Lawyers detained in Egypt receive CCBE Human Rights Award

The CCBE – European Council of Bars and Law Societies – recently honoured seven Egyptian lawyers with its prestigious Human Rights Award to draw attention to the Egyptian regime's ongoing repression of civil society. By Sofian Philip Naceur

By Sofian Philip Naceur

The arrest of three employees of human rights group Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights (EIPR) by Egyptian authorities in November made headlines around the globe for weeks, becoming something of a boomerang for the authoritarian regime of Egypt’s President Abdul Fattah al-Sisi. After all, Egypt’s systematic crackdown against civil society has not attracted that much international attention for quite some time. Following a veritable wave of declarations expressing solidarity with the three human rights advocates and an EIPR researcher, the latter imprisoned since February 2020, the three EIPR staffers were released on bail last week. Nevertheless, the situation for Egypt's civil society remains tense.

These days, it is not only human rights groups such as EIPR that are being targeted by the Egyptian authorities. Journalists, academics and opposition politicians are also facing persecution in the country on political grounds. At the same time, Egyptian legal professionals, who have likewise been a target for state reprisals at the hands of the Sisi regime for years, have received far less attention than those professions mentioned above.

CCBE Human Rights Award for incarcerated lawyers

Against this background, the Council of Bars and Law Societies of Europe (CCBE), a Brussels-based federation of bar societies from 45 countries, has awarded its annual human rights award to seven Egyptian human rights lawyers, all of whom are currently behind bars in Egypt. According to a CCBE statement, they were honoured "for their courage, determination and commitment to defending human rights in Egypt".

 

The award was granted to prominent left-wing human rights lawyer and activist Mahienour al-Masry from Alexandria, labour rights defender Haitham Mohammadein, known for her longstanding engagement for trade unionists, the co-founder of the Egyptian Social Democratic Party (ESDP) Ziad al-Elaimy, human rights lawyers Mohamed al-Baqer and Mohamed Ramadan, as well as Hoda Abdelmoneim and Ibrahim Metwally, who have been working for the human rights group Egyptian Commission for Rights and Freedom (ECRF).

The Turkish lawyer Ebru Timtik, who died in a Turkish prison in August 2020 after a 238-day hunger strike, was also posthumously decorated. Last year, Timtik was sentenced to 13 years and 6 months for alleged membership of a terrorist organisation in a controversial trial considered politically motivated.Arrested on duty

Imprisonment and charges against lawyers in the context of their work are part of everyday life in Egypt. Al-Masry and al-Baqer were both arrested in Cairo following a wave of protests in September 2019 and were shortly afterwards subjected to flimsy accusations by Egypt’s judiciary. The regime responded to the protests with brutal force and rampant arrests – in fact it was the most comprehensive clampdown since Sisi’s takeover in 2013. In the space of a few weeks, more than 4,000 people were arrested.

Al-Baqer, Director of the Adalah Centre for Rights and Freedoms, had rushed to the interrogation of a client shortly after the protests to provide him with legal assistance, but was himself arrested on the spot and added to the very same case file. Al-Masry was arrested outside the headquarters of the notorious Supreme State Security Prosecution (SSSP) in Cairo after attending the interrogation of five detainees. Although both lawyers had no connection with the protests whatsoever, both remain in pre-trial detention.

Autumn 2012: Egyptian woman carries her baby past a mural on a recently whitewashed wall while others take photos near it on Tahrir Square, Cairo, Egypt. Arabic writing in the thought bubble reads "Long live freedom, social justice!" (photo: AP photo/Mohammad Hannon)
What hope freedom and social justice now? It is unclear precisely how many lawyers are currently behind bars in Egypt , or are subjected to politically motivated criminal proceedings. A joint report published in September 2020 by the International Commission of Jurists and the Tahrir Institute for Middle East Policy featured a list of 35 lawyers arrested in Egypt between March 2018 and May 2020. Only five of them have been released as of today, most of the others are still in pre-trial detention

Neutralising the opposition

Ziad al-Elaimy, on the other hand, was not arrested for his judicial work, but for partisan activities. The founder and spokesperson of a prominent youth coalition active at the forefront of the Egyptian revolution in 2011 was even elected to parliament in the same year, as the youngest ever MP in Egyptian history.

Prior to his election, he was involved in establishing the ESDP. In mid-2019, he tried to form a secular partisan alliance together with several other opposition parties, with the aim of running during the 2020 parliamentary elections, but was arrested after a coordination meeting in Cairo, along with several other activists and journalists. Ever since, the SSSP has accused him of terrorism.

In March 2020, al-Elaimy was sentenced to one year in prison and a fine equivalent of 1,100 euros in another case – he was accused of spreading false news in an interview with the BBC. "Ziad is imprisoned in a nine square-metre cell in Cairo’s notorious Tora prison together with another inmate. Political prisoners are often held like this, to make sure they have no exchange with other prisoners and to keep them isolated," Ziad Abdel Tawab, deputy director of the human rights organisation Cairo Institute for Human Rights Studies (CIHRS) and well informed about this case, tells Qantara.

Systematic abuse of anti-terrorism laws

The terrorism-related allegations against the opposition politician are particularly absurd. "In April 2020, Ziad was listed by Egyptian authorities as a terrorist. He was the first ever secular individual to be listed as such in Egypt. But many others followed ever since, including prominent activist Alaa Abdel Fattah, Haitham Mohamadeen and Palestinian-Egyptian activist Ramy Shaath," says Abdel Tawab.

 

The four prosecuted EIPR employees are also facing terrorism-related charges, but they are by no means the only ones. Hundreds of activists, journalists, lawyers and politicians are systematically accused of absurd terrorism-related charges, aimed at silencing them.

International pressure – the last hope

 

Meanwhile, by granting its Human Rights Award to the seven lawyers, the CCBE is hoping to create as much public attention as possible for their cases and, thereby, increase international pressure on Egypt’s regime, the federation tells Qantara. "The objective of the CCBE is to honour distinguished lawyers and lawyers' organisations that have demonstrated outstanding commitment and sacrifice to uphold fundamental values", the federation states, additionally highlighting the difficult current situation for lawyers in Egypt and expressing the European legal profession’s support for the seven recipients.

It remains unclear precisely how many lawyers are currently behind bars in Egypt – or are subjected to politically motivated criminal proceedings. A joint report published in September 2020 by the International Commission of Jurists and the Tahrir Institute for Middle East Policy featured a list of 35 lawyers arrested in Egypt between March 2018 and May 2020. Only five of them have been released as of today, most of the others are still in pre-trial detention. The report confirms that lawyers have been increasingly targeted by authorities since Sisi's takeover and are systematically and arbitrarily arrested, detained and prosecuted for political reasons related to their work.

Sofian Philip Naceur

© Qantara.de 2020