Egypt: At least 19 arrested in crackdown on human rights workers

November 2, 2018 HUMAN RIGHTS , Middle East , News , OPINION/NEWS

Reuters photo

 

By

Amnesty International

 

 

The Egyptian authorities have stepped up their onslaught against the country’s human rights community by arresting at least 19 human rights lawyers and activists in a series of raids today, NGO Amnesty International stated.

 

So far at least eight women and 11 men were arrested in raids which began in the early hours of yesterday morning.

 

Among those arrested is the prominent 60-year-old human rights lawyer Hoda Abdel Moniem, a former member of the National Council for Human Rights. Security forces broke into her apartment and ransacked it before taking her to an undisclosed location.

 

The arrests prompted the Egyptian Coordination for Rights and Freedoms, a leading Egyptian human rights organisation, to suspend its activities citing the hostile environment towards civil society in Egypt today.

 

Another of those arrested today is Mohamed Abu Horira, lawyer and former spokesperson for the Egyptian Coordination group, while human rights defender Ezzat Ghoniem, the group’s co-founder, and Azzouz Mahgoub, another lawyer at the organisation, have been forcibly disappeared since 14 September. Both were arrested in March but a court ordered their release on 4 September. However, security forces ignored the court order and instead forcibly disappeared them from prison.

 

In a statement published yesterday announcing the suspension of its human rights work, Egyptian Coordination for Rights and Freedoms cited the current climate in Egypt as incompatible with human rights work and demanded intervention by the UN Human Rights Council. Amnesty has also repeatedly called on the Human Rights Council to comment on the rapidly-expanding human rights crisis in Egypt.

 

Najia Bounaim, Amnesty International’s North Africa Campaigns Director, said:

 

“Today’s chilling wave of arrests targeting the human rights community is yet another appalling setback for human rights in Egypt. With these arrests the Egyptian authorities have once more demonstrated their ruthless determination to crush all activism and dismantle the human rights movement in the country.

 

“Anyone who dares to speak out about human rights violations in Egypt today is in danger.

 

“The systematic persecution of human rights workers in Egypt has to stop.

 

“Human rights defenders should be allowed to carry out their work without fear of harassment, arrest or imprisonment. All those arrested for their human rights work should be immediately released.”

 

 

 

 

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Amnesty International is a non-governmental organisation focused on human rights with over 7 million members and supporters around the world. The stated objective of the organisation is “to conduct research and generate action to prevent and end grave abuses of human rights, and to demand justice for those whose rights have been violated.”

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