Egypt: End Harassment of Rights Defender – The Herald

Posted: November 23, 2021 at 4:11 pm

The Herald

Egyptianauthorities should cease the harassment and persecution of prominent human rights defender and journalist, Hossam Bahgat, who faces abusive charges intended to punish him solely for exercising his right to freedom of expression and his human rights activism, 46 human rights organizations said today.

The verdict in the trial of Hossam Bahgat, executive director and founder of the Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights (EIPR), isexpectedon November 29, 2021. Bahgat is charged with insulting the Elections Authority, spreading false news, and using a social media account to commit these crimes in response to atweethe posted criticizing the former head of Egypts National Elections Authority, the late Lashin Ibrahim, for his oversight of parliamentary elections. This case is the latest salvo in a years-long campaign targeting Hossam Bahgat who is well-known for his human rights activism and investigative journalism.

The Egyptian government needs to halt its relentless persecution of Hossam Bahgat, saidJoe Stork, deputy Middle East and North Africa director at Human Rights Watch. These endless legal proceedings look like a clear reprisal against Bahgats storied legacy of defending human rights.

The charges against Bahgat carry a penalty of up to three years in prison and a fine of up to EGP 330,000 (US$19,000) under Egypts penal code and2018 cybercrime law.

In 2016, the authorities arbitrarilybannedHossam Bahgat from traveling andfrozehis assets in relation to Case 173, known as the infamous foreign funding case, a decade-long abusive criminal investigation that targeted dozens of nongovernmental organizations unjust restrictions that remain in place today. InJuly 2021, an investigative judge in Case 173 summoned Hossam Bahgat and interrogated him on the basis of investigations by the notorious National Security Agency (NSA) accusing him of inciting the public against state institutions. While the investigative judges dropped their investigations against75 NGOs and some 220 activists and employees, Hossam Bahgat and the EIPR remain subject to the ongoing investigation. In November 2015, Egyptian authorities unlawfullydetainedBahgat for three days on charges of publishing false news following hisinvestigationpublished by the independent news site Mada Masr detailing the military trial of several military officers in relation to a plan to overthrow the government.

The Egyptian governments retaliation against Hossam and other EIPR leaders is a threat to the human rights community in Egypt and part of a pattern that threatens to cripple civil society, said Mohamed Zaree, head of the Egypt programat the Cairo Institute for Human Rights Studies. We strongly condemn this clear pattern of harassment and intimidation against Hossam Bahgat solely because he insists on exercising his right to free expression.

In November 2020, three top EIPR staff members Gasser Abdel-Razek, Karim Ennarah, and Mohamed Basheer werearrestedand detained for several days on unfounded terrorism charges following their meeting with European diplomats about Egypts human rights crisis. They were released within days following a global outcry but all three remain subject to travel bans and asset freezes.

In February 2020, the authoritiesarrestedPatrick George Zaki, a gender and sexuality rights researcher at EIPR, on his arrival at Cairo Airport from Italy, where he had been studying. During his detention, NSA officers subjected him totorturethrough the use of electric shocks and beatings, according to sources familiar with the case. After 19 months of detention without trial, prosecutorsreferredhim to an Emergency State Security Court for trial over unfounded disseminating false news charges which is set to resume on December 7, 2021.

As part of their unrelenting assault on the human rights movement, Egyptian authorities have a long track record of targeting Hossam Bahgat and other directors and staff at EIPR, one of Egypts leading human rights organizations, through unjust prosecutions, arbitrary arrests and detention, travel bans and asset freezes, said Amnesty Internationals Middle East and North Africa Research and Advocacy Director, Philip Luther. Egyptian authorities must halt their endless misuse of the justice system and drop all spurious charges against Hossam Bahgat, close Case 173 once and for all, and lift arbitrary travel bans and asset freezes.

Signatory Organizations:

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of Human Rights Watch (HRW).

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Egypt: End Harassment of Rights Defender - The Herald

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