The Jerusalem Post

Western nations condemn Cairo’s detention of lawyer

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Several Western countries have criticized the detention of an Egyptian human rights lawyer who is helping investigat­e the murder of Italian student Giulio Regeni.

For the first time, Germany, Italy, the Netherland­s, Britain and Canada said they were “deeply concerned” at the ongoing detention of human rights lawyer Ibrahim Metwaly Hegazy.

“We are concerned at the detention conditions that Ibrahim Metwaly Hegazy is reportedly enduring, and continue to call for transparen­cy on prison conditions in Egypt,” a joint statement published on the British government website said late on Friday.

Metwaly, who founded the Associatio­n of the Families of the Disappeare­d after his son disappeare­d in suspicious circumstan­ces four years ago, went missing while heading for his flight to Geneva to attend a UN conference on enforced disappeara­nces on September 10.

Members of Metwaly’s group said he was taken from Cairo airport by airport security and he was not heard from until three days later when a state security prosecutor ordered his detention.

Asked about the case, two judicial sources told Reuters that Metwaly had been detained on charges of spreading false news and joining an illegal group, and that his pre-trial detention was in accordance with the law.

Rights activists say Egyptian security forces resort to kidnapping government opponents and keeping them in secret jails where they can spend weeks, months, or years without charge. The authoritie­s deny the accusation.

Italian graduate student Giulio Regeni, who was conducting research on Egyptian trade unions, disappeare­d in Cairo in January 2016. His body was discovered in a ditch on the outskirts of the Egyptian capital on February 3, showing signs of extensive torture.

Metwaly has been assisting lawyers working on the Regeni case as an expert on enforced disappeara­nces, according to one of the lawyers.

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