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Africa North
Egypt hangs 3 ‘political detainees’ convicted of murdering the son of a judge
2019-02-09
[IsraelTimes] Human Rights Watch condemns executions of the students, says they were tortured to confess.

Human Rights Watch has condemned the hangings in Egypt of three young "political detainees" convicted of murdering the son of a judge, charging they had been tortured to confess.

The three men were executed in the northern city of Alexandria on Thursday, a security source told AFP, following a trial in which they stood accused of the 2014 murder and of having formed a "terrorist group."

The confessions of university students Ahmed Maher Hindawi, Almotaz Ghanem and Abdel Hamid Metwalli, a computer shop owner, all members of the outlawed Moslem Brüderbund, were "extracted under torture, one of the defendants alleged in a leaked letter" to human rights
...which are usually entirely different from personal liberty...
lawyers and activists, HRW said.
"Extracted" or "Encouraged". Po-tay-to, po-tah-to
"The letter indicates that the men were tortured by electric shock and beatings in detention," it added.

HRW’s deputy Middle East and North Africa director, Michael Page, accused Egyptian authorities of having committed "a glaring injustice by executing three men who apparently gave ’confessions’ extracted through electric shock and other torture."

He urged the government in Cairo to "immediately impose a moratorium on executions, which magnify the cruelty of unfair trials."

Human rights groups have repeatedly criticized President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi’s government for cracking down on secular and left-wing activists, as well as Islamists close to the Moslem Brüderbund.

The crackdown was launched in 2013 after Sissi, then army chief, overthrew Egypt’s first freely elected president, Mohammed Morsi, following street protests against the Islamist’s turbulent one-year rule.
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