Abdel Rahman Ahmed-Cairo

Despite the official announcement of the death of the Egyptian nuclear expert Abu Bakr Ramadan as a result of a heart attack while participating in a scientific conference in Morocco, the incident stirred controversy and recalled the mysterious deaths associated with the scientists of the genius, especially in the nuclear fields.

Moroccan media reported on Friday that Ramadan, a professor of radiation and environmental measurements at the state nuclear watchdog, died mysteriously last Wednesday while attending an IAEA workshop in the Moroccan city of Marrakech.

Moroccan newspapers quoted medical sources as saying that the Egyptian expert, who previously served as the head of the National Observatory Network at the Egyptian Nuclear and Radiological Control Authority, felt stomach cramps after drinking a glass of orange juice and was taken to hospital where he died.

The Moroccan authorities opened an investigation into the circumstances of the incident, sent blood samples to a medical laboratory to see if he was poisoned, and ordered the public prosecutor to conduct an autopsy to determine the cause of death.

Ramadan was reportedly commissioned by Arab environment ministers in 2015 to study the potential effects of the nuclear reactors in Dimona in Israel and Bushehr in Iran, raising doubts about the circumstances of death.


Controversy and official silence

The absence of any official Egyptian statement on the incident from Wednesday to Saturday morning, when the Egyptian ambassador to Morocco Ashraf Ibrahim said that the preliminary autopsy of the Egyptian scientist, which he described as a routine procedure, proved that the death is normal as a result of a heart attack.

But the same day, the newspaper "Al-Jarida 24" quoted medical sources as saying that the cause of the death of the Egyptian scientist is "taking medications that affect his health."

While the ambassador pointed out that Ramadan became more tired and asked the hotel management to take him to the hospital, he said in other statements that one person saw Ramadan in his bed in a state of fatigue, where his door was open and suffering from the inability to breathe.

Regarding the novel "Juice", which sparked a lot of controversy about the death of the nuclear expert, the Egyptian ambassador said that behind a Tunisian colleague of the late scientist said that Ramadan felt tired after drinking orange juice, but indicated in police investigations that he used to drink this juice daily.

Although Moroccan newspapers and the first Egyptian newspapers confirmed that the death occurred on Wednesday, September 4, the date of the latest publication of the Egyptian scientist on his Facebook page, the official Egyptian statements talked about the incident on Thursday, without justifying the reason for the delay of the official announcement to Saturday. Or the absence of the Egyptian medical presence for the autopsy, while calls for re-autopsy have escalated in Egypt.

A message sent from Dr. Gamal El-Din Ibrahim, Director of the Poison Center at the University of California, in America, questioned the cause of the death of the Egyptian twisted scientist d. Abu Bakr Abdel Moneim Ramadan in Morocco, and demands the Egyptian authorities to re-autopsy and examine the body thoroughly.
Ibrahim says the man may have been poisoned.

- Ammar Ali Hassan (@ammaralihassan) September 8, 2019


Einstein Arabs

Almost seventy years is the time difference between the announcement of the death of the famous Egyptian physicist Ali Mustafa Musharrafa as a result of a heart attack and the death of Egyptian nuclear expert Abu Bakr Ramadan for the same reason, and amid mysterious circumstances as well.

He was the first Egyptian dean of the Faculty of Science, one of the few scientists who discovered the secret of atom fragmentation, and the first to introduce the idea of ​​making a hydrogen bomb.

Musharrafa died on January 15, 1950, at the age of 52. The official announcement of his death after a heart attack was said to have been caused by stress, but there were several reports that he had been assassinated and poisoned.

The finger at the assassination refers to the Israeli Foreign Intelligence Service (Mossad), which was established one month prior to this incident, specifically on December 13, 1949.One of its main tasks was to thwart activities that Israel considered hostile to it, and was famous throughout its history for the assassinations of Arab minds.


Samira Moussa

Three years before Musharraf's mysterious death, he was followed by his pupil student, maize scientist Samira Moussa, who has been reported to have reached an important formula to break up cheap metals such as copper, and then make the atomic bomb from materials that might be accessible to all.

The Egyptian scientist was involved in a collision on August 15, 1952, while going to visit nuclear plants on the outskirts of California, the United States. Investigations showed that her driver who escaped was carrying a pseudonym, and that the management of the reactor did not send anyone to pick her up, and US newspapers admitted at the time that the accident was planned. .


Against anonymous

Same fate went to prominent Egyptian scientist in the field of atomic research, Samir Naguib. He traveled in the 1960s on a mission to the United States, worked as an assistant professor at the University of Detroit, and his research won the admiration of American scientists. Offers to develop his research there and not to return to Egypt.

But Naguib refused these offers, especially after the defeat of June 1967, and decided to return to his country, and booked a seat in the plane to Cairo on August 13, 1967, and on the night set for his return was surprised by a transport vehicle chased and rushed towards him very quickly to crash his car and crash to kill him inside, The incident was recorded against an unknown person.


Israeli recognition

Another Egyptian scientist with Mossad was Yahya al-Mashad, one of the most important scientists in the field of design and control of nuclear reactors, who joined the Iraqi nuclear weapons program, making it a target of Israeli intelligence, which assassinated him during his visit to France in 1980 after rejecting its temptations.

The corset was found dead on June 13, 1980, in a Paris hotel, and the case was also recorded against an unknown man, but Israel later officially acknowledged the assassination of the corset through the documentary film "Raid on the Reactor," which was shown in the Discovery Documentary Channel in 2012.

In addition to all of the above, the file of the death of Egyptian minds mysteriously abound with many other names, including professor of geopolitics Gamal Hamdan, the Egyptian scientist in the field of space Said El-Sayed Bedair, the young atom scientist Ahmed Mohamed El-Gammal and other names, as well as the mysterious disappearance of a scientist. Egyptian Corn Nabil Qaliny.