Document - Egypt: Keep Promise to Free Detainees by End of June: Joint statement
AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL
PUBLIC STATEMENT
29 June 2010
AI Index: MDE 12/027/2010
Egypt: Keep Promise to Free Detainees by End of June
May 11 Emergency
Law Revisions Mean No Legal Authority to Keep Hundreds of
Prisoners
The Egyptian government
should keep its promise to free detainees who can no longer be held
because of changes on May 11, 2010, in the scope of application for
the country’s emergency law, a coalition of twelve Egyptian and
international human rights organizations said today. High-level
officials had promised that they would start freeing prisoners on
June 1 and that the releases would be completed by the end of the
month, said the coalition which includes Human Rights Watch,
Amnesty International, Alkarama Foundation, and the Egyptian
Initiative for Personal Rights.
The government announced on May 11 that it would limit
administrative detention under the emergency law to persons
suspected of involvement in terrorism or drug-related crimes. The
change, included in the presidential decree renewing the state of
emergency, formally ends any reliance on the emergency law for
holding anyone for any other reason and would require the
government to immediately free hundreds of detainees whose
detention is unrelated to such offenses.
“The government should show that its promise to limit the scope of
the emergency law is not just empty words and immediately begin to
free everyone being held for reasons other than terrorism or
drugs,” said Sarah Leah Whitson, Middle East and North Africa
director for Human Rights Watch. “The world is watching.”
On June 12, Interior Ministry officials told Human Rights Watch
that those held for other reasons would be free by the end of the
month. They said the releases would occur either through the courts
or at the initiative of the ministry after reviewing the basis of
detention and determining that the detainee was not connected to
terrorism or drugs. This apparently means that lawyers for the
detainees would have to seek their release by filing appeals in the
courts created under the emergency law.
On June 11, Mufid Shehab, minister of legal affairs and
parliamentary councils, announced before the United Nations Human
Rights Council in Geveva, in the framework of Egypt’s Universal
Periodic Review of its human rights record, that about 453
detainees had been released. Human Rights Watch, Amnesty
International, Alkarama Foundation, and Egyptian Initiative for
Personal Rights have been unable to confirm this assertion.
"The Egyptian government is under an obligation to release all administrative detainees or charge them with a cognizable criminal offense and provide them with a fair trial," said Hossam Bahgat, Director of the Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights."Moreover, international human rights treaties to which Egypt is a state party clearly place the onus on the Egyptian government, on its own initiative, to immediately release all detainees in respect of whom it has repealed the legal provisions authorizing their detention."
Egyptian lawyers and human rights groups
estimate that between 5,000 and 10,000 people are currently in
long-term detention without charge or trial under the emergency
law. Some have been held for more than a decade. Many have filed
appeals before emergency courts and obtained numerous final release
orders enjoining their release, but remain detained.
Administrative detainees are entitled to lodge a complaint against
their detention to an emergency court, which may issue an order for
their release, against which the interior minister may appeal. If
the minister objects to the release, the complaint is examined by
another emergency court. If this court also orders the detainee’s
release, the Interior Ministry is required to free the detainee. In
practice, though, the ministry has frequently bypassed these court
decisions by issuing new detention orders, thus undermining the
judicial review provided by the emergency law.
Article 3 (1) of the emergency law empowers the Interior Ministry
to “arrest and detain suspected persons or those who endanger
public order or security.” The law renewing the state of emergency
limits the scope of detention powers to cases of “combating the
dangers of terrorism and its financing and the purchase, export and
trafficking in narcotics.” However, the definition of terrorism
under the Egyptian law is quite broad, covering “any threat or
intimidation” with the aim of “disturbing the peace or jeopardizing
the safety and security of the society.”
“If the Egyptian authorities rely on this expansive
definition of terrorism, they could continue to use the emergency
law to detain peaceful political opponents and rights activists,”
said Hassiba Hadj Sahraoui of Amnesty International. “Thousands
still languish in administrative detention despite having obtained
release orders from the courts; the government, which is charged
with upholding the rule of law, should immediately abide by these
decisions.”
