Skip to content
3arabawy
3arabawy

Hossam el-Hamalawy

  • Home
  • About
  • Archive
  • Blog
  • Photos
  • Books
3arabawy

Hossam el-Hamalawy

Tag: torture

Al-Jazeera journalist sentenced over torture documentary

Posted on 02/05/200720/01/2021 By 3arabawy

Mubarak’s regime cracks down again on those who speak out against torture:

An al Jazeera journalist has been sentenced to six months in prison in absentia by an Egyptian court after producing a film highlighting police torture.
The state security criminal court found Howayda Taha guilty of “harming Egypt’s national interest” and ordered her on Wednesday to pay a fine of 30,000 Egyptian pounds ($5,200).
She had been accused of planning to broadcast fabricated images.
Taha, who was making a documentary on torture in Egyptian police stations, described the decision as “an unjust, vindictive ruling by the government’s judiciary”.
She can appeal against the verdict.
In January, she was briefly arrested and her 50 videotapes confiscated at the Cairo airport.
Taha, an Egyptian citizen, is currently in Qatar, where al Jazeera’s headquarters are situated.

HRW calls for shutting down CIA prisons

Posted on 28/04/200715/01/2021 By 3arabawy

I received the following statement from Human Rights Watch:

The Bush administration’s continuing reliance on secret CIA prisons violates basic human rights standards, Human Rights Watch said today.
The announcement that Abd al-Hadi al-Iraqi was transferred to the Guantanamo Bay detention facility from CIA custody raises worrying questions about how long he has been detained by the CIA, where he was held, what kind of treatment he endured, and whether other prisoners still remain in CIA detention. The CIA has previously detained numerous detainees for months and even years.
“The CIA’s secret detention of Abd al-Hadi al-Iraqi is a blatant violation of international law,” said Joanne Mariner, terrorism and counterterrorism director at Human Rights Watch. “This transfer shows that Congress will have to act to end the CIA’s illegal detention program.”
By holding people in unacknowledged, incommunicado detention, outside of the protection of the law, the Bush administration has violated the international legal prohibition on enforced disappearance. The CIA’s reliance on enforced disappearance also raises serious concerns about the likelihood of torture and other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment. Notably, numerous detainees previously transferred from CIA custody to Guantanamo have claimed that they were subjected to torture.
Human Rights Watch also criticized the administration for transferring new detainees to the Guantanamo facility. Just one month ago, the Department of Defense announced that it had transferred to Guantanamo a Kenyan citizen, Mohammad Abdul Malik, arrested in Mombassa.

Sinai updates

Posted on 26/04/200728/12/2020 By 3arabawy

One day after Mubarak’s regime celebrated Sinai Liberation Day:

Hundreds of Egypt Bedouin seeking entry to Israel
By Yusri Muhammad
AL-ARISH, Egypt, April 26- Hundreds of Egyptian Sinai Bedouin massed at the border with Israel on Thursday seeking entry into the Jewish state a day after two Bedouin men died in a police chase, security sources and witnesses said.
The security sources said Egyptian police were monitoring the tribesmen from a distance but had not approached them, as a significant number of them were armed.
The massing at the border came a day after many Bedouin took to the streets and set fire to dozens of tyres in anger over the death of two Sinai Bedouin men on Wednesday in a chase with Egyptian police.
Security sources said the two men had exchanged fire with police after driving through a checkpoint in a pick-up truck with no license plates.
Tribal sources said the Bedouin headed to the border fearing a police crackdown and a wave of arrests after Wednesday’s deaths and protests. One tribal sheikh who asked not to be named said the Bedouin came from several tribes and had been seeking entry into Israel since dawn.
DIPLOMATIC EMBARRASSMENT?
Security sources described the decision to try to seek entry into Israel as an attempt by the Bedouin to embarrass the Egyptian government.
Bedouin in 1999 managed to illegally cross the border into Israel after disagreements with other tribes and requested political asylum there, but were returned to Egypt.
Egypt blamed a series of bombings in Sinai, the last of which took place in April 2006, on a local Islamist group called al-Tawhid wal Jihad (One God and Jihad), and says the group is made up of Sinai Bedouin with militant views.
Security sweeps have since focused heavily on Sinai’s Bedouins. Human rights groups say Egypt detained up to 2,500 people for questioning after the bombings, and that many were subjected to torture. Egypt denies this.
In January, the International Crisis Group said Egypt must tackle political and socioeconomic problems in Sinai if it hopes to end militancy there.

And here’s another Reuters report on border armed clashes with a Palestinian suspect:

Palestinian throws grenade at Egypt border police
AL-ARISH, Egypt, April 26 – A Palestinian man lobbed a grenade at Egyptian police who confronted him near the Gaza border on Thursday as he tried to smuggle a suicide bomb belt into Egypt, security sources said.
None of the police officers were injured but the 26-year-old attacker was seriously hurt by shrapnel.
The sources said Abdel Shafie Jabr Maraheel was suspected of having entered Egypt illegally via a smuggling tunnel on the border with the Gaza Strip. They could give no information on what he may have been planning.
Bombers have hit Red Sea resort areas in the Sinai peninsula three times since 2004, killing more than 100 people in attacks Egypt blames on a group of Islamists from the Sinai Bedouin community with militant views.
The Egyptian sources said police had tried to stop Maraheel north of the Rafah border crossing between Egypt and Gaza, but he fled and then threatened to detonate a grenade he was carrying.
Police fired warning shots in the air, and Maraheel threw the grenade, a source said. Maraheel was in hospital with internal bleeding.
Egyptian police regularly seize explosives and ammunition in Sinai, sometimes hidden in tunnels near the Gaza border. In March, Egyptian police arrested a suspected Palestinian suicide bomber they accused of planning an attack in Israel.

  • Previous
  • 1
  • …
  • 182
  • 183
  • 184
  • …
  • 230
  • Next

Search 3arabawy

Follow 3arabawy

  • Facebook
  • Flickr
  • Instagram
  • Bluesky
  • X
  • YouTube
  • Spotify
©2026 3arabawy