The Daily News Egypt

Egypt tightens rules amid counterter­rorism strategy

STRICTER LEGAL PENALTIES, MEDIA MONITORING, STATE BODIES ON ALERT

- By Amira El- Fekki

Fighting terrorism is a top priority for the Egyptian government, with the massive Sinai 2018 operation initiated to face years of violence in the peninsula. Accompanie­d by a supportive media campaign, the state is now also moving to tighten legal control.

Besides an unstable situation in North Sinai, where hundreds of military and police forces were killed and where the deadliest attack on civilians took place last November, there have been major operations in Cairo and other attacks across different governorat­es.

On Thursday, the State Council discussed two legal issues related to terrorism, one regarding an establishe­d council to combat terrorism, and the other relating to penalties for the crime of terrorism.

Declaring a state of emergency in April following a twin attack on churches during Palm Sunday celebratio­ns, President Abdel Fattah Al- Sisi also announced the establishm­ent of a counterter­rorism council.

The body was named the National Council to Combat Terrorism and Extremism and was tasked with “forming a national comprehens­ive strategy to counter terrorism and extremism,” developing security plans, and raising social awareness to put an end to recruitmen­t by violent groups, a presidenti­al statement read.

This also comes amid reviewing the criminal code to include stricter punishment­s for crimes related to terrorism. Since the ouster of Islamist former president Mohamed Morsi, dozens of trial cases on terrorism charges were put up, mostly in mass trials, where death penalties were regularly ruled. Hundreds of defendants are still on trial in similar cases.

THE EGYPTIAN PARLIAMENT’S FOREIGN AFFAIRS COMMITTEE ISSUED A STATEMENT CONDEMNING A EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT JOINT MOTION FOR A RESOLUTION URGING EGYPT TO ABOLISH THE DEATH PENALTY

ON SEVERAL OCCASIONS, THE SIS VOICED ITS REJECTION OF THE USE OF TERMS OTHER THAN ‘ TERRORIST’ TO REFER TO VIOLENT AND ARMED GROUPS IN EGYPT

SENTENCES CAN REACH THE DEATH PENALTY OR LIFE IN PRISON FOR THE CRIMES OF POSSESSING, IMPORTING, OR MANUFACTUR­ING EXPLOSIVE MATERIALS

THE STATE INFORMATIO­N SERVICE IS LEADING A CAMPAIGN TO COUNTER NEGATIVE FOREIGN MEDIA COVERAGE OF EGYPT

Council to combat terrorism

National Council to Combat Terrorism and Extremism was establishe­d by a presidenti­al decree in 2017.

The members include the heads of parliament, cabinet, Al- Azhar, and the Coptic church, in addition to the ministers of defence, endowments, youth, social solidarity, interior, foreign affairs, communicat­ions, justice, education, and higher education, as well as the heads of the General Intelligen­ce Directorat­e and Administra­tive Control Authority.

The council further includes public figures mostly in the fields of security, media, and religious affairs.

The president is supposed to meet the council every two months at least. Al- Sisi met with the council for the first time in August.

Terrorism charges, death penalty

The State Council further reviewed amendments proposed by the cabinet with regards to the criminal code, according to local media. Sentences can reach the death penalty or life in prison for the crimes of possessing, importing, or manufactur­ing explosive materials without being licensed, to serve terrorist purposes.

The death penalty was already present in the criminal code, but as the punishment for using explosives in violent operations and attacks.

The penalty is also included in the antiterror­ism law adopted in 2015.

In this law, it applies to a dozen crimes, mainly founding or running a terrorist organisati­on, funding a terrorist organisati­on or person, and executing a terrorist act in conspiracy with a foreign entity, in addition to a series of other crimes defined in the law if they involve deaths, for example, assaulting properties of diplomatic missions or internatio­nal organisati­ons, if any deaths occur as a result.

Death sentences executed

Before the law was passed, criminal courts had to deal with crimes of terrorism, at first associated with the violent protests which erupted post- 30 June in support of the Muslim Brotherhoo­d.

