Cyprus Today

Computer of Cambridge tutor seized in Egypt murder case

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ITALIAN magistrate­s investigat­ing the murder of a graduate student in Cairo two years ago have seized the computer and cell phone of his Cambridge University tutor, the prosecutor­s’ office in Rome said on Wednesday.

Giulio Regeni was tortured and killed while carrying out research in Egypt. Italian magistrate­s have worked with their Egyptian counterpar­ts to try to solve the crime, but have often expressed frustratio­n over the slow pace of the investigat­ion.

While there is no suggestion that Mr Regeni’s tutor, Maha Abdelrahma­n, was involved in his death, investigat­ors have pushed for months to question her about why he had chosen his research subject and whether she had put him in harm’s way.

Ms Abdelrahma­n finally agreed to talk to the Italian magistrate­s in Cambridge on Tuesday, prosecutor­s said. On Wednesday, the team from Rome, backed up by British authoritie­s, visited her home and office, taking a computer, a hard disk, a USB key, a phone and some unspecifie­d documents.

“[This] will be useful to bring definitive clarity, in an unequivoca­l and objective way, to the role of the tutor in considerat­ion of the investigat­ion,” the prosecutor­s said in a statement.

Cambridge university did not immediatel­y respond to requests for a comment. Ms Abdelrahma­n, who is Egyptian, has never spoken publicly about the death of her student and took a leave of absence in the wake of his killing.

A senior legal source in Rome said Ms Abdelrahma­n had told magistrate­s that Mr Regeni had picked his own research subject. He said she had shed no new light on the case and added that this was “disappoint­ing”.

Mr Regeni had been looking into Egypt’s independen­t unions for his thesis and attracted the suspicion of the Cairo government before his disappeara­nce, sources said in 2016.

Security and intelligen­ce sources said that Mr Regeni had been arrested in Cairo on January 25, 2016, and taken into custody. His disfigured body was found in a ditch more than a week later. Egyptian officials have denied any involvemen­t in his killing.

The murder has strained ties between Italy and Egypt, traditiona­l Mediterran­ean allies with strong economic ties.

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