Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights
Right to Privacy Program
Press release- 23 June 2005
UN Body Calls for Release of Shi'a Muslim Detainee
Mohamed El-Derini Decision Condemns Interior
Minister's Disregard for Court Rulings
The United Nations Working Group on Arbitrary Detention issued a decision in
a case submitted last year by the Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights (EIPR)
regarding the detention of Mohamed El-Derini on the basis of his Shi'a
religious beliefs.
The international body's opinion, which was made public yesterday, 22 June
2005, described the continued detention of El-Derini as "arbitrary" and in
contravention with international law, and requested the Egyptian government
to "take the necessary steps to remedy the situation." The Working Group
found that Egypt had violated Articles 9 and 10 of the Universal Declaration
of Human Rights, as well as Articles 9 and 14 of the International Covenant
on Civil and Political Rights, to which Egypt is a party.
"[M]aintaing a person in administrative detention once his release has been
ordered by the court competent to exercise control over the legality of
detention renders the deprivation of liberty arbitrary," the written opinion
read.
The Working Group also criticized the practice of recurrent administrative
detention in Egypt, whereby the Interior Minister issues a new
administrative detention order every time a detainee obtains a final court
ruling ordering his release. The international body found that "in the
present case no legal basis can be invoked to justify the detention, least
of all an administrative order issued to circumvent a judicial decision
ordering the release."
During the same week, a Supreme State Security Emergency Court issued a new
final ruling ordering the release of Mohamed El-Derini in a session held
last Sunday, 19 June 2005. This is the fourth final ruling obtained by the
lawyers of the EIPR in favor of El-Derini. The Interior Ministry has failed
to implement all of these rulings in consistence with its usual conduct
which was described by the first annual report of the National Council for
Human Rights as a "flagrant violation of legal legitimacy".
El-Derini was arrested at his house on 22 March 2004 as part of a larger
campaign of arrests that targeted a number of Egyptian Shi'a Muslims. While
all the other detainees were released at a later stage, El-Derini has been
in custody for 15 months now without ever being charged or even referred to
prosecution. In addition to the four court rulings ordering his release, the
EIPR submitted three complaints to the Office of the General Prosecutor and
two complaints to the National Council for Human Rights calling for El-Derini
to be released or referred to trial. No response has been received to any of
these complaints.
The Working Group on Arbitrary Detention is an international quasi-judicial
panel of five independent experts appointed by the UN Commission on Human
Rights (CHR). The Group will submit its opinion condemning the Egyptian
Government (Opinion No. 5/2005) to the next meeting of the CHR member
states.
The EIPR has also submitted a similar complaint to the African Union's
African Commission on Human and Peoples' Rights last May. The African
Commission will start considering the case at its next session.
"We will use every local and international mechanism available to us until
Mohamed El-Derini is released or referred to trial," said Hossam Bahgat,
Director of the Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights. "The Egyptian
government must realize that seeking African leadership or a Security
Council seat has a price that involves abiding by the rule of law and
fulfilling the state's responsibility under the constitution and
international law.
The text of the opinion is
available here