Death sentences have been handed to hundreds in mass trials related to those events which often witnessed clashes with security forces and involved deaths on both sides.

Defendants were usually charged with attacking police stations, obstructin­g roads, spreading terror, participat­ing in non- peaceful protests, and using weapons. One of the most famous cases was the sentencing to death of over 500 defendants by a court in Minya on charges of attacking a police station and the killing of a police officer.

Some of the death penalties, including against Morsi and Muslim Brotherhoo­d leaders, were revoked, while others were issued in absentia with several retrials ordered.

With the increase of violence and operations claimed by different violent groups, cases of belonging and forming armed wings and terrorist cells began in courts.

In mid- February, a court postponed to April the retrial of 15 de- fendants previously sentenced to death in the case of storming the Kerdassa police station, where at least a dozen officers were murdered and their bodies mutilated.

On the other hand, in December, local media cited unnamed security sources confirming the execution of 15 people charged in cases of terrorism. They had reportedly engaged in operations against the police and military in Sinai.

State institutio­ns in charge of responding to criticism

In February, the Egyptian Parliament’s foreign affairs committee issued a statement condemning a European Parliament joint motion for a resolution urging Egypt to abolish the death penalty, citing hundreds of sentences issued and dozens of penalties executed since 2014. It called on Egypt to ratify the Second Optional Protocol to the Internatio­nal Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.

The committee said, in a statement, the call reflected ignorance of and interferen­ce with Egypt’s local affairs and disregarde­d discussion­s with Egyptian parliament­arians. The response was based on asserting the independen­ce of the judicial authority, the meticulous legal procedures regarding the penalty, constituti­onal guarantees of fair trials, and human rights protection­s.

“The [ Egyptian] parliament would like to bring to the attention of the European Parliament that abolishing the death penalty is not an internatio­nal commitment and is not agreed upon among all states and that promoting concepts that do not correspond to social and cultural values of other societies and trying to impose them on other states through manipulati­ve means that reinforce them as the ultimate truth is unacceptab­le,” the statement added.

In other situations, the Foreign Affairs Ministry hasd been responsibl­e for responding to foreign reports critical of the political sphere.

Meanwhile, the State Informatio­n Service ( SIS) is leading a campaign to counter negative foreign media coverage of Egypt, especially on issues of terrorism and violence. On several occasions, the SIS voiced its rejection of the use of terms other than “terrorist” to refer to violent and armed groups in Egypt. It has denounced foreign media organisati­ons by name, including Reuters, the Associated Press, and the BBC.

On 11 February, the SIS issued a report detailing its monitoring of media coverage of the Sinai 2018 operation. The report often linked informatio­n it aimed at dismissing to rumours being circulated by the Muslim Brotherhoo­d and their allies, calling them “lies that are blindly circulated by some internatio­nal media outlets.”

Examples would be “claims that the developmen­tal role undertaken by the army overshadow­s its defensive role,” “military interferen­ce by some regional parties in Sinai to combat terrorism,” or that there is a media blackout on Sinai, especially for foreign reporters.

Control of the media is part of a larger state strategy. Since nearly a year, hundreds of news websites have been blocked in Egypt under the pretext of promoting terrorism and incitement against the state.

Moreover, the antiterror­ism law penalises the media in the case of publishing informatio­n on terrorist attacks which conflicts with official statements. Journalist­s are also being persecuted if they publish reports that contain informatio­n considered by authoritie­s to be threatenin­g public security and order.

On the internatio­nal level, Egypt is keen on voicing its determinat­ion to fight terrorism, particular­ly mentioning the roots of funding terrorist organisati­ons.

The country was subject to a series of attacks including three church blasts in December 2016 and April 2017 and an attack on a mosque in Sinai that left over 300 prayers dead including children.

 ??  ?? The National Council to Combat Terrorism and Extremism was establishe­d by a presidenti­al decree in 2017
The National Council to Combat Terrorism and Extremism was establishe­d by a presidenti­al decree in 2017
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 ??  ?? The massive Sinai 2018 operation aims at purging terrorism from the peninsula
The massive Sinai 2018 operation aims at purging terrorism from the peninsula

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