“Everybody needs a
weapon,” said Mahmoud, a 23-year-old Egyptian arms dealer, as he displayed his
inventory of pistols, machetes, and switchblades on the living room floor of
his family’s apartment in the crime-ridden Cairo neighborhood of Ain Shams.
With Egyptian
government statistics indicating a 300 percent [1] increase in
homicides and a 12-fold increase in armed robberies since the 2011 revolution,
Mahmoud and other black-market entrepreneurs are capitalizing on a growing
obsession with self-defense and civilian vigilantism among Egyptians who have
lost patience with their government’s inability to restore security.
Frustration with lawlessness is among the numerous grievances that will drive
antigovernment protesters to the streets on June 30, the one-year anniversary
of President Mohamed Morsi’s inauguration.
Mahmoud is one of
many post-revolutionary lawbreakers who were victims of crime before they
became perpetrators. When I asked him how he made the decision to start selling
black-market weapons, he replied sarcastically, “What decision? I had no
choice.” Over lukewarm Pepsi served by his mother, Mahmoud explained that he
used to earn a living as a taxi driver. But shortly after the revolution, his
car was hijacked at gunpoint by a local gang. Like many of the amateur black
marketeers responsible for Egypt’s current crime wave, Mahmoud is a far cry
from the hardened criminal I had been expecting; he is just a young man hoping
to earn enough money to move out of his parents’ house, marry his fiancée, and
replace his stolen taxi.





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