Cape Times

Egypt raids ‘an intimidati­on tactic’

-

THE POLICE raided the houses of two uncles of an Egyptian-American activist who recently sued a former Egyptian prime minister in a US court, accusing him of crimes against humanity, an internatio­nal rights group said yesterday.

Human Rights Watch (HRW) quoted a member of Mohamed Soltan’s family as saying that more than a dozen uniformed and plain-clothes police on Wednesday searched the houses of two of Soltan’s uncles in the Delta province of Menoufeya.

The security forces also looked at passports, phones and laptops before asking about Soltan and whether the family had been in touch with him, according to a statement released by the New York City-based group.

Nobody was arrested and nothing was confiscate­d, the statement said.

“The security raids at the homes of (Soltan’s) relatives in Egypt follows a clear pattern of targeting relatives of dissidents abroad,” said Joe Stork, HRW’s Middle East and North Africa deputy director.

On June 1, 32-year-old

Soltan, now living in Virginia, filed a lawsuit against Egypt’s former prime minister Hazem el-Beblawi, accusing him of targeting him for attempted extrajudic­ial execution and torture while he was in detention in Cairo between 2013 and 2015.

Soltan invoked a 1991 US statute that allows for victims of torture and extrajudic­ial killings committed by foreign officials abroad to seek damages through the US court system.

El-Beblawi currently lives in Washington, where he works as an executive director of the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund.

In the summer of 2013, after the military-led ousting of the country’s first democratic­ally elected but divisive president, Mohamed Morsi, Egyptian security officers descended on a protest camp packed with his Islamist supporters, killing hundreds.

Soltan, an Ohio State University graduate and the son of a prominent member of the now-outlawed Muslim Brotherhoo­d, was shot in the arm while working as a reporter for Western news organisati­ons in Rabaa al-Adawiya Square.

He was eventually arrested by security forces and sentenced to life in prison on charges of spreading “fake news” in a mass trial widely condemned by rights groups.

In the maximum-security Tora prison complex, Soltan said he endured torture overseen by el-Beblawi.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa