Imperial Valley Press

Human rights honor goes to Egyptian banned from travel

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CAIRO (AP) — An Egyptian has been honored with one of the most prestigiou­s awards granted to human rights defenders but was unable to accept the prize in person because his government has banned him from travel over his work documentin­g abuses.

Mohamed Zaree is one of several prominent Egyptian activists and human rights workers who are banned from travel over allegation­s of harming national security, part of a wide-scale crackdown on dissent that has stamped out much of the country’s once-vibrant civil society.

The Martin Ennals award is given out by 10 of the world’s leading human rights organizati­ons, including Amnesty Internatio­nal and Human Rights Watch, to recognize outstandin­g work done at great personal risk. Zaree’s wife and daughters accepted it on his behalf at the ceremony in Geneva.

Zaree said he hopes the award will o er some protection to him and other members of Egypt’s dwindling human rights community, nearly all of whom face prosecutio­n under sweeping laws targeting those accused of “underminin­g national unity.”

“We are all banned from travelling, and some have had their bank accounts frozen,” he told The Associated Press. “There is a danger for myself and my colleagues, but I believe the biggest danger is when the victims of human rights violations are denied their last hope.”

The 37-year-old Zaree leads activities in Egypt for the Cairo Institute for Human Rights Studies, which focuses on the Arab world. The group moved its base to Tunisia in 2014 after Egypt unleashed a wave of repression against such organizati­ons following the military overthrow of an elected Islamist president the previous year.

The group has handled high-profile cases, including that of Egyptian-American charity worker Aya Hijazi, who had establishe­d a foundation to aid street children in 2013 and was jailed on charges of child abuse that were dismissed as bogus by human rights groups and U.S. officials. She was released and allowed to return to the U.S. earlier this year after nearly three years in prison.

The award, named after a former head of Britain-based Amnesty, is among the most prestigiou­s in the field. The other finalists were El Salvador transgende­r woman and activist Karla Avelar, and the Free The 5KH group — five human rights defenders who were recently released after more than a year in pre-trial detention in Cambodia.

In Geneva, award founder Hans Thoolen celebrated Zaree’s “heroic” behavior in “holding the fort” nearly alone amid the crackdown on human rights organizati­ons.

“There was a very clear understand­ing that the Egyptian regime seems to be emboldened by the lack of action in the U.N. and by major states,” he said.

Local human rights organizati­ons and other civil society groups played a major role in documentin­g abuses under President Hosni Mubarak, who resigned in the face of a popular uprising in 2011 after nearly three decades in power. Such groups continued to operate until the military overthrew his successor, the freely elected but divisive Mohammed Morsi, two years later.

But Egypt’s current president, Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi, who led Morsi’s overthrow, has presided over the heaviest crackdown in decades. Authoritie­s have jailed tens of thousands, mainly Islamist supporters of Morsi but also several prominent secular activists.

 ?? AP PHOTO/NARIMAN ELMOFTY ?? Mohamed Zaree, human rights advocate and legal scholar, writes on a card after an interview with The Associated Press in Cairo, Egypt, on Tuesday. Ten of the world’s leading human rights organizati­ons have selected Zaree for the prestigiou­s Martin...
AP PHOTO/NARIMAN ELMOFTY Mohamed Zaree, human rights advocate and legal scholar, writes on a card after an interview with The Associated Press in Cairo, Egypt, on Tuesday. Ten of the world’s leading human rights organizati­ons have selected Zaree for the prestigiou­s Martin...

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