Emergency Law Detention and Promises for
Change
Despite promising since 2005 to end the state of
emergency, which has been continuously in force since 1981, the
government renewed it on May 11 for two more years. The
presidential decree renewing the measure, which the People’s
Assembly approved, states in article 2 that enforcement “will be
limited to cases of combating the dangers of terrorism and its
finance and the purchase, export and trafficking in
narcotics.”
The organizations also noted that the UN Special
Rapporteur on the promotion and protection of human rights and
fundamental freedoms while countering terrorism, Martin Scheinin,
expressed concern in October 2009 following a visit to Egypt about
the breadth and imprecision in definitions of terrorism offenses in
Egyptian law.
The groups noted that while the government has been claiming for
years that it applies the emergency law only in drug trafficking
and terrorism cases, the interior minister has routinely approved
new detention orders on a variety of other grounds. People have
been detained because of their political views or on suspicion of
links to networks aiding illegal migration abroad or in connection
with incidents of sectarian violence, and at times for their
religious beliefs. State Security Investigations (SSI) officials
also have routinely ignored final court orders to free emergency
law detainees in their custody, giving rise to doubt that the
government will carry out its new pledge.
On May 11, Fathi Surour, speaker of parliament and a senior
official of the ruling National Democratic Party (NDP), said,
“Every detainee whose detention is not related to counter-terrorism
and drugs will be free on June 1 under the new presidential decree
limiting the scope of application of the emergency law.
The Egyptian state
newspaper
Al Ahramreportedthis the next day,
quoting Surour as saying, “I am responsible for the legal
interpretation of this law.”
The independent daily newspaper Al
Dustoorreportedon
May 11 that General Amin Radi, member of the NDP policies committee
and deputy head of the parliamentary committee on defense and
national security, told the committee that the Interior Ministry
would release all those detained under the emergency law on any
grounds other than drugs and terrorism offenses, including those
detained for “illegal” migration and financial crimes.
The UN Working Group on Arbitrary Detention, a panel of independent
legal experts appointed by the UN Human Rights Council, has issued
at least seven decisions urging the government to release
individuals detained under the emergency law because the detention
practices under the state of emergency “[do] not conform to the
requirements of the International Covenant on Civil and Political
Rights (ICCPR).” The UN Human Rights Committee, the body tasked
with interpreting and monitoring compliance with the covenant, said
in 2002 that it was “disturbed” by the “semi-permanent state of
emergency” in Egypt. Also in 2002, the Committee against Torture
concluded that the state of emergency was “hindering the full
consolidation of the rule of law in Egypt” and recommended that
Egypt “[e]liminate all forms of administrative detention.”
“If the government wishes to fulfill its pledge to curtail the
arbitrary detentions that have been rampant under the emergency
law, it should, as a start, immediately release detainees held for
their suspected nonviolent political activities and views,” said
Rachid Mesli, director of Alkarama Foundation's legal
department.
Examples:
Detained for
expressing an opinion, peaceful activism, other activities
unrelated to terrorism or drug-trafficking
The government
detained Hany Nazeer, a blogger who provided a link to a
controversial book that some in his village, Abu Tesht in Qena,
considered insulting to Islam, on October 3, 2008, saying it was
“to protect [his] life in light of the anger and the strong
uprising of the Muslims in Abu Tesht in Qena caused by his blog.”
Despite an April 3, 2010 court order for his release, the Interior
Ministry renewed his detention for the sixth time at the end of
April.
SSI has detained human rights defenders Mus’ad Abul Fagr
and Yehia Abu Nassira under successive emergency law orders since
February 15, 2008, because of their criticism of abuses against
Bedouins in the Sinai desert. Abul Fagr founded the Wedna
Ne’ish (We Want to Live) movement, calling for better access to
education, health, and property rights for the Bedouin, as well as
the release of the hundreds of Bedouins detained under the
emergency law. There have been 21 court orders for Abul Fagr’s
release. Both men remain detained under the emergency law, along
with their brothers, Ahmed Abul Fagr and Ghanim Abu Nassira.
