The Guardian (USA)

Egypt arrests activists including Ahdaf Soueif over coronaviru­s protest

- Emma Graham-Harrison

Egyptian security forces arrested the Booker-shortliste­d novelist Ahdaf Soueif and three other women after they staged a protest demanding the release of prisoners over fears of a coronaviru­s outbreak in the country’s overcrowde­d jails.

Soueif, her sister Laila Soueif, the activist Mona Seif and Rabab El-Mahdi, a political science professor, held a small demonstrat­ion in central Cairo on Wednesday afternoon.

“We are in front of the cabinet, asking for the state to take serious steps regarding corona in prisons. As we know, at any time Egypt’s prisons are clusters for disease,” Mona said in a Facebook live video, according to Ahdaf Soueif’s son, Omar Robert Hamilton.

Three of the group are relatives of one of Egypt’s most prominent bloggers and activists, Alaa Abd El Fattah, who was imprisoned last September after rare, small-scale protests erupted demanding the toppling of the president, Abdel Fatah al-Sisi.

There have been increasing concerns among supporters of Abd El Fattah and his family about conditions in Egyptian prisons, where human rights groups have repeatedly warned about overcrowdi­ng and lack of hygiene.

Seif, El Fattah’s sister, had been active on social media calling for prisoners to be released, and on Tuesday, Laila Soueif, his mother, wrote to Egypt’s attorney general urging him to free prisoners.

“The only way to prevent detention centres becoming hubs for spreading the pandemic and endangerin­g the entire population of the country is to release as many prisoners as possible,” she wrote.

Since the outbreak of the coronaviru­s, jails have been sealed off, fuelling concerns about conditions inside, Hamilton added.

“Prisons have been shut off for two weeks now. Families have had no contact at all and they are increasing­ly nervous,” he said on Twitter. Egypt so far has 196 confirmed cases of coronaviru­s and six deaths, but there are fears the virus could have spread further.

Human Rights Watch also said this week that Egypt could “spare disaster” if it organised conditiona­l releases from jails “notorious for being overcrowde­d, dirty and unhygienic”. It called on Sisi to “put reason before punishment”.

The four women face possible charges of unlawful protest, illegal assembly and obstructin­g traffic, the independen­t, and were taken for questionin­g by prosecutor­s, the Mada Masr news site reported.

Daniel Gorman, director of English PEN called for the immediate release of all four women. “Ms Soueif is a hugely valued member of the global literary community, and at a time like the present we particular­ly need to hear her voice. We call on the Egyptian authoritie­s to drop all charges against her, and for her immediate and unconditio­nal release,” he said.

 ??  ?? The Tora prison in Cairo. Human rights groups have criticised overcrowdi­ng and lack of hygiene in Egypt’s jails. Photograph: Khaled Desouki/AFP via Getty Images
The Tora prison in Cairo. Human rights groups have criticised overcrowdi­ng and lack of hygiene in Egypt’s jails. Photograph: Khaled Desouki/AFP via Getty Images

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