The Sunday Post (Newcastle)

Fears climate summit will greenwash human rights abuses in Egypt

- By Nabila Ramdani news@sundaypost.com

The world’s skies have darkened in the year since Cop26 ended in Glasgow with hopes of significan­t agreement promising planet-saving action.

Now as the climate summit prepares to land Egypt, hopes will again be kindled that despite war in Ukraine and the unfolding energy crisis, delegates meeting in the Red Sea resort of Sharm El-Sheikh will renew progress towards achieving global net zero emissions and limiting global warming to 1.5°C.

However, while Egyptians living in one of the most polluted countries in Africa welcome the ambition of Cop27, many also hope the conference will be used to highlight other more pressing dangers.

For critics, that list is topped by the brutality of the ruling regime run by President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi, a leader Donald Trump once described as “my favourite dictator”.

As somebody who was reporting from Cairo at the height of the Arab Spring in 2011, I regularly speak to those who have seen dreams of freedom and democracy crumble. They would rather other countries and their leaders boycott elSisi’s attempt to “greenwash” his crimes at Cop27, due to open on November 6.

“The world leaders coming to Egypt should be taking a stand against the murderous police state that our country has become,” one academic told me.

“Nobody should be sitting around in a luxury holiday destinatio­n talking about green issues when people are being killed and locked up without trial because they oppose the el-Sisi dictatorsh­ip.”

The Arab Spring was a time when protest chants included “Be proud – you’re an Egyptian” and “Breathe the fresh air of freedom”. Demonstrat­ions centred on Tahrir Square in Cairo helped depose

Hosni Mubarak in just over a fortnight after 30 years of dictatorsh­ip, and Mohamed Morsi became Egypt’s first democratic­ally elected president in June 2012.

Within just a year Morsi was removed from power by a military coup, however, as Cairo-born el-Sisi, a retired general and former director of military intelligen­ce, took control.

Atrocities included the Rabaa massacre, when el-Sisi forces attacked Rabaa al-Adawiya and al-Nahda squares in the Egyptian capital on August 14, 2013. Up to 1,000 people were killed and thousands more wounded while staging sit-in protests against el-Sisi.

Supporters of Morsi, the Muslim Brotherhoo­d leader, were the principal victims, and he too “collapsed and died”, according to official regime accounts, while being tried for espionage in a Cairo court in 2019. Many blamed el-Sisi for the death of Morsi, directly or indirectly.

Numerous human rights organisati­ons say that such crimes are now the norm in Egypt, and that Cop27, which is expected to be attended by more than 90 heads of state, will only mitigate them.

Amnesty Internatio­nal said there had been more than a decade of “unrelentin­g violations of human rights” under el-Sisi, who was now trying to improve his internatio­nal standing, using events such as Cop27. Among an estimated 60,000 political prisoners being held without trial are numerous journalist­s, according to multiple sources inside Egypt.

One, a woman aged 38 who supports the Egyptian Campaign for Climate and Democracy, said: “Anybody who opposes the government, including those working in the media, are liable to be roughed up and then arrested without trial. Many face torture and death.

“There are always protesters when environmen­tal conference­s are held in free countries like Scotland but that will not be the case in Egypt because they will be kept away and threatened. The situation is scandalous.”

Discussing the Al-Sisi “greenwashi­ng” further, a male dissident aged 62 said: “It has two aims – to distract from the human rights abuses, and to bring in billions in financial aid from much richer countries such as the USA. Most of the money that arrives to treat environmen­tal issues ends up in personal bank accounts. That’s why Cairo is one of the most polluted cities on earth, and why Egypt as a whole is one of the worst greenhouse gas emitters.”

Scientists have measured trafficcon­gested Cairo’s concentrat­ion of PM2.5 – airborne particles that get deep into human lungs and cause them immense harm – as being 12 times higher than the limit set by the World Health Organisati­on.

Egypt’s energy policy is entirely dependent on fossil fuels, and the country has doubled its production of oil and gas within the last six years.

Clean water shortages are such a chronic problem in the country that there are regular “thirst protests” held, especially in isolated rural communitie­s.

People block roads, including the main ones between major cities, using empty water containers to draw attention to their plight. These demonstrat­ions – as with other forms of dissent – are brutally repressed by the forces of law and order.

A Human Rights Watch report even suggests that profession­al environmen­talists are among those who have been seized away by the army and police.

According to the report: “Outspoken, independen­t, strident voices have by and large been silenced, exiled, or corralled into working in safe, less damaging environmen­tal spaces that match the government’s priorities.”

All of the activists I speak to certainly all request anonymity, for fear of being arrested and imprisoned.

Despite all this, el-Sisi is taking a very personal interest in Cop27, claiming his country is leading the way on climate action. An Egyptian government spokesman said there were “deplorable and counterpro­ductive” reports circulatin­g, and that “all efforts should be consolidat­ed to ensure the convening of a successful Cop that guarantees the implementa­tion of global climate commitment­s”.

Those listening to such words before deciding whether they will travel to Egypt will include the incoming prime minister

along with other British delegates.

 ?? Picture Andre Pain ?? Soldiers stand guard as voters leave a polling station in Cairo during Egyptian presidenti­al elections
Picture Andre Pain Soldiers stand guard as voters leave a polling station in Cairo during Egyptian presidenti­al elections
 ?? ?? Workers pass a billboard featuring President el-Sisi in Egypt’s New Capital
Workers pass a billboard featuring President el-Sisi in Egypt’s New Capital
 ?? ?? Cop27 begins in Egypt on November 6
Cop27 begins in Egypt on November 6

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