Vancouver Sun

Youth detained for wearing anti-torture T-shirt freed

- HAMZA HENDAWI

CAIRO — An Egyptian youth released Friday after two years in detention for wearing a T-shirt with a slogan against torture described his imprisonme­nt as “very cruel” and said one challenge he must immediatel­y tackle was to grow accustomed again to being among people.

Mahmoud Mohammed Ahmed, 20, walked out of a Cairo police station in the morning, more than 12 hours after a Cairo court upheld another tribunal’s order to release him, according to his brother and one of his lawyers. The prosecutio­n had appealed the earlier ruling, they said.

Ahmed stepped out of the station to a warm and noisy welcome by his brother, Tarek Mohammed Ahmed, and a small crowd of about 40 lawyers, rights activists and friends.

“My experience was very cruel,” he said in a telephone interview. “I put up with it because of my brother and everyone else who has been demanding my freedom. But, I am not a hero. I am nothing.”

Mahmoud was 18 and a high school student when he was arrested on Jan. 25, 2014 — the third anniversar­y of the uprising that toppled autocrat Hosni Mubarak.

The day saw deadly street clashes between police and protesters. He was detained at a police checkpoint north of Cairo as he made his way home after taking part in street protests marking the occasion. Another youth accused in the same case, 24-year-old Islam Talaat, was also released Friday.

Police accused Mahmoud of taking part in unauthoriz­ed demonstrat­ions, possession of explosives and paying money on behalf of the now-banned Muslim Brotherhoo­d group to others to take part in protests.

He was never formally charged, but the case against him remains pending despite his release.

When arrested, he was wearing a T-shirt with the slogan “A nation without torture,” something that turned his case into a cause celebre for Egyptian rights activists campaignin­g for an end to police abuses. He also wore a scarf that bore the date of the start of the 2011 uprising: Jan. 25.

His brother and one of his lawyers, Mukhtar Munir, have maintained that Mahmoud was tortured in the early stages of his detention and deprived of many of his rights.

He had leg surgery in 2010 for a condition stemming from a bad childhood fall. In detention, the leg’s condition deteriorat­ed for lack of adequate medical attention, they said. He now limps and walks slowly, using a cane for support.

He will soon undergo corrective surgery on his leg, rejoin school and, according to him, take an arts major in college.

His detention was part of the crackdown overseen by President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi who the year before, as military chief, led the July 2013 ouster of Egypt’s elected president, the Islamist Mohammed Morsi, following mass protests against his divisive rule.

 ?? MOHAMED EL RAAI/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Egyptian activist Mahmoud Mohammed Ahmed smiles after his release in Cairo Friday after two years in detention without formal charges against him.
MOHAMED EL RAAI/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Egyptian activist Mahmoud Mohammed Ahmed smiles after his release in Cairo Friday after two years in detention without formal charges against him.

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