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What's At Stake?Egyptian Blogger Among Hundreds Detained After Judges' Protests
Opposition activists have focused their efforts on a call for political change in Egypt, which has been ruled for the past 25 years by President Hosni Mubarak, who was reelected for another six year term in 2005 after a rigged, but contested election. Activists are also calling for an end to Egypt's permanent state of emergency, which provides the presidency with enormous unchecked powers, and for the independence of the judiciary as a check on these excesses. Public protests died down after the parliamentary elections in November 2005, but sprang up again in April 2006 when two senior judges, Hisham al-Bastawisi and Mahmud Mekki, were made to appear before a disciplinary tribunal for exposing irregularities that took place during the elections, and for asserting the role of judges in ensuring a fair electoral process. Protests in support of the judges took place in central Cairo until May 18, when the tribunal ruled that the two judges would not lose their positions as a result of their stand. A further mass protest took place on May 25 calling for the release of protesters, like Alaa Seif al-Islam, who were detained at previous demonstrations. This demonstration, like the earlier ones, was brutally broken up by riot police and scores more demonstrators were taken into detention. At least six bloggers were among those detained, and their supporters allege that they have been particularly targeted by the police because of their activities as "citizen journalists," reporting news that is ignored by the state dominated media in Egypt. One of them, Muhammad al-Sharqawi has posted his testimony describing torture he suffered while in detention: http://arabist.net/archives/2006/05/28/a-letter-from-sharqawi/ Alaa and other bloggers have reported on incidents of sectarian violence and have exposed and condemned the persecution of Egypt's minority Bahai community. In October 2005 the press freedom organization Reporters Without Borders presented Alaa and Manal with an award for their web site. Alaa is currently being held in Tora prison, just outside of Cairo. He has managed to send out a few messages from his prison cell that have been posted to his website. Alaa Seif al-Islam and hundreds of other mostly young people are being held in detention for exercising their basic rights to freedom of expression and assembly. These are rights upheld in the Egyptian Constitution, but curtailed under the state of emergency; they are also upheld in binding international human rights treaties to which Egypt is a State Party, like the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. Egypt's brutal suppression of nonviolent protesters in recent months has been widely criticized by the international community. It, too, is a violation of Egypt's obligations under international human rights law. Human Rights First is calling for the immediate release of Alaa Seif al-Islam and the hundreds of other protesters who are still held in detention. Human Rights First also calls on the Egyptian government to permit peaceful public protests to take place freely. The pattern of excessive use of force, beatings and torture used by the security forces in recent weeks is illegal and should be prevented by the authorities. Those responsible for ordering such methods should be investigated and held accountable for the violations that have taken place.
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