Seventeen senior Egyptian intelligence officials were summarily removed from their posts hours after the government’s human-rights monitoring body issued a damning report of violations by security agencies. The removal of the officers was announced on Sunday in the official journal of the Egyptian government, in an article that bore the signature of Egypt’s President, Abdel Fatah al-Sisi. It listed the names of 17 senior officers of Egypt’s feared General Intelligence Directorate (GID). The article said the 17 would go into early retirement “based on their own requests”, but provided no information on the reasons why they allegedly asked to retire as a group, or who will replace them.
The announcement of the intelligence
officers’ removal came shortly after the publication of the annual
report on the state of human rights in Egypt by the country’s official
government monitoring organization. Egypt’s National Council for Human
Rights said in its 2016 report,
published over the weekend, that the rights of citizens have “not yet
become a priority for the state”. It added that the state of human
rights in Egypt remains alarmingly poor despite the adoption of the
country’s new constitution in 2014. Egyptian and international rights
monitoring organizations claim that as many as 60,000 people have been
arrested for political reasons since 2013, when the military overthrew
the government of Muslim Brotherhood leader Mohamed Morsi, following
months of protests against his administration.
Focusing on the period between April 2015
and March of this year, the report lists over 260 cases of enforced
disappearances of individuals, of which 143 remain under what is termed
by the authorities “pretrial detention”. The report further notes that
“pretrial detention”, which is often indefinite, has become “a
punishment in itself”, and points out that the numbers of prisoners
currently held pretrial detention centers exceed their capacity three
times over. Consequently, pretrial detainees are forced to “take turns
sleeping due to lack of space”, says the report. It also criticizes
Egypt’s security and intelligence services for failing to curb the use
of torture, which remains widespread despite its condemnation by the
government and the conviction of several police and security officers
who were found to have tortured detainees to death.
The removal of the 17 senior GID officers
highlights the embattled state and internal divisions that continue to
plague the Sisi administration, two years after the military strongman
assumed power in the country, following a military coup. His
administration has focused largely on a violent crackdown against the
Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood, which includes the imposition of death
sentences on hundreds of thousands of people who were convicted in mass
trials. Sisi’s legitimacy is disputed by the Muslim Brotherhood
—arguably Egypt’s most popular social movement— and secularist
reformers, who boycotted en masse the election that propelled
him to the presidency. Sisi won with 97 percent of the vote in a heavily
boycotted ballot that was reminiscent of the staged elections held by
longtime Egyptian dictator Hosni Mubarak. At the same time, however,
Sisi is facing challenges from within the military and intelligence
services, which some believe
may be planning another coup. In June 2014, a less than a month after
taking office, SIS replaced 14 senior GID officials. He fired another 11
a year later, while 13 more were forced to retire last December.
No comments:
Post a Comment