Babylon & Beyond

Observations from Iraq, Iran,
Israel, the Arab world and beyond

« Previous Post | Babylon & Beyond Home | Next Post »

EGYPT: Police officer imprisoned for torturing suspect

November 8, 2009 |  8:18 am

S1120096213244In a nationally followed case that highlighted Egypt's long-standing problem of human rights abuses, a police officer has been sentenced to five years in prison for torturing a mentally disabled suspect in July.

Col. Akram Soliman first appeared in front of a criminal court in the city of Alexandria in September after he was accused of detaining and beating Ragaie Soltan for eight days without any formal charges. Soltan had been taken into custody July 21 during a random police sweep of the homeless in the seaside city.

Soltan was transferred to a public hospital one week later, where he was diagnosed with brain concussion and internal bleeding after losing consciousness as a result of the physical abuse.

Human rights organizations and democracy campaigners rallied around Soltan's case as another example of the abuse many Egyptians face at the hands of police and intelligence agencies. Some activists said Soliman's five-year sentence was too lenient.

"We were really hoping for a more deterrent judgment. Article 282 of the Egyptian Penal Code states that an officer who tortured or illegally captured a suspect should receive life sentence with labor," said Moheb Aboud of the Victims Human Rights Institute, which organized a march condemning torture in prisons after Soliman's conviction.

"The Ministry of Interior deals very softly with cases like torture. If proven guilty, officers are sent to prison for short periods and they are reinstated in their jobs right after their release," the founder of the El Ghad opposition party, Ayman Nour, said. "Incidents like these have increased in our prisons because the government is sponsoring torture as a mean of dealing with suspects." 

Public anger over the torture of suspects and prisoners intensified beginning in 2007 when bloggers started posting videos of police abuse on the Internet. International human rights organizations regularly criticize Egypt for torture and civil rights violations.  

-- Amro Hassan in Cairo

Photo: Officer Akram Soliman. Credit: Sarah Carr
 


Post a comment
If you are under 13 years of age you may read this message board, but you may not participate.
Here are the full legal terms you agree to by using this comment form.

Comments are moderated, and will not appear until they've been approved.

If you have a TypeKey or TypePad account, please Sign In





Comments

‎Egyptian police a vivid picture of terrorism‎ President Mubarak is the first official in charge of the phenomenon of the use of torture and cruelty against citizens,
Torture, which constitutes a crime against humanity Torture in Egypt at the hands of the police and this phenomenon is now part of the sad fact that the Egyptian police a vivid picture of terrorism

I don't understand why Egyptians don't just "move on"? Don't they have so many more important issues facing their society than this? Shouldn't they be more concerned about the "real issues" that they face?

Egypt should take a page from the American elite's playbook and just bury the misdeeds of their officials under an avalanche of inane gibberish.



Advertisement





Archives