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Hossam el-Hamalawy

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Hossam el-Hamalawy

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Resources, photos and videos of Egyptian police officers involved in torture and human rights violations.

Anti-torture activists: Mubarak’s police knows no limit

Posted on 03/04/200727/12/2020 By 3arabawy

I received the following statement about the Warraq torture incident I blogged about last week:

El-Nadim Center or the Management and Rehabilitation of Victims of Violence
Cairo 3 April 2007
Egyptian Police Knows No Limits
This is a new incident to be added to the black record of Egyptian police, which is full of brutality, abuse of power and unlimited harassment.
On the 14th of March 2007, at 2.30 am police force from El Warraq police station attacked the residence of citizen Fikri Muhammad Abbas, claiming to be searching for Hash.
They broke the door to the flat, threw Fikri to the ground, and tied his hands behind his back. When the son, witness to the assault, asked for a permission to search the flat, the police force beat him up, while the officer in charge threatened that he should shut up or else his father will mourn him. The informant then locked him up in one of the rooms.
The police battalion then went into the bedrooms to finish their mission. There they found the wife and the children. They closed the door, got out their black batons, raised the sound volume of the TV, so that the neighbors would not hear the screams and started beating them with their batons and boots.
Then came the part most favored by the Egyptian police: sexual harassment. They ordered the wife and the 14 years old teen age daughter to strip and when they refused they did it themselves. They tore a golden necklace off the young girl’s neck and continued beating them on their bare bodies. They ordered both mother and daughter to urinate in the room. When they refused the beating became more brutal. Then they took them to the bathroom and forced them to squat on the floor.
The police force then continued to destroy the furniture and when they finished their mission they took Fikry, the father, with them to the police station.
As for the reason behind this mission executed by El Warraq police station, it definitely had nothing to do with a search for Hash. They have plenty of that in their own drawers. The reason, which they did not mention in their report, is to force the family of Fikry Abbas to permanently leave their residence in the interest of the landlord who wants to evict them. This was not the first time the family was subject to harassment to leave their residence.
We shall send the story of this family to the Ministry of Interior who repeats day and night that torture is not widespread and that sexual harassment is foreign to our behavior and conduct.
Some of the names of police personnel involved in this barbaric violation include: Officer Karim, Sergeant Muhammad Gamal and informer Girgis.

Bulaq Police torturers trial postponed to 6 May

Posted on 03/04/200727/12/2020 By 3arabawy

The trial of Police Captain Islam Nabih and Corporal Reda Fathi, who tortured and sexually abused driver Emad Kabeer in Bulaq el-Dakrour Police Station, was postponed today to 6 May. Emad Kabeer showed up today in court, and testified against the Bulaq police sadists.

