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Egyptian Government Bans "6 April" Opposition
Group, Another Attempt to Silence Dissent
a Human Rights
Watch Report
Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, May 5, 2014
An Egyptian court’s ban on the activities of the 6 April Movement is a
clear violation of citizens’ rights to free association, peaceful assembly,
and free expression, Human Rights Watch said today. Rather than enforce the
ruling against the youth opposition movement, authorities should dedicate
themselves to overturning it in court.
Egypt’s Court of Urgent Matters ruled on April 28, 2014 in response to a
lawsuit filed by a lawyer, Ashraf Said. The suit called on the interim
authorities to freeze the protest movement’s activities on the grounds that
it allegedly engaged in espionage and defamed Egypt’s image abroad.
Authorities can potentially use the ruling to criminalize a range of
activities well within the limits of peaceful opposition, Human Rights Watch
said.
“Banning political dissent won’t make it go away,” said
Joe Stork, deputy Middle East and North Africa director at Human Rights
Watch. “A judge’s gavel can’t turn back the clock to before 2011.”
The court’s ruling marked a further escalation in the government’s campaign
against all peaceful opposition, Human Rights Watch said. Two of the group’s
founding members, Ahmed Maher and Mohammed Adel, and a third activist, Ahmed
Douma, are serving three-year sentences issued in December 2013 for
demonstrating against
a repressive protest law and assaulting police officers. On April 7, a
court rejected their appeal.
The 6 April Movement, which emerged on
that date to support a 2008 industrial strike in the Nile Delta town of
Mahalla al-Kubra, was a key player in organizing the January 25, 2011, mass
protests that prompted the ouster of Hosni Mubarak from Egypt’s presidency.
Said told the government-owned newspaper Al-Ahram that recorded phone
calls among leading 6 April members aired on the television talk show “Black
Box” in December 2013 inspired him to file the lawsuit. The host, ‘Abd
al-Rahim ‘Ali, claimed he had more than 5,000 such recordings that proved
the youth opposition group was “conspiring against state institutions.”
Whatever the legality of the wiretaps, their release to the media clearly
violated the activists’ right to privacy, as protected by the Egyptian
constitution and international law.
The 6 April Movement’s popularity
rocketed among Egypt’s youth after Mubarak stepped down. Since then
government-friendly media and, at times, the government itself, have
repeatedly accused 6 April of, for example, sedition and working with
“foreign hands” against Egypt. In July 2011, the group took to the media to
ask Egypt’s general prosecutor to investigate it to clear it of allegations
of any wrongdoing after the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces, which took
power following Mubarak’s fall, claimed that the group was engaged in
“suspicious schemes that seek to sow division between the armed forces and
the people.”
After supporting the Muslim Brotherhood’s Mohamed Morsy
in his successful 2012 presidential election campaign, the 6 April Movement
backed the June 30, 2013 mass protests that encouraged the military to
remove Morsy from the presidency. As Egypt’s human rights crisis worsened
under the military-backed government, the group returned to opposition, and
again became the target of a media rumor campaign.
Egypt’s
protest law, as amended by presidential order on November 24, 2013,
empowers security officials to ban protests on vague grounds, allows police
officers to forcibly disperse any protest if even a single protester so much
as throws a stone, and sets heavy prison sentences for offenses such as
attempting to “influence the course of justice.” The law also gives the
Interior Ministry the right to ban any meeting “of a public nature” of more
than 10 people in a public place, including meetings related to electoral
campaigning.
In a March 3
letter from Torah prison, just south of Cairo, the 6 April founder Maher
urged fellow activists to tell the world that “the police display brutality
every day, and there is no one who can stop them from murdering us in our
cells if they want to. Tell them that there is no protection today nor
tomorrow, and tell them that whoever is silent about it today will face
worse tomorrow.”
“Years of vilification did not silence the youth who
risked their lives for a more democratic Egypt, and this ruling won’t
either,” Stork said. “Rather than enforcing this ban, authorities should be
vigorously defending the rights enshrined in Egypt’s constitution.”
For more Human Rights Watch reporting on Egypt, please visit:
https://www.hrw.org/middle-eastn-africa/egypt
For more
information, please contact: In Washington, DC, Joe Stork (English):
+1-202-299-4925 (mobile); or storkj@hrw.org
In New York, Sarah Leah Whitson (English): +1-718-362-0172 (mobile); or
whitsos@hrw.org. Follow on Twitter
@sarahleah1 In Beirut, Nadim Houry (Arabic, French, English):
+961-3-639-244 (mobile); or houryn@hrw.org.
Follow on Twitter @nadimhoury
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