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WSWS : News
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Egypt
US threatens Egypt with sanctions over imprisonment of human
rights activist
By Robert Stevens
31 August 2001
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The imprisonment of Saad Eddin Ibrahim, a prominent Egyptian
human rights campaigner who was sentenced to seven years
imprisonment in July 2002, has sparked a crisis in relations between
Egypt and the United States.
On July 1, 2000, Saad Eddin Ibrahim, 63, was arrested in Egypt
and held for 15 days under the countrys emergency laws.
Ibrahim holds dual Egypt/US citizenship, is a professor of sociology
and heads the Ibn Khaldun Centre for Democracy, a research centre
that promotes civil and minority rights.
The arrest was carried out at the Ibrahim home. His files,
personal computer and family safe were also taken. Twenty-seven
others were arrested in connection with Ibrahim, who were all
co-defendants at his subsequent trial.
The charges levelled against Ibrahim included embezzlement
and accepting foreign funds without government approval to make
a film damaging the image of the Egyptian government. The film
was never broadcast. Ibrahim pleaded not guilty to all the charges
but on May 21, 2001 an Egyptian court sentenced him to seven years
in jail. The co-defendants in the trial received sentences ranging
from two to five years imprisonment.
Immediately Ibrahims lawyer said that he would be requesting
a suspension of the sentence until the Cassation Court, the highest
in the country, was able to review the case. Ibrahim served eight
months of his sentence pending the appeal. He has always protested
his innocence and stated that the trial and verdict were politically
motivated. Ibrahim charges that a primary reason for his arrest
was that the government needed to cover up irregularities in the
parliamentary elections in 1995. Advocates of Ibrahim state that
the only film he participated in making was part of a civic education
programme by the Ibn Khaldun Centre to encourage wider participation
in the upcoming elections. Ibrahim had planned to monitor those
elections in an attempt to ensure they were free from irregularities.
The arrest and sentencing has met with widespread international
condemnation, with Amnesty International prominently opposing
his incarceration and trial.
On February 6 this year the Cassation Court granted Ibrahim
a new trial in the Supreme State Security Court. The 27 other
defendants were also granted new trials. At the hearing were human
rights representatives from Egypt and abroad as well as representatives
from the US, Canadian, Norwegian, Australian, British and Dutch
embassies. Sara Hamood, a spokesperson for Amnesty International,
said that the organisation would monitor the new trial and that
Amnesty, still believe its politically motivated and
has been used as a pretext to punish people who criticise government
policy. Ibrahims lawyers said they expected the charges
to be dropped or the retrial to result in his freedom.
The retrial took place in July this year and on July 29 he
was again sentenced to seven years prison. Ibrahim stated that
he would once again appeal the decision and was determined
to fight on for freedom and democracy and pay whatever it takes.
His wife Barbara commented, The rule of law died today in
Egypt. Four co-defendants were also sentenced to prison
during the retrial.
The state security court in Cairo announced that Ibrahim had
been convicted due to his statements that Egypts Coptic
Christians faced religious persecution at the hands of the government.
The involvement of the US
Since the original arrest of Ibrahim, the US has taken a keen
interest in the affair. As early as July 2000, the Washington
Post editorialised under the heading of Free Saad Eddin
Ibrahim that he should be immediately released.
Egypts role as a key US ally is reflected in the fact
that it is one of the worlds largest recipient of US aid,
second only to Israel. Since the 1979 Camp David peace treaty
with Israel, the country has received annual payments amounting
to nearly $2 billion. This amounts to nearly 10 percent of the
total US foreign aid budget of about $14 billion.
However, following the retrial and jailing of Ibrahim, President
George W. Bush stated that additional aid would be withheld forthwith
from Egypt. On August 15, State Department spokesman Philip Reeker
announced, We confirmed to them [the government] that were
not contemplating any additional funds for Egypt at this time.
We also reiterated the concerns regarding the verdict in the case
of Dr Ibrahim.
It had been expected that Egypt would receive a further $130
million in aid. On August 22, a US official said that President
Bush would write to Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak opposing
the treatment of Ibrahim, its opposition to Egypts attacks
on pro-democracy groups and to formally inform him of the planned
financial sanctions.
In response, Egyptian Foreign Minister Ahmed Maher said on
August 22 that it opposed the US position. We do not give
in to (American) pressure. Everybody knows that. We do not interfere
in the judiciarys affairs and we ask everybody to respect
our judiciary like we respect theirs.
The Egyptian news agency Mena condemned the US in more explicit
terms, saying that Egypt does not need a preacher to guide
it on the way it should protect human rights.
The decision by the US to withhold aid cannot be explained
simply with reference to the trial of Saad Ibrahim. After all
there have been many cases of severe human rights violations throughout
the Middle East and these cases have been well documented in the
past. The Egyptian government has been constantly criticised by
human rights bodies over the last period due to its anti-democratic
actions. The US stance can only be understood within the context
of Washingtons plans to launch an imminent invasion and
war against Iraq and its general role in the ongoing Arab-Israeli
crisis.
Mubarak has repeatedly criticised the US plan to invade Iraq
and spoken in almost apocalyptic tones of the dire consequences
of such overt belligerence. He told Egypts state-run television
on August 27 that he had spoken to the Bush administration and
told it, If you strike at the Iraqi people because of one
or two individuals and leave the Palestinian issue (unsolved),
not a single (Arab) ruler will be able to curb the (rising of)
popular sentiments. We fear a state of disorder and chaos may
prevail in the region. He also referred to Israels
military onslaught against the Palestinians, commenting that it
is completely futile and the killing and the destruction
might continue for another 50 years.
Naturally Mubarak was careful not to fundamentally undermine
Egypts status as a client regime of the US. He added that,
Our relations with the United States are strategic and unchangeable
under any circumstances, and that connecting aid with a local
issue is not very accurate.
But as far as the Bush administration is concerned, Egypt and
the other Arab states must be brought into line by a combination
of the carrot and the stick. During the last war against Iraq
in 1991, the US was able to establish a temporary coalition of
forces internationally, including a raft of states in the Middle
East. Today, however, two key allies, Egypt and Saudi Arabia,
have repeatedly stated their objections to US military action
against Iraq.
This week Adel el-Jubeir, the foreign policy adviser to the
Saudi Crown Prince Abdullah, warned, There is no country
I know of supporting force at this time. Abdullah is the
de facto ruler of Saudi Arabia due to the chronic illness of King
Fahd.
Mubaraks warning of the social impact of another war
against Iraq and the destabilisation of the entire region is a
fairly accurate picture of the situation confronting his regime.
Following a substantial decline in the support of his National
Democratic Party at the 2000 elections at the expense of Islamic
opposition groups, the US-led war against Afghanistan served to
weaken his rule even further in a country where social tensions
have reached breaking point. Such was the level of anti-war protest
in Egypt, the most populated country in the region, that Mubarak
was not able to speak openly of his support for the war and waited
several days until after the bombing began to make a public statement
on the issue.
See Also:
The US war drive and
the destabilisation of Egypt
[8 November 2001]
President Mubaraks
party sustains significant losses in Egyptian elections
[16 November 2000]
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