Egyptian Crack-Down on Human Rights Defenders Reaches Key Christian Activist
Activist Threatened three times before arrest, he faces life in prison
By Dan Wooding, Founder of ASSIST News Service
EGYPT (ANS -- May 31, 2016)
-- A Coptic human rights activist arrested this month by Egyptian
security officials faces the possibility of life in prison on concocted
charges because of his efforts to expose persecution of Christians,
human rights activists said.
According
to Morning Star News, Mina Thabet, 26, director of the Minority and
Religious Groups Department at the Egyptian Commission for Rights and
Freedoms (ECRF), faces 10 charges filed against him under anti-terrorism
laws that were signed into effect in August 2015. The charges include
“inciting youth to use force to overthrow the government” and “inciting
terrorist attacks on police stations.”
Mohamed
El-Messiry, a researcher at Amnesty International, said the charges
against Thabet are meant to silence or punish him for documenting
persecution of religious minorities in Egypt, especially Coptic
Christians.
“The
charges are completely false and trumped up. There is no evidence in
the case against Mina,” El-Messiry said, adding that the prosecutor has
filed the charges under the direct instruction of the National Security
Agency (NSA), a division of the Ministry of the Interior. “The
prosecutor is dependent entirely on the police investigations only, and
this is a pattern in most of the political cases now … The prosecutor
basically copied accusations from the police report and pasted them into
[its] charges.”
Days
before his arrest, Thabet told Morning Star News that he expected to be
detained or jailed by security officials in the near future. Officers
from the NSA had contacted him three times over the past several months,
he said, and told him that if he didn’t stop his activities they would
“teach him to behave.”
Thabet
was arrested in the early morning hours of May 13 in his Dar Al-Salam
apartment on the outskirts of Cairo. On the afternoon of May 12, an
officer from the NSA went to Thabet’s apartment. Thabet, who shares the
apartment with his mother and brother, was not there, and the officer
threatened to take his brother into custody, according to confidential
sources. Eventually the officer backed down and left, they said.
Thabet’s
mother called him, told him what happened and begged him not to return
home, but Thabet chose to return, knowing that if he didn’t, the
Ministry of the Interior would only abduct his 21-year-old brother in
his place. At 3 a.m., the sources said, several heavily armed,
plain-clothes security officers forced open the door to Thabet’s
apartment and, without identifying themselves or producing a warrant,
ransacked all the rooms, verbally abused Thabet’s mother and brother and
then forced Thabet into an unmarked car.
Morning
Star News went on to say that for 12 hours officials detained Thabet
and refused to answer any questions about where he was. The next day
Thabet appeared in court, and a judge issued a temporary detention order
against him, which was extended for 15 days. He is now being held
without bail in pretrial detention. There is no word on the date of his
next court hearing.
El-Messiry
called the evidence behind the charges against Mina “ridiculous.” It
consisted of an illustration of the Virgin Mary, a copy of the
International Covenant on Civil and Political rights, papers on
religious minority groups and a paper on Egyptian political party Bread
and Freedom, he said.
Thabet
also has been charged with using threats of violence to prevent the
president from performing his duties, membership in a terrorist or
banned group, using the Internet to incite a terrorist act, inciting
protests, spreading false information about the country meant to disrupt
public order and damage national prestige, harming citizens and the
public interest and possessing documents that would incite people to
overthrow the government and change the constitution.
Amnesty International called Thabet a prisoner of conscience “detained solely for exercising his rights.”
“He
must be released immediately and unconditionally with all charges
against him dropped,” a statement issued by the organization declared.
Thabet’s
arrest is part of a larger crack-down against human rights activists
and advocates by the military dictatorship of Egypt, but it also sends a
direct message to the Christian community of Egypt that delivers a hard
blow, human rights activists said. Thabet worked tirelessly documenting
not only persecution but the government’s apparent apathy toward
resolving any religious minorities’ problems.
