Egypt: Mark New UN Post by Ending Abuses
Uphold Promises Made in Election to Human
Rights Council
(Cairo, May 26, 2007) – Following Egypt’s
election last week to the UN Human Rights Council, the government should
immediately fulfill the pledges it made in campaigning for the seat, Human
Rights Watch and the Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights (EIPR) said in
a
briefing paper released today.
In a 13-page briefing paper, “Human
Rights Council Membership Requires Steps to Address Violations,”
Human Rights Watch and the EIPR said that Egypt’s terrible human rights
record made that country a poor choice for membership. They nevertheless
welcomed the Egyptian government’s public pledges to improve its practices
domestically and to strengthen the capacity of the council.
“Egypt has for too long committed serious and systematic abuses at home
while consistently undermining UN mechanisms to defend rights,” said Joe
Stork, deputy director of Human Rights Watch’s Middle East division. “Now
Cairo needs to show that it really intends to turn a new page on human
rights and uphold international standards.”
The elections to the council, the United Nations’ highest human rights body,
took place on May 17, 2007. The African regional group, however, put up only
four candidates, one of them Egypt, for its four allocated seats on the
council, foreclosing any competition. Under the UN resolution establishing
the council, members must “uphold the highest standards in the promotion and
protection of human rights” and “fully cooperate” with the Human Rights
Council.
The briefing paper reviews Egypt’s record of undermining UN efforts to hold
governments accountable for abuses. The government of President Hosni
Mubarak, for example, has never allowed the UN Special Rapporteur on Torture
or any other UN rights rapporteurs to visit Egypt.
“Over the past year, Egypt consistently worked with other abusive
governments to limit its effectiveness and credibility,” said Hossam Bahgat,
director of the EIPR. “Egypt should now support measures to strengthen the
council’s system of independent experts rather than abet those who are
trying to dismantle it.”
Egypt’s appalling domestic rights record includes routine torture in police
stations, arbitrary arrests of non-violent dissidents, and crippling
restrictions on civil society organizations. On April 25, 2007, the
government shut down the Center for Trade Union and Workers’ Services for
politically motivated reasons. Peaceful critics of the government currently
in jail include Ghad Party leader Ayman Nur, who challenged Mubarak in the
last presidential election, and Abd al-Monim Mahmud, a television journalist
and blogger who has testified publicly about his experience as a torture
victim several years ago.
“If Egypt is serious about cleaning up its human rights performance, it
should start by allowing the Center for Trade Union and Workers’ Services to
reopen, and by freeing Ayman Nour and Abd al-Monim Mahmud,” Stork said.