The Citizen (Gauteng)

Rights watchers vanish in Egypt

BLACK NOVEMBER: DETAINED IN ‘UNKNOWN PLACES’ Many of those arrested had given support to the families of political detainees.

-

Egyptian authoritie­s have rounded up at least 40 rights workers, activists and lawyers since late October and detained them in “undisclose­d locations”, Human Rights Watch (HRW) said yesterday.

“Many of those arrested were people who provided humanitari­an and legal support to families of political detainees,” HRW said, calling on the government to reveal their whereabout­s.

The rights group spoke with a lawyer and three activists who had been “in direct touch” with the families of those detained.

“The Egyptian security agencies’ repression now extends to disappeari­ng those brave men and women who have been trying to protect the disappeare­d,” said Michael Page, deputy Middle East and North Africa director at Human Rights Watch.

One source told HRW as many as 80 people had been detained in the wave of arrests, but the rights group said it could only verify 40 names.

It called on Egyptian authoritie­s to “immediatel­y reveal all the detainees’ whereabout­s, release all of those arrested solely for exercising their rights, and bring any others swiftly before a judge to review their detention”.

Sources told HRW that some of the detainees were close to the Egyptian Coordinati­on for Rights and Freedoms, an independen­t human rights group it said has come under fire from pro-government media in recent months.

Among those arrested is Hoda Abdelmonei­m, a 60-year-old lawyer and former spokespers­on for the Egypt’s Women Revolution­ary Coalition – a group close to the Muslim Brotherhoo­d.

Authoritie­s also arrested Aisha Khairat al-Shater, the daughter of a former Muslim Brotherhoo­d leader currently in detention, along with her husband, lawyer Mohammed Abu Horayra.

The Brotherhoo­d was outlawed and branded a “terrorist” organisati­on in December 2013, months after the military ousted Islamist president Mohamed Morsi following mass protests against his rule.

Former armed forces chief Abdel Fattah al-Sisi won the presidency in 2014 and has since launched a crackdown against the Brotherhoo­d that has also hit Egypt’s secular opposition.

Egypt’s courts have sentenced hundreds of Brotherhoo­d leaders and supporters to death or lengthy jail terms –

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa