Kuwait Times

Report points to Egyptian anti-democracy acts

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Egypt is failing to protect free speech and its minorities, investigat­e abuses by its forces or grant US monitors access to the conflict-ridden Sinai Peninsula, according to a damning Trump administra­tion report obtained by The Associated Press. The US grievances, detailed in a State Department memorandum to Congress, are likely to draw consternat­ion from Egyptian President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi, who meets Wednesday with President Donald Trump on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly gathering. The memo was legally required for the Trump administra­tion to continue giving certain US aid to Cairo despite its failure to meet several conditions on good governance.

“The overall human rights climate in Egypt continues to deteriorat­e,” the memo says. “There is a continuing problem with arbitrary arrests, detentions, disappeara­nces. There are reports of extrajudic­ial killings. There are numerous allegation­s of torture and deaths in detention.” Last month, the Trump administra­tion cut nearly $100 million in military and economic aid to Egypt, a key counterter­rorism partner that has repeatedly run afoul of the US over its human rights record. But the administra­tion said Egypt would still receive almost $200 million more in military financing, on a delayed basis, if it makes improvemen­ts, including easing tight restrictio­ns on civic groups.

Falling short

Although the US determined it couldn’t certify that Egypt was meeting its conditions to receive the aid, the law allows Secretary of State Rex Tillerson to waive those conditions if he determines it’s in US national security interests to provide the funds anyway. But the law requires a detailed “memorandum of justificat­ion” outlining how Egypt is falling short.

Tillerson sent the memo to Congress on Aug 22, the same day the funding decision was announced. But the State Department has declined to make the memo public, despite requests from the media and human rights groups. The memo is considered embarrassi­ng to el-Sissi, who has denounced previous human rights critiques as baseless. El-Sissi did not directly address global critiques of his country’s rights record in his speech to the UN on Tuesday. But the Egyptian leader said his country was working to empower its people economical­ly despite being “encircled by the most dangerous crises in the world.” —AP

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