Egyptian allegedly tortured by police testifies against officers
CAIRO, Egypt (AP) _ An Egyptian who was seen being tortured in a widely circulated video testified Monday against the police officers who he claims sexually abused him and used a cell phone to film the abuse.
Emad el-Kabir, 22, tearfully recounted to Judge Samir Aboul Maati and a packed courtroom of the alleged torture he was subjected to last year as the accused men _ Islam Nabih, a police colonel, and Reda Fathi, a noncommissioned officer _ stood nearby in the defendants’ cage.
El-Kabir, wearing a checkered yellow shirt and black pants, said he was kicked and beaten with shoes and a whip and hit with a gun. He said such tactics were the “the norm in any police station.”
But the bus driver broke into tears as he began talking about the alleged sexual abuse.
“They tried to stick a baton in my bottom, forcing me to shout obscenities against myself and my family,” he said. “I repeated these words, and then they threw water on me and ordered me to run like a horse, but my feet hurt so much.”
In November, several Egyptian bloggers posted a video, which also later appeared on the popular video-sharing Web site YouTube, showing a man naked from the waist down being sodomized with a stick. As he screamed in pain, those around him, whose faces are not visible, ridiculed him.
The man was later identified as el-Kabir who said the incident took place in January 2006 at a police station in Bulaq al-Dakrur, a low income neighborhood in Cairo, the Egyptian capital. He said the police video taped the incident on a cell phone, and the footage was later leaked to bloggers.
Police have said el-Kabir was detained and beaten for attempting to stop an argument between his cousin and police. At the time, he was released without any charges against him.
El-Kabir later filed a complaint with the prosecutor general, and in late December, the two police officers were arrested. Their trial started March 3.
Monday was the first time el-Kabir testified against the officers. Despite being initially released by police, he was later jailed for three months after the judge found him guilty of resisting arrest. El-Kabir was released from prison Friday.
Though el-Kabir’s trial is not the first against police officers accused of torture, it is the first in Egypt involving a video that was circulated on the Internet. Other videos of alleged police torture in Egypt have since appeared on blogs, and human Rights groups and activists believe the verdict in el-Kabir’s case could set a precedent.
During el-Kabir’s cross examination, one of Nabih’s lawyers, Said Gamil, cast doubt on the torture allegations and cell video, calling them “fabricated.”
The two accused police officers stood behind bars in the defendants’ cage wearing normal clothes, not the usual white prison jumpsuits. Two noncommissioned officers stood just in front of them inside the cage. The judge refused their lawyers’ request to free them on bail and adjourned the trial until May 6.
Outside the courtroom, el-Kabir told The Associated Press he does not have any regrets.
“I don’t feel weak that I couldn’t defend myself then, the same way they were not strong when they abused me,” he said.
“I feel God is supporting me. They filmed me to humiliate me. I never imagined that these same photos would send them to prison. It’s God’s justice,” el-Kabir added.
Rights groups say torture, including sexual abuse, is routinely used in police stations and in the interrogation of prisoners, but the government denies it is systematic. In recent years, the Ministry of Interior, which supervises detention facilities has investigated many officers on allegations of torture.
Some have been indicted, convicted and received prison sentences, but the punishments have not been harsh even in cases were the victim died because of torture. Many officers also have been pardoned before the end of their sentences.

Cairo Anti-War Conference: Abu Omar makes an appearance; Sharqawi identifies his torturers

Posted on 31/03/200716/01/2021 By 3arabawy

The second day at Cairo’s 5th Anti-War Conference and 3rd Cairo Social Forum brought earthshaking surprises at it’s Anti-Torture Forum, held on Friday afternoon.

Abu Omar الشيخ أبو عمر

Abu Omar–the Alexandrian cleric kidnapped 2003 by the CIA in Milan and rendered to Egypt where he was brutally tortured–showed up today at the Press Syndicate, defying the travel ban imposed on him by State Security as a condition for his release. Abu Omar took part in the Anti-Torture Forum, chaired by leftist activist Dr. Aida Seif el-Dawla, where he presented his testimony about his torture odyssey from Milan to Cairo, via Germany. “I was severely tortured by the Mukhabarat and State Security,” Abu Omar said. “I was electrocuted for months, till my whole body turned black.”

Abu Omar speaking about his torture ordeal الشيخ أبو عمر يروي تفاصيل واقعة تعذيبه

Abu Omar expressed fears of re-arrest by the Egyptian police for speaking to the media, but insisted he will keep on talking. “If I stay silent, these practices (by the Egyptian security services) will continue.” The cleric also pleaded to be allowed to leave Egypt, back to Italy.

Another political bomb was thrown by blogger Muhammad el-Sharqawi, who gave his testimony about the torture and sexual abuse he faced in Qasr el-Nil Police Station on 25 May 2006. For the first time, Sharqawi named his torturers.

Anti-Torture Forum منتدى مناهضة التعذيب

“Police Major Samaw’al Muhammad Abu Sehla was the first to kidnap me from the car I was in on that day,” Sharqawi told the audience.

Police Major Samaw'al Mohamed Abu Sehla الرائد سماؤل أبو سحلة

And, “the State Security officer who supervised my torture inside Qasr el-Nil Police Station is named Sherif.”

State Security Officer Sherif el-Qamati

Sharqawi also expressed his frustration with the refusal of the authorities to open an investigation into his abuse, despite the repeated requests by his lawyers, accusing State Security of breaking into his house and stealing his laptop.

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