In recent weeks, fires have broken out in various parts of Egypt: from Ramses Central to service facilities, from a mall in Sheikh Zayed to informal settlements. The locations have varied, but the scenes have repeated… So are we facing an unfortunate coincidence? Or is there a pattern that warrants reflection and a logical response?
A superficial view might consider these incidents as isolated—each with its own cause, circumstances, and assessment. But when they happen repeatedly in a short period, and across vital areas, it becomes hard for the public to believe they’re merely “random.”
We are not here to prove the existence of a hidden conspiracy or a deliberate hand, but we also cannot ignore the fact that there is a systematic flaw evident in: weak fire protection systems, deteriorating electrical infrastructure, and a lax attitude toward implementing safety standards in both public and private facilities.
There’s still a societal culture that underestimates the dangers of a “bare wire” or a “cracked plug.”
Is There a Geographical Pattern?
The geographic spread of the fires hasn’t been limited to one area, but is concentrated in densely populated urban centers (Cairo, Alexandria, Delta cities) and aging facilities: telephone exchanges, schools, markets, service institutions, and places of symbolic or communal value. This may raise suspicions we currently lack the evidence to confirm.
While the prevailing theory is “negligence,” the frequency of incidents creates a public sense of danger—even if not intentional. This calls for a smart and convincing institutional response, not simplification, denial, or accusations against those who ask questions.
The issue isn’t about intentions, but about preparedness. The greatest danger we face is being lulled by reassurances that “everything is under control,” while the reality shows the fire is close to every home.
We must act with a three-pronged approach:
- Preventively: Launch a national plan to review safety systems in critical facilities, starting with schools and hospitals, and extending to markets and central exchanges.
- Culturally: Raise awareness about the dangers of negligence, spontaneous ignition, and random wiring. Make “safety” part of school curricula and public media.
- Institutionally: Restructure civil defense and industrial safety agencies, and connect them to modern technology, including surveillance, monitoring, and early-warning systems.
We need to pause, reflect, and face ourselves before we face the flames. What’s burning today is the result of long silence in the face of negligence, and underestimating what may seem trivial… until it ignites.
We are not looking for a scapegoat to hang our worries on, but for rationality to light the darkness—before the flames do.


