CAIRO — Egyptian police arrested 21 people for taking part in rare protests against the government’s surprise decision to hike fares on Cairo’s subway, officials said Saturday.
The fare hikes are part of austerity measures meant to overhaul the economy.
The arrests, mostly at Helwan metro station on the southern outskirts of Cairo, took place two days after the government announced the second round of subway fare hikes since March 2017. The hikes were up to 250 percent, raising fares from two to up to seven Egyptian pounds (11 U.S. cents to 39 cents) depending on the number of stations commuters travel.
Videos circulating online show dozens of outraged commuters yelling and chanting anti-government slogans at Cairo metro stations, with some jumping over electronic ticket gates to avoid paying fares. One video showed a woman berating the men at the station for not being brave enough to challenge the hikes.
Although small, Saturday’s protests were the first by Egyptians angered by the government’s austerity measures, which started in 2014 but escalated after a deal was struck in 2016 with the International Monetary Fund for a $12 billion loan.