Detained for membership in the Muslim Brotherhood, a peaceful
opposition group
The Muslim Brotherhood lawyer Abdelmoneim
Abdelmaqsood said on May 23 that he had submitted a memorandum to
the interior minister and the public prosecutor calling for the
immediate release, based on the new presidential decree, of 191
members of the Muslim Brotherhood detained under the emergency
law.
Ragab
Mohamed El Banna, 55,a candidate in the 2005 parliamentary
elections, has been arrested repeatedly for his political beliefs
and activism on behalf of the Muslim Brotherhood. He was arrested
on December 5, 2009, held for four months for “investigation,”
according to authorities. On March 18, the criminal court of Kafr
El Sheikh ordered his immediate release. But the interior minister
issued a new emergency law detention order for him, and he remains
locked up in Wadi Natrun prison.
Detained on suspicion of aiding illegal migration
abroad
Over the past three years, security forces have
arrested scores of people from the Nile Delta, including fishermen,
and the Interior Ministry is detaining them on the basis of
detention orders on suspicion of aiding illegal migration
abroad.
Adel El-Sayyed Eisa Salim was arrested on September 24, 2007, and
charged with the illegal transfer of migrant workers abroad in case
no. 12027 of 2007 of Rashid Misdemeanors court in the governorate
of Kafr Sheik. The Rashid public prosecution office ordered his
release on bail on October 7, 2008, but the ministry of interior
issued a new administrative detention order the next day. Although
he was acquitted by a court on December 2, 2007, he continued to be
held in administrative detention. He filed appeals against his
detention in October and December 2009, and again in February 2010,
but these were rejected by the court. He is in Borg al-Arab Prison,
near Alexandria.
Detained for religious beliefs
Over the past years,
security officers have on several occasions detained members of
religious groups with beliefs differing from official Sunni Islam
under the emergency law. This has occurred with members of the
Ahmadi, Quranist, and Shi’ite minorities. SSI has held eight men
who identify themselves as Shi’ite Muslims since April and May
2009. One is Mohamed Farouk El Sayed, an engineer employed at the
Ministry of Electricity and Energy, arrested on May 31, 2009. His
lawyers have appealed his detention three times, and the emergency
court has ruled in his favor every time. In mid-2009, the men
appeared before the state security prosecutor, who questioned them
about their Shi’ite faith, accusing them of spreading Shi’ite
thought and of “contempt of religions,” an offense under the
Egyptian penal code. In October 2009, the prosecutor ordered their
release but the Interior Ministry continued to renew their
detention orders, most recently in June. On June 8, the emergency
court ordered the release of the eight men, but they remain
detained in Damanhour prison.
The signatory organizations are:
Human Rights Watch
Amnesty International
Al Karama Foundation
The Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights
The Association for Freedom of Thought and Expression
The Egyptian Center for Economic and Social Rights
El Nadim Center for Rehabilitation of Victims of Torture
The Cairo Institute for Human Rights Studies
The Land Center for Human Rights
Hisham Mubarak Law Center
