Egyptian
Army tortured protesters
Thursday February 10, 2011 07:27:51 PM,
IANS
|
London: The Egyptian
military has secretly detained hundreds and possibly thousands of
suspected government opponents since the anti-President Hosni
Mubarak protests began, and some of these detainees have been
tortured, a media report stated.
The military has claimed to be neutral, merely keeping anti-Mubarak
protesters and loyalists apart. But human rights campaigners
accuse the army of involvement in both disappearances and torture
and abuses of Egyptians, the Guardian reported Thursday.
The paper, quoting some detainees, said such abuses have, for
years, been associated with the notorious state security
intelligence (SSI) but not the army.
According to the detainees, they have suffered extensive beatings
and other abuses at the hands of the military in what appears to
be an organised campaign of intimidation. Human rights groups have
documented the use of electric shocks on some of those held by the
army.
Egyptian human rights groups say, families are desperately
searching for missing relatives who have disappeared in army
custody. Some of the detainees have been held inside the renowned
Museum of Egyptian Antiquities on the edge of Tahrir Square.
Those released have given graphic accounts of physical abuse by
soldiers who accused them of acting for foreign powers, including
Hamas and Israel.
Among those detained have been human rights activists, lawyers and
journalists, but most have been released.
According to Hossam Bahgat, director of the Egyptian Initiative
for Personal Rights in Cairo, hundreds and possibly thousands, of
ordinary people had "disappeared" into military custody across the
country. They disappeared for no more than carrying a political
flyer, attending the demonstrations or even the way they look.
Many were still missing.
"Their range is very wide, from people who were at the protests or
detained for breaking curfew to those who talked back at an army
officer or were handed over to the army for looking suspicious or
for looking like foreigners even if they were not," he said. "It's
unusual and to the best of our knowledge it's also unprecedented
for the army to be doing this."
One of those detained by the army was a 23-year-old man who would
only give his first name, Ashraf, for fear of again being
arrested. He was detained last Friday on the edge of Tahrir Square
carrying a box of medical supplies intended for one of the
makeshift clinics treating protesters attacked by pro-Mubarak
forces.
"I was on a sidestreet and a soldier stopped me and asked me where
I was going. I told him and he accused me of working for foreign
enemies and other soldiers rushed over and they all started
hitting me with their guns," he said.
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