Saad Eddin Ibrahim Acquitted: Lawyers Committee
Welcomes Positive Verdict
Read "Letter from Cairo" by LCHR Staff at the
Ibrahim Trial
Egypt’s highest criminal court, the Court of Cassation,
today acquitted renowned social activist Saad Eddin Ibrahim and two
of his co-defendants, Mohammed Hassanein and Nadia Ahmed Abd el Nour,
of all charges in a case that began with Dr. Ibrahim’s detention
from his home on a summer evening almost three years ago, on June
30, 2000. A fourth defendant, Magda el Beh, received a six month suspended
prison term, and will not be returned to prison.
“This is a very positive verdict,” said Neil Hicks,
director of the Lawyers Committee’s Middle East initiative.
“It will provide hope to independent activists in Egypt that
the judiciary can still uphold the basic rights and freedoms they
need in order to carry out their work.”
At a court hearing on February 4, 2003, Ibrahim’s lawyers
had systematically refuted the prosecution’s charges that
Ibrahim and his colleagues from the research and advocacy center
that he directed, the Ibn Khaldoun Center for Development Studies,
had been involved in fraud, in publishing false information to tarnish
Egypt’s reputation or had received foreign donations without
permission. The prosecution offered few arguments to support its
case, leaving the defense hopeful that the court would rule in its
favor. Nevertheless, the acquittal of all the Ibn Khaldoun staff
members comes as a great relief, given the troubling rumors of political
manipulation of the judiciary that have swirled around the case.
“This prosecution should never have happened,” said
Hicks. “It has done great damage to Dr. Ibrahim and his co-defendants,
to the work of the Ibn Khaldoun Center that has been closed since
June 2000, and to the Egyptian human rights movement as a whole.
Targeting such a prominent activist as Dr. Ibrahim sent a chilling
message to every activist and every independent thinker in Egypt.”
“At this time of great uncertainty in the region, the Arab
world needs more than ever for its independent human rights defenders,
like Saad Eddin Ibrahim, to be free from state interference and
persecution,” said Hicks. “If democracy and human rights
are to prosper in the region, these courageous individuals must
be given the opportunity to promote their ideals, and to organize
to protect human rights for all.”
The Lawyers Committee for Human Rights awarded Dr. Ibrahim its
Annual Human Rights Award in October 2002. Dr. Ibrahim was in jail
at the time and his wife, Barbara Ibrahim, accepted the award on
his behalf.
Background
on the Ibrahim case
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