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Hossam el-Hamalawy

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New questions raised about human rights record of US ally

Posted on 23/01/200704/01/2021 By 3arabawy

The San Francisco Chronicle covered El-Adly Video-Gate, and how Mubarak’s participation in the US-sponsored “extraordinary renditions” program (whereby Cairo receives Islamist suspects, and interrogate them under torture on behalf of the US) is giving the regime a sense of immunity from prosecution:

Torture video stirs fury over Egypt penal system
New questions raised about human rights record of U.S. ally
Joseph Krauss, Chronicle Foreign Service
Monday, January 22, 2007
Cairo — The man in the video lies on the floor on his back, naked from the waist down, with his feet hoisted into the air, surrounded by pairs of anonymous black boots.
The camera captures an act of brutality before zooming in until the man’s face, scrunched with agony, fills the frame. He cries out for mercy from his tormentors, but within seconds the words give way to screams of desperation. The abuse continues, and the camera holds steady.
The rare footage, shot on a cell phone camera inside a Cairo police station in January 2006, is the most striking evidence to date of what Egyptian and international human rights organizations have long called an epidemic of torture in the country’s penal system.
The video, which appeared on YouTube in November and quickly made the rounds of the local blogosphere, has sparked outrage in recent weeks, casting a harsh light on the deteriorating human rights situation in one of the United States’ closest allies in the Arab world.
The United States gives Egypt around $2 billion annually in military and development aid, and the Bush administration has come to see it as a crucial Sunni Arab ally in its escalating conflict with Iran. In recent years, Egypt has also emerged as a prime destination for “extraordinary rendition” — the controversial U.S. policy of kidnapping suspected terrorists and secretly sending them to be imprisoned and interrogated in countries that are known to practice torture.
Torture in Egyptian prisons has a long history, but human rights experts say Egypt’s participation in extraordinary rendition gives it an unspoken immunity from international criticism.
“Some countries, including the United States, are involved in torture and are benefiting by having Egypt assume the role of interrogating suspects,” said Bahey El Din Hassan, director of the Cairo Institute for Human Rights Studies. “They can’t send people here to be tortured and then take a stand against it.”
In 2005, Egyptian Prime Minister Ahmad Nazif said the United States had sent 60 to 70 Egyptians back to their home country for interrogation, including Hassan Mustafa Osama Nasr, an Islamist preacher who goes by the name of Abu Omar.
Abu Omar was kidnapped in 2003 near his home in Milan and flown to Egypt, where he remains imprisoned without any formal charges lodged against him. His case sparked outrage in Europe, and an Italian court is trying 25 CIA agents and a U.S. Air Force officer — in absentia — along with nine Italian secret service agents for their participation in the kidnapping.
In November, Abu Omar smuggled out of prison an 11-page handwritten letter in which he described the abduction and the torture he had received since being brought to Egypt. According to the Washington Post, which obtained a copy of the letter, he claimed to have lost hearing in one ear as a result of repeated beatings and described being strapped to an iron device known as the “Bride” before being shocked with electric stun guns.
Montasser el-Zayat, his lawyer, said that although the authorities are no longer physically torturing Abu Omar, he continues to endure psychological torture from being held in solitary confinement with few visitors, and that he has tried to kill himself on three occasions.
El-Zayat, who has represented several prominent Islamists, said Abu Omar was never affiliated with any al Qaeda or any other organization. “He was only an activist, and he delivered Friday sermons in the mosque,” el-Zayat said.
