Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights
Right to Privacy Program
Press Release- 18 February 2007
Parliamentary Committee Should Reject
Terror-Related Constitutional Amendment
The Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights
(EIPR) warned against the suspension of fundamental constitutional rights in
the name of fighting terrorism. As members of the Legislative and
Constitutional Committee of the People's Assembly begin drafting amendments
to 34 articles of the Constitution today, the EIPR urged them to reject the
proposal for a new article that would grant security forces the power to
circumvent other constitutional provisions in counter-terrorism measures.
In a letter addressed to both houses of the
Parliament on 26 December 2006, President Hosni Mubarak proposed the
introduction into the Constitution of Article 179, which would provide for
"constitutional protection of the measures" taken in the fight against
terror. The President specifically requested a constitutional provision that
would allow counter-terrorism measures to avoid the basic rights provisions
of Articles 41 (on arrest and due process), 44 (on house searches) and 45
(on the privacy of correspondence and communications) of the Constitution.
"The President's proposal to extend
constitutional protection to exceptional security measures while depriving
citizens of the same protection is simply unacceptable," said Hossam Bahgat,
Director of the EIPR. "Basic rights are protected by our Constitution
precisely in order to prevent impinging on them by excessive powers such as
those proposed in the President's letter to the Parliament."
The EIPR said it was deeply concerned about
the prospect of removing anti-terror measures outside the sphere of
constitutional protection of basic freedoms, particularly in light of the
broad and vague definition of terrorism in Egypt's Penal Code. Article 86,
introduced into the Penal Code in 1992, classifies as terrorism such acts
that could fall under the peaceful exercise of human rights protected both
by the Constitution and by international human rights treaties ratified by
Egypt, such as the right to freedom of expression and assembly
During two parliamentary hearings convened
by the People's Assembly last week, constitutional law professors invited to
comment on the amendments expressed strong objections to the proposed
Article 179 and warned against its impact on freedoms. The EIPR strongly
calls on lawmakers to take these expert opinions into account while drafting
the amended articles.
The EIPR
reiterated that subjecting the excessive counter-terrorism measures to
retroactive judicial oversight will stop short of providing the necessary
safeguards against abuse by security agencies. "Since the state of emergency
was declared in 1981, retroactive judicial oversight provided by the
Emergency Law offered little protection against systematic violations of
human rights at the hands of security officials," said Bahgat. "The proposed
Article 179 will only sustain this atmosphere of impunity and even embed it
in the country's Constitution."