Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Anger grows over Egypt’s execution of 15 dissidents

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>> DAYS before the World Day Against the Death Penalty, Egypt’s execution of 15 political dissidents drew condemnati­on from human rights groups. The Geneva Council For Rights and Liberties slammed the Egyptian government for executing the death sentence through security authoritie­s against 15 detainees within 24 hours after “trials that lacked justice,” adding the trials were dominated by suspicion of “political revenge.”

>> THE GENEVA-BASED human rights group said in a statement that such executions ahead of the Oct. 10 World Day Against the Death Penalty sent a negative message and reflected the determinat­ion of the authoritie­s in Egypt to violate internatio­nal human rights.

The council called on the internatio­nal community to shoulder its responsibi­lities regarding the escalation of flagrant human rights violations in Egypt and to take deterrent measures.

Several other human rights groups also condemned the executions and demanded the death penalty be abolished in Egypt, especially in cases with a political dimension.

Spokespers­ons for the Muslim Brotherhoo­d organizati­on expressed their condolence­s to the families of the executed in statements on their Twitter accounts and emphasized the importance of fair retaliatio­n against the sentences.

Two detainees, Yasser Abasiri and Yasser Shakr, were members of the Muslim Brotherhoo­d, from the coastal city of Alexandria. They had been detained during protests against the 2013 military coup that deposed of the country’s first democratic­ally elected president, Mohammed Morsi. The two were held in Tora Prison in southern Cairo, which is known as the country’s most fortified jail, after their trial in the case that is publicly known as the “Library of Alexandria” case.

With the latest executions, the number of political prisoners executed under the rule of Egyptian President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi since 2014 reached 79, with 25 of them hanged in 2020, as reported by the Middle East Monitor.

Egypt has witnessed an unpreceden­ted crackdown on dissents under the rule of el-Sissi since the ouster of Morsi. The military crushed the Muslim Brotherhoo­d movement in a major crackdown, arresting Morsi and many of the group’s other leaders. Egyptian authoritie­s have killed hundreds of Muslim Brotherhoo­d supporters and sent thousands to prison for inciting violence. Activists consider the repression the worst in Egypt’s modern history.

The executions came as demonstrat­ions are spreading in rural areas and city slums. The el-Sissi administra­tion was worried over the “September Uprising” which started on Sept. 19 as a result of calls by Mohammed Ali, an opposition figure living in exile in Spain. The regime, which initially did not take the demonstrat­ions seriously, began using force after increasing participat­ion in the “Friday of Rage” and “Friday of Triumph” protests. This led to the killing of three activists by the police on Sept. 25, but the anger on the streets did not fade.

Fearing that the protests which started for economic reasons could spread further, the administra­tion launched Plan B to execute 50 prisoners who had previously been sentenced to death by the courts. As of Saturday, most Muslim Brotherhoo­d members were waiting for the execution of the 50 defendants after all legal remedies were exhausted.

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