While high-profile suspects have attracted the most attention, experts say the majority of torture victims in Egypt are, like the man in the video, ordinary citizens without political affiliations and that torture, once reserved for political dissidents and Islamist militants, is now applied across the penal system.
After the video surfaced, a local newspaper identified the victim as Imad Al-Kabir, a microbus driver who was brought in after intervening in an argument between his cousin and two plainclothes police officers. Al-Kabir was not accused of anything at the time, and he has said the police filmed the incident and sent the clip to local microbus drivers merely to humiliate him and to intimidate others.
“Torture has become endemic to Egyptian prison facilities, detention centers and police stations,” said Elijah Zarwan, a spokesman for Human Rights Watch in Cairo. “That the police videotaped everything and then circulated it among the public shows that they know they can get away with this sort of thing. It’s yet more evidence of a culture of impunity.”
The Egyptian Organization for Human Rights documented 34 cases of torture in 2005 and 27 in 2006, but Zarwan and other human rights advocates insist that many if not most cases go unreported.
Although the worst forms of torture are usually reserved for suspected terrorists, the abuse of prisoners is more often aimed at collective punishment and intimidation than intelligence-gathering, said Dr. Magda Adly, director of the Nadim Center, which counsels and treats victims of torture.
“Torture sends a message not only to the victim and the victim’s family, but to the whole society, and that message is that if you speak out, you will never see the sun again,” she said.
On Jan. 15, the center, which sees an average of 70 new cases of torture each year, submitted a list of 189 names of suspected torturers, compiled primarily from the testimony of victims, to the Interior Ministry.
Egyptian bloggers have also taken up the cause and, in recent months, have published several videos showing the abuse of prisoners. The most recent shows a young woman suspended by her hands and knees from a pole between two chairs, confessing to murder and screaming that her hands are about to break off. The woman’s identity remains a mystery, but the Interior Ministry says it is investigating the matter.
The Imad Al-Kabir video, however, remains the most graphic, and has sent shock waves through the local human rights and activist community. After a local newspaper located and identified Al-Kabir, human rights lawyers persuaded him to identify his tormentors and take the case to the public prosecutor, who has since detained two of the officers involved and scheduled a trial for the first week in March.
But what at first seemed like a triumph for human rights advocates turned into a potential nightmare earlier this month, when the same court sentenced Al-Kabir himself to three months in prison for “resisting authorities.”
“We wanted the video to be seen so that the criminals in it could get the punishment they deserved, but so far that hasn’t happened,” said Wael Abbas, one of the first bloggers to publish the video. “Instead, the victim has been punished.”
Egyptian law narrowly defines torture as acts carried out against suspects during interrogation. Since Al-Kabir was not, at the time he was tortured, accused of any crime or in the process of being interrogated, it’s unlikely that the officers will be found guilty.
The Interior Ministry, which is in charge of Egyptian security services, has denied it practices torture, and some officials have accused Abbas and other bloggers of defaming the country’s image by putting the videos on the Internet instead of taking them directly to the ministry.
Human rights experts say the government is more interested in protecting its image than in addressing the problem of torture.
“Everyone in the human rights community agrees it is a huge problem, not only in the police stations but in the entire penal system, but nothing is being done because the government refuses to recognize it,” said Hassan, of the Cairo Institute for Human Rights Studies. “It’s grown into a cancer, and the government treats it like a mild headache.”

