Egypt’s authorities slammed at New Arab Debates

19/05/2014

Amman, May 19, 2014- Egypt’s human rights’ record came in for sharp criticism from a mainly Arab audience here, just days before the country votes in presidential elections.

Participants at Monday’s New Arab Debate (NAD) heard impassioned arguments that both the justice system and freedom of speech had been badly compromised since the overthrow of President Mohammed Morsi last July.  Seventy-three percent voted in favour of the motion:’Egypt is a disappointment to the rest of the Arab world.’

Before the debate only 55 percent had supported it.

Arguing for the motion, Manar Rachwani, OP-ED editor and columnist at the independent Al-Ghad daily, blamed Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhood and the divided secular opposition for allowing the state to fall into the hands of the “old guard” who, he claimed, had rolled back popular demands for freedom and justice.

“What we see in Egypt today is no freedom, no dignity and no social justice,” he said. “You cannot put thousands in jail and have massive trials and death sentences handed out and say there are no problems and this is stability.”

Speaking against the motion,  Senator Hani Al-Mulki, former foreign minister and ex-ambassador to Egypt, defended the crackdown saying it was needed to  “punish those who have committed crimes” against civilians and security forces alike.

He said the “violence has gone down to zero” in recent months, adding that human rights’ groups “don’t know what they are talking about.”

A Jordanian student, who said he was recently in Egypt questioned the fairness of the upcoming vote when anyone seen opposing the current regime risked being jailed. Another asked how military rule today was different from “Mubarak’s dictatorship”.

Organisers of the NAD,  a high-profile regional platform, said they would have liked to hold the debate in Egypt, but the banning of the Muslim Brotherhood had made it impossible to seek the views of its former members in a public forum.

The NAD offers an extensive outreach campaign in schools and universities, aimed at encouraging young people to participate in political life. It is funded by the Norwegian and British governments.

Both debates will be transmitted for the third year on Deutsche Welle TV in English and Arabic along with its global and regional network of partners including Egypt’s ONTV, Ro’ya TV in Jordan, Hanibal in Tunisia, and Watan TV in Ramallah.