Right to Privacy
Program
Press Release- 4 October 2007
Egyptian Government Must Release Two Detained
for Shi'ite Beliefs and Torture Statements
The Egyptian
Initiative for Personal Rights (EIPR) and the Hisham Mubarak Law Center (HMLC)
today urged the Ministry of Interior to immediately release two Egyptians
detained for belonging to Shi’ite Islam and criticizing the government’s
torture and detention policies. The two rights groups also called on the
Public Prosecutor to drop all charges brought against the two men for their
peaceful exercise of their right to freedom of belief and expression
Today the
State Security Prosecutor’s Office concluded two days of interrogation of
Mohamed El-Derini, secretary-general of the Supreme Council for the Care
of the Prophet’s Family (al majlis al-a’la li ri’ayat ‘al al-beit).
Derini is charged in case number 1061/2007 (state security) together with
Ahmed Mohamed Sobh, director of the Imam Ali Center for Human Rights.
Derini was detained at his house in Zeitun, Cairo early on 1 October, while
Sobh was detained on 28 August in Mansura and only appeared before the State
Security Prosecutor’s Office on 29 September. Both men are detained under
administrative decrees issued by the Minister of Interior in accordance with
the Emergency Law. They are being held in solitary confinement in Tora
prison in southern Cairo.
The two men
have been charged with “promoting extreme Shi’ite beliefs with the intent of
causing contempt of the Islamic religion” and with “spreading false rumors
and inciting propaganda that could promote terror amongst people, disturb
public security and the rule of law and undermine the trust in security
agencies through claiming that prisoners and detainees died as a result of
torture in prisons.”
According to Adel Ramadan of the EIPR and Ahmed Ragheb of HMLC, who both
represented Derini before the prosecutor’s office, investigations of the
“contempt of religion” charge centered solely around Derini’s belonging to
Shi’ite Islam and included questions such as “do you believe [the Prophet’s
cousin] Ali should have become the first Caliph?” and “do you believe
Muslims should fast on the [Shi’ite holiday of] Ashura?” The prosecutor
refused to note in the interrogation transcripts the defense lawyers’
objections to questions that challenged the religious beliefs of the
defendant. At the end of the hearing the lawyers submitted a challenge
against the constitutionality of Article 98 (f) of the Penal Code on
“contempt of religion”, citing its violation of the rights to freedom of
religion and expression, personal liberty and non-discrimination on
religious grounds. The article stipulates a punishment of up to five years.
The charge of “spreading false rumors” is based on media interviews in which
both Derini and Sobh criticized the ongoing detention and torture of
thousands of Islamist detainees. Article 102 bis of the penal code
includes a three-year prison term as punishment for this charge.
Both Sobh and
Derini are former victims of torture and detention themselves. Sobh spent 15
years in administrative detention until early 2005 for suspected membership
of the armed Islamic Group before converting to Shi’ite Islam. Derini was
detained for 15 months in 2004 and 2005 without charge or trial and despite
several court rulings ordering his release. The Public Prosecutor never
opened an investigation into Derini’s claims that he was tortured and
mistreated during his previous period of detention.In a 2004
report entitled “Freedom of Belief and the Arrests of Shi’a Muslims in
Egypt”, the EIPR had documented violations against Shi’ite Egyptians
detained in several crackdowns conducted in 1988, 1989, 1996, 2002 and 2004.
Those violations included arbitrary arrests, unlawful detention, torture and
mistreatment. None of the men detained in these crackdowns was ever referred
to court and no security officers are known to have been investigated or
punished for violating the rights of detainees.
For more information:
Hossam Bahgat, Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights: (+20) (0) 10 628
8928.
Ahmed Ragheb, Hisham Mubarak Law Center: (+20) (0) 12 062 4003.
To view the EIPR’s 2004 report in English:
http://www.eipr.org/en/reports/04/en1rep.htm