El-Adly Videogate: Shocking Egypt police video stirs debate

Posted on 22/01/200725/03/2015 By 3arabawy

A good AP feature by Maggie Michael…

Shocking Egypt police video stirs debate
Associated Press
CAIRO, Egypt – The footage is shocking: A man lies screaming on the floor of a police station as officers sodomize him with a wooden pole.
Compounding the shock, it turns out that it was the police who made the film, and that they then transmitted it to the cell phones of the victim’s friends in order to humiliate him.
For Egypt, the ordeal of 21-year-old Emad el-Kabir has been something of a Rodney King moment – a sudden, stark glimpse of a reality which authorities routinely deny, but which human rights groups say is part of a pattern of police brutality.
But unlike the tape of the Los Angeles police beating up King in 1991, which was aired almost immediately, the attack on el-Kabir happened a year ago, and has only became public months later after an Egyptian blogger posted it on his site and it reached YouTube.
A newspaper, al-Fagr, then published a story about it, and appealed to el-Kabir to come forward. He did, giving a TV interview and filing a complaint against the police officers with the state prosecutor.
That’s where the Rodney King analogy ends. Few people in this nation of 74 million have Internet access, and no TV station has shown anything of the offending footage. There have been no demonstrations or riots or high-profile lawsuits. The only person so far to be sentenced is the victim himself, who police say injured an officer with a broken bottle. On Jan. 9, he was jailed for three months.
Human rights activists say police brutality is deeply entrenched in Egyptian life.
“Torture in Egypt is just routine, exerted on everybody whether in political or criminal cases, and the police don’t really feel any shame in practicing it,” said Mohammed Zarie, head of the Human Rights Center for the Assistance of Prisoners.
Still, Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, a key U.S. ally, is under mounting pressure for democratic freedoms and human rights, and the el-Kabir video, along with other less widely publicized videos of recent months, appear to have embarrassed authorities into action.
The same judge who jailed el-Kabir ordered two officers suspected of torturing him to remain in custody until they go on trial March 3. Meanwhile, the Interior Ministry has ordered a nationwide search to identify a woman seen tortured in a different video and to determine who abused her. She is seen hanging by her legs from a pole balanced between two chairs, screaming in pain and confessing to a murder.
El-Kabir, a minibus driver, says he got into trouble at a Cairo parking lot in January 2006 when he intervened in an argument between police and his cousin, the driver of truck carrying cooking gas canisters. He says an officer hit him in the back of the head with the butt of his gun. Then he was taken to a nearby police station, released on bail, and that evening the police came to his home and took him back to their station.
There, he said, they beat him with fists and sticks and ordered him to shout obscenities. The video took the story from there, showing el-Kabir on his back on the floor, naked from the waist down, his legs held up in the air.
“Oh pasha (sir), I beg your mercy. Pasha, forgive me,” el-Kabir cries on the video. The black boots of policemen are seen around him, kicking down his bound hands to prevent him from protecting his naked buttocks.
Then the black pole is wielded and el-Kabir screams.
“Everybody in the parking lot will see this tomorrow,” an officer is heard saying.
“I felt so humiliated,” el-Kabir said in an interview with The Associated Press. “They were so brutal, as if they were slaughtering an animal and peeling off his skin.”
In his complaint to the public prosecutor, he identified the voice on the video as that of Capt. Islam Nabih, and said he led the attack. His lawyer, Nasser Amin, said he also alleged that Nabih and higher-ranking officers threatened him lest he speak out.
On Dec. 26, Nabih and one of his aides, Reda Fathi, were detained, and on Tuesday a judge refused their requests to be released pending their trial. The same judge also sentenced el-Kabir to prison. His lawyer says he is holding the Interior Ministry responsible for his client’s safety behind bars.
In court, police said he had a broken bottle and threatened to kill himself if his cousin was arrested, then attacked and injured a policeman in the hand and cheek. Al-Kabir pleaded not guilty and denied wielding a broken bottle or harming a policeman, according to a court official who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to discuss the case with the media.
For el-Kabir to come forward at all meant breaking through barriers of fear and humiliation, given the stigma of sodomy in Egypt’s masculine culture.
But some break the silence. In another well-publicized case, Mohammed el-Sharqawi, a pro-democracy activist arrested during a demonstration in Cairo over the summer, said he was raped by police while in custody, a claim his lawyer said was backed by a medical examination which hasn’t been made public.
In the interview before his jailing, El-Kabir said his family and fellow drivers are supportive, and “From now on, we will not shut our mouths when we face injustice or torture.”
But activists say it will take much more than a few videos to change a security apparatus that has wide powers of arrest and infiltrate every corner of Egyptian life – schools, political parties, newspapers and the civil service.
Egyptian opposition media have claimed that in the police academy, recruits are trained to use torture to extract confessions.
Egyptian officials say they have introduced a human rights training program for police and a commission to investigate torture allegations. They also say cases of torture have fallen since 1999, but give no numbers. The Egyptian Organization for Human Rights says it documented 120 deaths from torture from 1993 to 2004, 15 of them in the last year it counted.
Hafez Abu Saada, secretary general of the Egyptian Organization for Human Rights, said his group reports some 400 cases of alleged police abuse a year. He said 20 percent result in prosecutions, and convictions are much rarer.
In 2002, eight police officers were convicted of torturing detainees to death and sentenced to between one and 10 years in prison. Two years later, three senior police officers were tried for torturing a prisoner to confess that he killed his daughter, who turned out to be alive. Their sentences ranged from one to three years, but they were acquitted in a retrial.

