe "your" story about "being" a "marine." See how it feels?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
plansmaker
Will China Bailout America For Alaska & Hawaii
08:27 PM on 11/28/2011
They are indeed very luck to be alive and out of chaotic Egypt.