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Egyptian state cracks down on anti-war activists
international |
anti-war / imperialism |
news report
Wednesday August 20, 2003 18:23 by Donal Mac Fhearraigh - SWP Donal.MacFhearraigh at ucd dot ie 0876838746
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These details have been taken from a GR Britain e-mail. I will keep you informed with updates when they occur. [email protected] Below is a report of yet another attack by the Egyptian state on anti-war
activists. The magnificent response by the movement worldwide to earlier
waves of arrests in February and March this year underlined the importance
of international solidarity in defending human rights in Egypt. Please
protest to the Egyptian authorities as quickly and as fully as possible.
Please remember that a robust
international response to this kind of repression can have an enormous
impact, liberating activists from imprisonment and torture.
Alex Callinicos
(Globalise Resistance)
After 111 days in detention, ten of them on hunger strike, Egyptian anti-war
activist Ashraf Ibrahim was finally charged on 7 August. Alongside four
other activists - Nasser Farouq, Yehia Fakry, Mustafa El Basiony and Remoan
Edward Gendi - he stands accused of forming an illegal left-wing
organisation.
For anti-war activists in Egypt, the prosecution represents a worrying new
development. Like tens of thousands of others, Ashraf took part in the
massive anti-war demonstrations of 20th and 21st March in Cairo. When they
arrested him on 19th April, state security officers seized video footage of
the protests, which ended in brutal repression and mass arrests. The five
activists are also accused of "damaging the prestige and status of the
state" by contacting international human rights organisations.
Despite the campaign of arrests and torture which followed the
demonstrations of March and April, Ashraf and his co-defendants are the only
anti-war activists charged with serious offences. Under Egypt's harsh
emergency laws they could face years in prison if convicted.
The activists' defence campaign believes that the case is politically
motivated. A statement signed by 21 civil society groups says that the
prosecutors aim "to send a threatening message to political activists and
groups in Egypt."
International human rights campaigners agree that the Egyptian government
is trying to crack down on its political opponents. "Egypt's persecution of
Ashraf Ibrahim symbolizes the government's determination to punish
legitimate dissent," said Scott Long of Human Rights Watch, in a statement
released on 1 August.
Millions around the world were inspired by the protests against the war in
Cairo, now Egyptian activists need the support of our movement.
What you can do:
§ Write, email or phone the Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, the Public
Prosecutor and the Egyptian Ambassador (addresses below).
§ Write to your TD and ask him/her why the Irish government has friendly relations with a regime which denies its citizens their basic democratic rights.
§ Send messages of support from your trade union branch or community group
to [email protected] or [email protected] and we will forward them to Ashraf's defence
campaign.
Write to:
His Excellency Mohammad Hosni Mubarak
President of the Arab Republic of Egypt
'Abedine Palace, Cairo, Egypt
[email protected]
+ 202 390 1998
Telegram: President Mubarak, Cairo, Egypt
Telex: 93794 WAZRA UN
Counsellor Maher 'Abd al-Wahid
Public Prosecutor
Dar al-Qadha al-'Ali
Ramses Street, Cairo, Egypt
+ 202 577 4716
Telegram: Public Prosecutor, Cairo, Egypt
His Excellency Mr Abdallah Fouad Hafez
Embassy of the Arab Republic of Egypt
12 Clyde Road, Ballsbridge, Dublin 4.
Tel: 01-6606566/660 6718 Fax: 01-6683745
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Hasty indictment
Are anti-war activists paying a heavy price for their stand during the invasion of Iraq? Amira Howeidy reports on the referral of five activists to an emergency court
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Frustrated by his detention for 100 days without trial, anti-war activist Ashraf Ibrahim went on a hunger strike on 30 July in a bid to force prosecutors to either release him or press charges against him. Almost a week later, the 34-year old activist's efforts yielded results, albeit not in the direction he certainly would have preferred. On Saturday 10 August, prosecutors issued a decision referring Ibrahim and four others to an Emergency State Security Court for allegedly forming a clandestine communist organisation that aimed at overthrowing the government and replacing it with a "hard-line communist" regime.
The prosecutor's referral warrant accused Ibrahim of leading the alleged Revolutionary Socialists Organisation, possessing documents that propagate the organisation's objectives, disseminating false information, and contacting foreign human rights organisations and providing them with reports of human rights violations in the country. All these matters, the warrant said, had the effect of "undermining Egypt's status and position".