Thabet
researched and reported on the de facto Dhimmi status of Copts in
Egypt; unexplained slayings of Copts in the Egyptian military; the
disproportionate numbers of Copts in Egypt that are kidnapped for
profit; a long-standing epidemic of violence against Christians in
Egypt; “weaponized” blasphemy laws being used against the Copts;
discriminatory laws against Christians regarding building houses of
worship; and numerous acts of persecution against those who leave Islam
to embrace Christianity. Mina was one of the founders of the Maspero
Youth, a group of Coptic Christians seeking basic human rights and a
member of the Coalition of Minority Groups.
“He
has been one of the pillars [of human rights in Egypt],” El-Messiry
said. “[His arrest] will definitely affect religious minorities in the
country.”
‘Military Dictator’
Thabet’s
arrest came less than a month after the arrest of Ahmed Abdullah,
director of the ECRF, on April 25. Abdullah was a member of the banned
Sixth of April group, a pro-democracy movement.
Because
Abdullah and Thabet face essentially identical charges, El-Messiry said
he thinks the government is trying to claim Thabet was part of the
Sixth of April group. There is no evidence, however, that he was ever
part of that group, according to those that know Thabet.
The
government of President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi has arrested numerous
human rights activists across Egypt and seemingly anyone who commits
even a minor act of political dissent, sources said. In roughly one
month, the NSA has arrested some 250 persons, including a leading human
rights lawyer, members of a street theatre group, two dissident
journalists, and 238 people protesting Sisi’s return of two islands in
the Red Sea to Saudi Arabia. Other dissidents who haven’t been arrested
have been harassed or had their assets frozen or seized.
The
Sisi government has also banned public protests, some private group
meetings, and almost any press coverage that diverges from the official
state version of events – along with numerous other human rights
violations.
Sisi
came to power when, as the leading general in the Egyptian military, he
led what came to be described as a popular coup against the government,
then led by President Mohamed Morsi. While critics have often accused
Morsi’s predecessor, President Hosni Mubarak, of leading a centralized
authoritarian state, and accused Morsi of attempting to recast Egypt
into an Islamist state, Sisi has come in for worse criticism. Human
rights groups roundly accuse him of being nothing short of a military
dictator who has made Egypt a country where rights exist only on paper.
While
Sisi fights against supporters of the Muslim Brotherhood he deposed and
against Islamic State-allied groups, he uses that fight as a thinly
veiled excuse to crack down on anyone who says anything against the
government, critics say. Even Christians demanding to be treated equally
or be given their basic rights are now facing arrest or have already
been silenced, said Safwat Samaan, chairman of Nation Without Borders, a
human rights and development group headquartered in Luxor.
“These
people are treated as terrorists,” Samman said. “This a problem facing
everybody who works in these fields, and many have stopped writing,
opposing, or objecting to what’s happening, afraid they will be arrested
next.”
El-Messiry said Egypt’s fight on terrorism is hypocritical.
“While
Egypt is portraying to the world that they are fighting terror and
fighting terrorism, they are arresting Copts, and they are charging
Copts with trumped-up charges that include belonging to a terrorist
organization,” El-Messiry said. “They are not targeting the right
people. They are just using counter-terrorism to silence any kind of
dissent.”
For more information on Morning Star News, please visit http://morningstarnews.org.
Rights
activist Mina Thabet (center) and others examine church building set
ablaze on Aug. 14, 2013. (Courtesy of Mina Thabet). 2) Egyptian
President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi. 3) Dan Wooding with Norm Nelson of
Compassion Radio at the pyramids in Giza, Egypt.
About
the writer: Dan Wooding, 75, is an award-winning winning author,
broadcaster and journalist who was born in Nigeria of British missionary
parents, and is now living in Southern California with his wife Norma,
to whom he has been married for nearly 53 years. They have two sons,
Andrew and Peter, and six grandchildren, who all live in the UK. Dan is
the founder and international director of the ASSIST News Service (ANS),
and the author or co-author of some 45 books. He has one radio show and
two TV programs all based in Southern California. Before moving to the
US, Dan was a senior reporter with two of the UK’s largest circulation
newspapers and also an interviewer for BBC Radio One in London.
** You may republish this and any of our ANS stories with attribution to the ASSIST News Service (www.assistnews.net).
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