New Era

Thousands languish in jail

… decade after Arab Spring

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BEIRUT - Ten years ago, millions dared to dream that political change could sweep across Arab capitals, but in most places such hopes have been crushed as thousands languish in jail.

From Cairo to Damascus, regimes have cracked down on the dissent which flourished in the early, heady days of the Arab Spring uprisings, with many protesters especially in Syria and Egypt now silenced through torture and imprisonme­nt. Or even death.

Today, some 60 000 Egyptian political detainees have been rounded up since then autocratic president Hosni Mubarak was ousted in early 2011, according to a grim toll by human rights groups.

A 2018 Amnesty Internatio­nal report alleged that Egypt, a country with 100 million people, had become “an open-air prison for critics”.

Just last week, Amnesty denounced a “horrifying execution spree” in Egypt, saying at least 57 men and women had been put to death in the past two months, which was almost double all of last year.

And in Syria, where a brutal civil war is still raging in which more than 380 000 people have died, detainees continue to meet their deaths in prisons.

“The Syrian government has used torture and enforced disappeara­nce as a means to crush dissent for decades,” said Amnesty in a different 2017 report.

“Since 2011... the Syrian government’s violations against detainees have increased drasticall­y in magnitude and severity.”

A report from the Human Rights Data Analysis Group said at least 17 723 people were killed in government custody between March 2011 and December 2015, roughly equating to about 300 deaths a month.

While the Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights has estimated that 100 000 people have died in Syrian prisons since 2011.

In response, both Cairo and Damascus have categorica­lly denied the accusation­s and accused “biased” rights groups of interferin­g in domestic affairs.

And amid an internatio­nal fight against attacks by radical Islamists, the government­s have also justified the wave of arrests as part of the global battle against such “terror groups”.

Informatio­n on prisoners is scarce however, and families often spend years searching for missing sons and

It was only in 2018 that many in Syria learnt that their loved ones had died years ago when authoritie­s updated the death records.

“That’s it? You’re sure he’s dead?” Salwa had said, in shock.

After seven years with no news, Salwa could hardly believe her nephew, a Syrian activist arrested in 2011, had been dead the last five.

“Even in mourning, we’re afraid and hide our grief,” Salwa had told AFP in 2018, using a pseudonym.

The 2011 uprising against Egypt’s longtime president Mubarak initially saw the release of thousands of prisoners, especially Islamists.

But the following chaotic years - first under an Islamist president and then after the army moved in to take control - led to a renewed heavy crackdown, especially on the nowoutlawe­d Muslim Brotherhoo­d.

Activists say authoritie­s often level new charges against those who have exceeded the two-year limit in pretrial detention, a procedure known as “rotational pre-trial detention.”

And some prisoners only briefly taste freedom, before being returned to their cells on new charges.

Among them is Egyptian activist Alaa Abdel Fattah, 39, a prominent figure in 2011, who was freed in March 2019, only to be re-imprisoned in September that year after rare, smallscale anti-government protests.

In June, his sister, Sanaa, 26, was also arrested for allegedly inciting protests and posting “fake” informatio­n about the spread of coronaviru­s in prisons.

Their mother Laila Soueif, 64, a mathematic­s professor at Cairo University, told AFP of the immense “personal pain” she feels at the absence of her son and daughter.

She says she has no idea when her children will be freed again.

Egyptian authoritie­s recently placed her son on the country’s terror list, a designatio­n which bans him from travel even if he were released.

But Soueif has never regretted that they took part in the 2011 protests, even though she acknowledg­es that “if it wasn’t for the revolution, Alaa and Sanaa wouldn’t have been in prison.”

The uprisings “woke people up to their rights,” she said.

Mohamed Morsi, the leader of the Muslim Brotherhoo­d and Egypt’s first democratic­ally elected president, was himself subjected to harsh imprisonme­nt after being ousted by the military.

- Nampa/AFP

 ?? Photo: Nampa/AFP ?? Flashback… In this file photo taken on 9 April 2011, a young Libyan woman holds signs in front of the White House in Washington during a protest by Libyans and Syrians against the regimes of Muammar Gaddafi and Bashar al-Assad.
Photo: Nampa/AFP Flashback… In this file photo taken on 9 April 2011, a young Libyan woman holds signs in front of the White House in Washington during a protest by Libyans and Syrians against the regimes of Muammar Gaddafi and Bashar al-Assad.

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