The prosecutor's unexpected decision surprised not only Ibrahim, who has been in detention since 19 April, but also came as a shock to the four other defendants named by the case. Their shock emanates from the fact that they were never summoned for interrogation, nor had prosecutors ordered their arrest in the over three months that Ibrahim has been in jail.
The four other defendants -- Nasser El-Beheiri, a researcher at the Land Centre for Human Rights, Yehia Fekri Amin, an engineer, Mustafa Mohamed El-Bassuini, an activist, and Reymon Edward Guindy, a student -- are currently at large.
According to Ahmed Seif El-Islam, director of the Hisham Mubarak Law Centre (HMLC) which is handling the case, the defendants face a maximum prison sentence of 15 years if found guilty.
An Emergency State Security Court, he said, is strict by default. It doesn't accept appeals and only the president can order a clemency plea on its decisions. Seif El-Islam said that these courts -- established by the Emergency Law that has been in force since the assassination of former President Anwar El-Sadat in 1981 -- "clearly violate the Egyptian constitution. They're illegal because the executive power replaces the rule of law." Actually, the HMLC filed a lawsuit contesting the constitutionality of the Emergency Law last November.
The Ashraf Ibrahim case has sent shock waves across the political spectrum and especially within civil society. A statement signed by 21 rights organisations and research centres on Saturday argued that the case is politically motivated and aims at "terrorising" political activists, with emphasis on the members of the Egyptian Popular Committee in Solidarity with the Palestinian Intifada (EPCSPI) and the anti-war movement.
"This escalation [of Ibrahim's case] is part of the government's efforts to impede civic activity in Egypt and demonstrates the government's intention to use the Emergency Law in the terrorising of political and rights activists," the statement said.
The prosecutor who referred the case to the Emergency State Security Court, Osama Abdel-Moneim, was not available for comment.
"Despite this escalation," said Seif El- Islam, "the case itself is very weak and doesn't stand on its own. It was obviously done in haste, and hence is full of loopholes." He argued that the four defendants who were added to the case "could be acquitted quite easily because they were never summoned for interrogation at all. A defendant accused of a felony can't be referred to such a court without interrogation -- it's illegal."
The accusation of "disseminating false information is similarly easy to refute", he said. Seif El-Islam indicated that the recent high-profile acquittal of sociologist Saadeddin Ibrahim -- who was found innocent of several charges including that one -- would provide a powerful precedent which would help weaken the charges against Ibrahim.
As for contacting human rights organisations, Seif El-Islam said that "is obviously not a crime and there is no law that criminalises such a thing".
The Egyptian Organisation for Human Rights (EOHR) also took issue with the charges, expressing its "extreme concern" over the "continuous use of the Emergency Law against political dissent". By doing so, an EOHR statement argued, the government is contradicting itself when it claims that the Emergency Law is only used to fight "terrorism".
A systematic clampdown on activists involved in anti-US and anti-Israel demonstrations over the past three years escalated this spring. More than 800 demonstrators, including students, journalists and MPs, were arrested following violent clashes with the police in March.
Ibrahim's lawyers said their client had never been confronted with the accusation of forming a communist group in the over three months since his detention. "Ibrahim appeared before the prosecutor nine times so that his detention period could be renewed, and not once did they bring up the communist group allegation, which is a serious crime that certainly requires interrogation. Why didn't they ask him one question in that regard?" asked Seif El- Islam.
Ibrahim had, in fact, been confronted with such "charges" as posting information on the government clampdown on the anti-war demonstrations, surfing the Al-Jazeera Web site, and contacting human rights groups. Police raided his home in the early hours of 17 April while he was out of town and seized his computer, scanner, digital camera and papers. His wife said the police force that searched her house that day failed to present a search warrant. His lawyers say the same police force issued a search warrant on 18 April, which claimed that the raid took place that day, and not the day before. "This is another glaring legal violation added to the long list of breaches in this case," said Seif El-Islam. "From a legal perspective, there is no case."
The political implications, however, are a different story altogether.
All of the "awkward squad" rounded up and thrown in jail. Sounds like heaven.
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