On the sixth anniversary of the Egyptian
coup which ousted the late President Mohamed Morsi, the Human Rights
Monitor is calling for an international investigation into the
systematic crimes carried out by the Egyptian regime.
The
London-based organisation has documented a series of atrocities it says
amount to crimes against humanity under the Rome Statute including
systematic torture, enforced disappearance and genocide.
The
rights group has monitored extensive attempts at eliminating Egypt’s
opposition, including members of the Muslim Brotherhood, activists,
political opponents, journalists and intellectuals by forcibly
disappearing them, incarcerating them in dire prison conditions and
torturing them.
Egypt has come under renewed criticism in recent weeks for its unprecedented use of the death penalty. According the group, 83 people are currently on death row.
In North Sinai the
Egyptian Army has killed over 4,000 civilians and displaced thousands
more. It has demolished homes without providing alternative
accommodation.
Women and men have been
subject to rape, sexual harassment and threats of rape meted out by
prison guards, sometimes in a bid to coerce them into confessing.
Political
opponents to the current regime are forced out of their jobs, subject
to travel bans, placed on terror lists and demonised by the state media.
Human
Rights Monitor is calling on the international community “to take the
necessary measures to hold those perpetrators accountable, bring them to
justice, put an end to these practices and compensate the victims.”
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