The Egyptian Association for the Enhancement of Community Participation
Center for Trade Unions and Workers Services
For more information please contact:
In Cairo, Heba Morayef (English, Arabic, French): +201-2381-0319; or morayeh@hrw.org
In Cairo, Hossam Bahgat (English, Arabic): +20 10 628-8928 or hossam@eipr.org
In Geneva, Michael Romig (English, French) 0041 22 734 1006, or m.romig@alkarama.org
In London, Hassiba Hadj Sahraoui (English, French) +44 20 7413 5643
Human Rights Watch, Al Karama, and the Egyptian Initiative for
Personal Rights on behalf of the Campaign have documented a list of
the following detainees under the emergency law whose detention is
not related to terrorism and drugs:
1. Hani Nazeer
2. Massad Abu Fagr
3. Ahmed Abu Fagr
4. Yahya Abu Nasera
5. Ghane Abu Nasera
6. Atef Mohamed Amer
7. Osama Mohamed Ebeid
8. Saad Aboul-Enein Metwaly
9. Badr Abdel Aziz Mahmoud Alflah
10. Omar Abdel Aziz Makhlouf
11. Abd El Aziz Said Makhlouf
12. Ahmad Farid
13. Nasr Al-Sayyed Hassan Nasr
14. Massad Tawfiq El Shafei
15. Amr Ahmed Suleiman Mohamed
16. Ibrahim Ahmed Abdel Muti
17. Jamal Mahmoud Ibrahim Hegab
18. Adel Mohamed Ali Diab
19. Khaled Nabil Hussein Elsayed
20. Bara Adel Mostafa Mohamed El Tayeb
21. Abu Zaid Kassim
22. Hamada Khalaf Ismail Mahmoud
23. Nabil Ibrahim Mohamed
24. Rami Faik Wehbe
25. Abd Alla Osman El-Mahdi
26. Abdul Rahman Mohamed Saad
27. Rajab Mohammed Al-Banna
28. Saleh Bastawy
29. Jamal Imam
30. Ahmed Abdel-Hamid Alkhaddl
31. Ahmed Osama Mourad
32. Mohammed Saleh
33. Mohamed Abdel-Latif Hallaj
34. Anas Essam El-Din al-shafei
35. Ahmed Naim
36. Elsayed Ali Abdul Khaliq
37. Bilal Saad algezer
38. Maaz Sabah Sharaf
39. Saeed Salem
40. Ahmed Mohammed Abu Zeid
41. Hamdi Mohammed Ibrahem Alkholy
42. Yahya Aqeel Sulaiman
43. Abdul Hafiz salama Abdul Hafiz
44. Abdel-Rahman Abdel-Hafez
45. Ahmed Ali Hafez
46. Ahmed Ali Hakim
47. Ahmed Mohamed Mahmoud
48-. Anwar Shaban Morsy
49. Jamal Ali Abdul Wahab
50. Mohamed Ali Abd el-Gawad
51. Mohammed Amin Hussein
52. Mohammed Behnsawi
53. Mohamed Fathy Mahmoud
54. Mohammad Mehdi
55. Mohamed Sayed Hassan Abd-El Khalek
56. Nafie Sayed Abdul Salam
57. Nasser Hassan Abd El- Sattar
58. Rabiae Abd EL-Salam
59. Sameh Mohamed Mahmoud
60. Hassan Abd El-Salam
61. Abdul Rahman Mohamed Ahmed
62. Ayman Al-Subhi Jamil
63. Ayman Al-Faraj
64. Mahmoud Fawzi
65. Mohamed Abdel-Hamid Abd El- Moez
66. Mohammed Ali Hassan Sabra
67. Ragab Hisham Abdel-Meguid
68. Sayed Ahmed Al-Ghandour
69. El-Sayed Mansour
70. Taha Saad gomaa
71. Tamer Ahmed El Sayed
72. Hassan Hussein
73. Hussein Abdel-Razek
74. Ibrahim Saad
75. Mohamed Abdel-Latif El Barkoky
76. Mohammed Abdel-Rahman
77. Sameer Malhi
78. Abdullah Abd El-Majeed
79. Abdullah Al-Nahas
80. Abdel Karim Abdel-Maksoud
81. Ahmed Mourad
82. Ahmed Shahin
83. Awad Mohamed
84. Desoky Abu Issa
85. Jamal Khalifa
86. Khaled Fadel
87. Mohammed Abdul-Qasim
88. Mohammed Fiqi
89. Mohamed Hussein
90. Mohamed Gabr
91. Mohamed Gad El Rab Ibrahim
92. Akasha Abad
93. Osama Younis
94. Rafat Saad
95. Sami Alousta
96. Tariq Sharif
97. Ashraf Saleh
98. Hisham Rashid Abdel Mawla
99. Jama Imam
100. Kareem Abdul-Hamid Sadiq
101. Mohammad Hejazi
102. Mohammed Hindawi
103. Mohamed Ibrahim
104. Mohamed Kamel Mohamed Badr
105. Mohamed Mahmoud
106. Mohamed Mohamed Ahmed Awad
107. Mohamed Saad Abdel-Rahman
108. Mohamed Salem
109. Mohsen El-Sayed
110. Mostafa El-Sayed
111. Osama Fattouh
112. Walid Al-Rakeshi
113. Mohammed Mahdi Mohamed Attia