Joint Press Release: Will Egypt compete for the world’s worst executioner in 2021?

Press Release

1 May 2021

The Campaign to Stop the Death Penalty in Egypt and the undersigned human rights organizations strongly condemn and categorically reject the Egyptian government’s expansion of the implementation of the death penalty, with new reports indicating that the Prisons Authority in Wadi Al-Natrun Prison on April 28 executed seven convicts in the case known as “the storming of Kerdasa police station.” The executions took place just two days after the death penalty was carried out on nine other convicts connected with the same case.

Due to a media blackout on these recent executions, it has not yet been possible to verify the confirmed number and all the names of those executed, except concerning two people, Muhammad Amer Yousef Al-Saidi and Qutb Al-Sayyid Qutb, whose relatives received their bodies. Meanwhile, five families have reportedly been notified that their five relatives had been executed without releasing their bodies.

This acceleration in the pace of mass executions is unprecedented, not to mention that it contravenes the established practice of not carrying out executions during the month of Ramadan. The continuation of such behavior by the Egyptian government heralds that Egypt is set to be a strong competitor for the first rank globally in applying the death penalty in 2021. According to the latest Amnesty International annual report, this would be more shameful than Egypt’s ranking third in the world in 2020 after China and Iran.

The Egyptian government carried out death sentences over the previous three days without prior notification to the families of the convicts of the execution date. The families have also not been allowed to see their relatives before the execution, a right enshrined by Article 472 of the Criminal Procedure Law, which stipulates that relatives of the person sentenced to death have the right to meet the convict on the day of the execution of the sentence in a place should be far from the place of implementation. The law also stipulates that necessary facilities shall enable a cleric to meet the death row inmate to complete any religious duties before death. Egyptian law also provides for the presence of lawyers, which is stipulated in the first paragraph of the aforementioned article. Furthermore, Article 474 of the same law stipulates the compulsory granting of permission to the lawyer of the convicted person to attend the execution.

However, the Egyptian Penal Code does not stipulate a penalty or punishment for violating the legal provisions regarding implementing the death penalty. Such a loophole helps law enforcement agencies not comply with the legal rules and the principle of the rule of law affirmed by the Egyptian constitution. Failure to inform the convicts' families of the date of the execution of the death sentence dehumanizes the victims of that punishment. On the other hand, it causes severe psychological damage to the families of those who are executed, especially since the implementation of such a penalty during the month of Ramadan contradicts the custom of the Ministry of Interior not to carry out death sentences during religious events related to the religion of the inmates.

On the official level, no government agency or sector affiliated with the Ministry of Interior or the Public Prosecution has yet issued an official statement clarifying the names of those executed in connection with the case of storming the Kerdasa Police Station, and what procedures, if any, have been followed by the Prisons Authority in the presence of the Public Prosecution under the provisions of the Criminal Procedure Law.

Ambiguity and the failure to publish data on cases in which the death penalty is carried out transparently is an approach that Egyptian government agencies adopt and become accustomed to, specifically about executions carried out by the Ministry of Interior under the supervision of the Public Prosecution.

In this regard, the conduct of official authorities violates the right to disclose and circulate information and the right to know, which undermines the transparency of the criminal justice system in Egypt about its handling of the death penalty. The failure to make information and data available by official authorities is contrary to what is stipulated in Article 68 of the Egyptian Constitution, which guarantees all citizens the right to obtain information, data, and official documents. It states that it is an obligation for the state to disclose and provide such data and make it available to all transparently as it is the property of the people. Article 19 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights also recognized the right to freedom of information.

Over recent years, many countries, international bodies, and human rights institutions have been calling for a moratorium to implement the death penalty as a criminal deterrent and replace it with penalties such as life imprisonment or work for public service other alternatives. The United Nations General Assembly confirmed that in its annual resolution adopted and issued in January 2018, which called for a moratorium on the death penalty worldwide. This decision had the support of 121 countries.

The Stop the Death Penalty Campaign in Egypt and the undersigned organizations call on the Egyptian government to temporarily postpone the execution of death sentences until a broad societal discussion about the punishment is held and until it carries out systematic studies on the death penalty's feasibility in deterring and preventing the recurrence of crimes, and to consider reducing the number of crimes punishable by death.

We also call on the Egyptian government to abide by the Criminal Procedure Law by informing the families of those sentenced to death of the execution date and allowing them to visit the convict following what is stipulated in Egyptian law and international human rights standards. The Egyptian government must also adhere to standards of transparency and provide information on the implementation of the death penalty, given the devastating impact of the blackout by the Ministry of Interior on the families of victims who have no other means of verifying the information published in the media. The Egyptian government must also consider the spiritual conditions experienced by those sentenced to death and their families during various religious occasions. We also reiterate our appeal to the Egyptian authorities to stop carrying out the death penalty in Egypt.

Signatories:

  • Stop the Death Penalty campaign
  • Egyptian Commission for Rights and Freedoms (ECRF)
  • El Nadeem Center for Rehabilitation of Violence and Torture Victims
  • Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights (EIPR)
  • Committee for Justice (CFJ)
  • The Freedom Initiative
  • Belady Center for Rights and Freedoms