Kefaya to SS Captain Ashraf Safwat: You tortured a citizen to death, and we can prove it

Posted on 20/01/200723/12/2020 By 3arabawy

Kefaya called for the prosecution of State Security Captain Ashraf Safwat, who tortured to death citizen Muhammad Abdel Qader in Hadayek el-Qobba Police Station. The movement managed to obtain copies of the Coroner’s report, with horrible autopsy photographs of the victim’s body that bears marks of burns and bruises clearly proving Muhammad died from torture.

The photos of the autopsy report are here. I should warn you they are really sickening, but they have to be published so that the criminals will not escape justice.

On 16 September 2003, State Security Captain Ashraf Mustafa Hussein Safwat summoned two brothers Muhammad Abdel Kader el-Sayyed, 31, and his 27-year-old brother Sameh for interrogation in Hadayek el-Qobba Police Station, based on an illegal detention order. After a five-day torture odyssey on the hands of Captain Ashraf, citizen Muhammad died, while his brother Sameh has remained in detention since then.

The family of the victim refused to receive his body, and sought legal help from Association for Human Rights Legal Aid (AHRLA), whose lawyers notified the Prosecutor of the incident. The forensic report, after examining the body of Muhammad Abdel Qader, proved that he was subject to injuries that involved “red bruises and hematomas (blood collections) in the lower lip, left nipple, right wrist, right forearm, chest, left arm, left thigh and left leg (..) in addition to severe hemorrhagic injuries in the head and abdomen which are contusive injuries resulting from collision with solid body or bodies. These are recent injuries that coincide with the date of death.”

The forensic report also confirmed the presence of “congestion and evidence of use of high temperature to the right and left breast and the penis resembling the effect of electrocution with an electric wire. He was subject to those injuries hours before this death.”

While working on the case, the AHRLA lawyers faced great difficulties that included denying them access to the complete file of the case—in violation of criminal law. The Interior Ministry refused to comply with the prosecutor’s orders to arrest and summon the accused officer, Ashraf Hussein. Finally on 4 November 2006, the victim’s family surprised the lawyers by dropping the case in court and cancelling their power of attorney, after they were blackmailed by the security: We will release your living son, if you give up the rights of the deceased one, the police told the family.

The executioner is about to escape justice once more, so that he can torture and kill more Egyptian citizens inside the morgues and torture chambers of State Security Police. It is further evidence to how Mubarak’s regime nourishes torture systematically, and covers up for the criminals engaged in it.

The torture victim, citizen Muhammad Abdel Qader had rights. His three daughters also have rights. Their last chance of achieving justice could be on the 3rd of February, where the Hadayek el-Qobba Prosecution Office for Family Affairs (in charge of financial custody over Muhammad’s minor daughters) will reopen the investigation into the case once again.

Kefaya obtained previously unpublished copies of the Forensic Medical Authorities autopsy report that prove citizen Muhammad Abdel Qader died because of the torture he received on the hands of State Security Captain Ashraf Mustafa Hussein Safwat. As we publish them today, we call on all civil society organizations to extend their solidarity to the victim’s family, and show up on 3 February, 2007 in court.

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