The Standard (St. Catharines)

‘Assembly line’ of torture in Egypt

- MAGGIE MICHAEL

CAIRO — An internatio­nal rights group says Egyptian President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi has given a “green light” to systematic torture inside detention facilities, allowing officers to act with “almost total impunity.”

In a 63-page report released Wednesday, Human Rights Watch says el- Sissi, a U.S. ally who was warmly received at the White House earlier this year, is pursuing stability “at any cost,” and has allowed the widespread torture of detainees despite it being outlawed by the Egyptian constituti­on.

El-Sissi “has effectivel­y given police and National Security officers a green light to use torture whenever they please,” said Joe Stork, deputy Middle East director at the New York-based group. “Impunity for the systematic use of torture has left citizens with no hope for justice.”

The allegation­s, the group said, amount to crimes against humanity.

Egypt’s Foreign Ministry slammed the report in a statement later on Wednesday, saying it’s full of inaccuraci­es and undermines the sovereignt­y of the state and the role of its national institutio­ns“

Most of the detainees are alleged supporters of the Muslim Brother- hood group, which rose to power after the 2011 uprising that toppled President Hosni Mubarak but has been the target of a sweeping crackdown since the military overthrew Morsi in 2013.

Human Rights Watch says Egypt arrested or charged some 60,000 people in the two years after Mohammed Morsi, a Brotherhoo­d leader who became Egypt’s first freely elected president, was overthrown following a divisive year in power. Hundreds have gone missing in what appear to be forced disappeara­nces, and hundreds of others have received preliminar­y death sentences.

Widespread torture in a perceived climate of impunity was one of the main grievances behind the uprising that toppled Mubarak. Stork warned that “allowing the security services to commit this heinous crime across the country invites another cycle of unrest.”

U.S. President Donald Trump has hailed el-Sissi as an ally against terrorism, but last month the United States cut or delayed nearly $300 million in military and economic aid, part of an estimated $1.3 billion a year the U.S. has given Egypt since it made peace with Israel in 1979.

Based on interviews with 19 Egyptians detained as far back as 2013, the rights group documented abuses ranging from beatings to rape and sodomy. Human Rights Watch said local rights groups have documented dozens of deaths under torture in police custody.

It said torture sessions are aimed at extracting confession­s, collecting informatio­n or simply as punishment. Prosecutor­s, who are tasked with probing violations, create an “environmen­t of almost total impunity” by either ignoring complaints of torture or threatenin­g abuse themselves.

Human Rights Watch says it found identical methods of torture used in detention facilities across the country, an “assembly line of serious abuse.”

After a “welcoming party” of beatings, detainees are stripped naked, blindfolde­d and subjected to elec- trical shocks and various stress positions. In one position, known as the “grill,” detainees are hung from a spit-like wooden pole placed atop two chairs.

Officers often move detainees from one room to the other, where different methods of torture are used, such as pulling out nails or electrocut­ing a detainee while dousing him with water, often until he passes out. Some detainees said they were placed inside a room dubbed the “fridge” and kept in extremely cold temperatur­es while wearing nothing but underwear.

“All my nerves were shaking. I wasn’t in control of them,” Human Rights Watch quoted a detainee as saying, after an intense torture session that included shocking his genitals with electrical wires.

The researcher­s found five cases in which officers used torture to force detainees to read pre-written confession­s, which were filmed and then posted on social media or shown on state TV.

“I gave them the answers they wanted to hear because the electrocut­ion was too much for me to bear” another detainee said.

The Interior Ministry in the past has denied allegation­s of systemic torture, blaming any abuses on individual­s and saying they are held accountabl­e. Several officers have been tried and convicted of torture, while others have been acquitted.

 ?? AP FILES ?? A prisoner gestures from a defendants cage in a courtroom in Egypt’s notorious Torah prison in this file photo. Human Rights Watch, an internatio­nal rights group, is alleging systematic torture inside Egyptian police stations and Interior Ministry...
AP FILES A prisoner gestures from a defendants cage in a courtroom in Egypt’s notorious Torah prison in this file photo. Human Rights Watch, an internatio­nal rights group, is alleging systematic torture inside Egyptian police stations and Interior Ministry...

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