"Critical juncture" for human rights in Egypt

More than 100 organisations consider the situation in Egypt under head of state Abdul Fattah al-Sisi to be so bad that they are calling for the UN Human Rights Council to intervene

More than 100 human rights organisations from around the world have written to foreign ministers warning that Egypt's "human rights community" is being "obliterated" by the government of President Abdul Fattah al-Sisi. According to a statement from Human Rights Watch (HRW), the human rights activists are calling on governments around the world to initiate the establishment of a monitoring and reporting mechanism on the continuously deteriorating human rights situation in Egypt at the UN Human Rights Council session scheduled for late February.

"Exposed to repression on a daily basis"

Such an instrument is important to increase focus on the crimes committed, provide survivors and victims' families with more legal recourse, deter further violations and create opportunities to bring those responsible to justice, the text says.

"Governments sitting on the UN Human Rights Council should send the overdue message to the Egyptian government that violations will be monitored and reported now and in the future, and that the brave people of Egypt who face repression every day are not alone in their struggle," said Geneva-based HRW Director John Fisher. Ten years after the revolution in Egypt, he said, the population lives under a repressive government that suppresses all forms of dissent and peaceful expression.

 

"Independent civil society crushed"

The struggle for human rights in Egypt has reached a "critical juncture", the authors continue. The inaction of Egypt's partners and the member states of the Human Rights Council has "emboldened the government in Cairo to silence dissent and crush independent civil society".

Since the overthrow of then-President Mohammed Morsi in July 2013, Egyptian authorities have increasingly cracked down on human rights defenders and violated civil and political rights on a massive scale, the organisations said. Thousands of Egyptians - including human rights defenders, journalists, academics, artists and politicians - have been arbitrarily arrested, they said.

The list of organisations that signed the letter was reportedly not published in full due to security concerns.    (KNA/HRW)