Yahoo – AFP,
Mona Salem, September 9, 2015
![]() |
Mariam
Malak talks to the media outside the Forensic Medical Authority
headquarters in
Cairo on September 8, 2015 (AFP Photo/Khaled Desouki)
|
Cairo (AFP)
- Schoolgirl Mariam Malak has become an unlikely symbol of the fight against
corruption in Egypt after scoring the sum total of zero in her final exams.
The
19-year-old top student, a teacher's daughter in a small village in the poor
southern province of Minya, dreams of becoming a doctor like her two brothers.
In previous
years she aced her exams, and had expected a similar result in her final year.
Now
nicknamed the "zero schoolgirl" in the local press, Malak had scored
97 percent in her previous two years.
But Malak
was shocked to find that she had been failed in her finals, and says her
answers had been replaced with someone else's -- clearly not in her
handwriting.
"Since
the results came out I've been living a nightmare," Malak told AFP after
coming to Cairo from her home in southern Egypt.
"When
I was shown the so-called copy of my answers, I couldn't believe my eyes,"
she said.
Malak said
she had written page after page in the exams, and what she was shown consisted
of a few lines.
In highly
bureaucratic Egypt with its confusing legal system, challenging rampant
corruption or wrongs suffered by the average citizen can be a formidable task.
Were her
papers swapped?
But Malak,
who wears thick glasses and has her hair in a simple ponytail, is standing up
for her rights and challenging the exam results.
Her lawyers
believe Malak's exam papers could have been swapped with those submitted by the
child of a person of influence.
When the
final result first came out, a disbelieving Malak appealed to the education
authority in the southern city of Assiut, which dismissed the complaint.
So she
appealed to the prosecution service, which tasked a forensics team in Assiut to
determine if the answers were in her handwriting.
Malak was
again stunned when the experts ruled that the answers were indeed in her
handwriting, and the prosecution closed the case.
So she
again appealed against the decision.
"When she
first heard of the forensic report she fainted," said her brother Mina, a
doctor in his thirties who accompanied his sister to Cairo.
Malak was
hospitalised briefly, and then appeared in tears on a television show, a
catheter for a drip still inserted in her hand.
"I
know I'm fighting corruption because the way my results were announced and
forged means that corruption exists," she said.
'I
believe Mariam Malak'
By the time
Malak lodged her second appeal, her story had become a mainstay of television
talk shows and in the newspapers, with people taking to Twitter with the
hashtag "I believe Mariam Malak".
![]() |
Mariam
Malak (centre) a teacher's daughter in a small village in the poor southern
province of Minya, dreams of becoming a doctor like her two brothers (AFP
Photo/
Khaled Desouki)
|
Her case
finally came to the attention of Prime Minister Ibrahim Mahlab, who invited
Malak to the capital for a meeting and issued a statement backing her.
Mahlab said
he would "support the student in her appeal as if she were his
daughter".
The Coptic
Pope Tawadros II also asked to meet her, but Malak, a Christian, declined lest
it appear a sectarian issue, saying her case was "that of an Egyptian
citizen".
The
prosecution service has now reopened the case, this time appointing a forensics
team in the capital to study the handwriting in the answers attributed to her.
Malak's
case has seized the public imagination as Egypt reels from a corruption scandal
that led this week to the arrest of the agriculture minister immediately after
he was told to quit.
There are
also rumours in the press of a pending cabinet reshuffle.
At the
education ministry, a senior official insisted that justice would be upheld in
Malak's case.
"We
are not with anyone or against anyone, and we respect justice," said
Mohamed Saad, adding that the prosecution findings would be implemented.
"If
you respect my rights in my country, all those who live in injustice will know
they can claim theirs as well," Malak told AFP.



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