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Hossam el-Hamalawy

Tag: pigs

Judge fines Mubarak, Adly $5000

Posted on 15/03/200720/01/2021 By 3arabawy

From AFP:

Judge fines Mubarak, minister $5,000
13/3/2007
CAIRO: An Egyptian court has ordered President Hosni Mubarak and his interior minister to pay more than $5,000 in compensation to a man jailed for seven years without charge, security and judicial sources said on Tuesday.
The administrative court in the Mediterranean city of Alexandria on Monday approved Hamed Yassin Hamed’s request for compensation from the president and Interior Minister Habib Al-Adli for being kept in prison for seven years.
The government is appealing the decision.
Hamed was arrested in Alexandria in 1989 on suspicion of having  links with Islamist groups and then released in 1996, without ever  having been formally charged or appearing before a court, said the  judicial source.
Human rights organizations have repeatedly criticized the Egyptian government for “arbitrary” and prolonged detentions of suspected Islamists, often without charge.

Police detain 16 MB activists

Posted on 13/03/200726/12/2020 By 3arabawy

From Reuters:

Egyptian police arrest 16 Muslim Brotherhood members

CAIRO, March 13 – Egyptian security forces arrested 16 members of the Muslim Brotherhood on Tuesday in a crackdown ahead of an April referendum on constitutional amendments the Islamists say aim to block them from politics.
The arrests followed the detention on Monday of Mahmoud Ghozlan, a senior leader and a member of the group’s executive Guidance Council, hours after opposition lawmakers formally announced their rejection of the amendments.
“This campaign comes as a direct reaction from the authorities to the Brotherhood parliamentarians’ rejection of the constitutional amendments,” Brotherhood leader Mahdi Akef said.
Brotherhood spokesman Abdel-Moneim Mahmoud said those arrested include three local leaders from the Nile Delta and the media adviser of the Guidance Council, the highest body in the group, which operates openly despite being banned since 1954.
The Brotherhood, which rejects violence, is the strongest opposition force in the most populous Arab country. Members running as independents won nearly a fifth of the 454-seat lower house of parliament in 2005.
Analysts say the government fears that unless it stops the Brotherhood now, the group will make more electoral gains that could help it eventually mount a serious challenge to President Hosni Mubarak’s ruling National Democratic Party.
The constitutional amendments, which must be approved by parliament before next month’s referendum, would weaken the role of judges in monitoring elections. An anti-terrorism clause would give police sweeping powers of arrest and broad authority to monitor private communications.
The Brotherhood would be hard hit by the proposed laws, which would also ban political activity based on “any religious reference or basis” and would quash the group’s hopes of acquiring legal standing as a recognized political party.
“These amendments will lead to a setback in political life and are a step backwards with their restrictions on public and private liberties,” Akef said in a statement.
Opposition and civil society groups say a requirement that judges supervise elections is one of the best ways to discourage widespread abuses which have marred voting in Egypt.
Mahmoud said at least seven of those arrested on Tuesday had previously spent time in detention or stood trial before military courts. Ghozlan was sentenced to five years in prison by a military tribunal in 2001 but was released in 2005.
More than 300 Brotherhood members are now in detention, including third-in-command Khairat al-Shatir who was referred last month to a military trial along with 39 other officials on charges that include money laundering and terrorism.

Security crackdown on MB continues

Posted on 13/03/200726/12/2020 By 3arabawy

From Ikhwan Web:

The Egyptian state security forces stormed, Tuesday at 3.00 AM, the house of Muhammad Ali Al-Qassas, a Muslim Brotherhood young leader, and arrested him in a fresh crackdown that started on Sunday at night with arresting Dr Mahmoud Ghazlan.
Muhammad Al Qassas, 34 years, works in the field of artistic production and was previously detained three times: the first was in 1998 and the second was in the case of referring Muslim Brotherhood leaders to military trials in 2001 and he was acquitted by the court after spending nine months pending trial; the third arrest was during the demonstrations for supporting the judges in May 2005.

More worryingly

Ikhwanweb’s correspondent in Cairo reports that there are now (on Tuesday predawn at 3.30 AM) more detentions against Muslim Brotherhood leaders and members in the Egyptian capital.

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