Tuesday, 17 May 2016

Egypt sentences 101 protesters to 5 years in prison for participating in peaceful demonstrations


Two Cairo courts have jailed 101 people for five years for taking part in peaceful, anti-government demonstrations last month. Officials said those jailed were convicted of breaking a disputed 2013 law that effectively bans street protests. Of the 101, 79 were fined about $US10,000 ($A13,761) each and 54 were convicted and sentenced in absentia. The sentences were passed late Saturday, hours after another Cairo court sentenced another 51 protesters to two years in jail for their part in last month's demonstrations, which were called to protest Egypt's decision to hand over control of two Red Sea islands to Saudi Arabia as part of a demarcation deal. The deal, negotiated in near total secrecy, has earned mounting criticism of President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi by activists who claim the transfer was a sell-off to oil-rich Saudi Arabia, which last month announced a multi-billion dollar aid package to Egypt.
El-Sissi maintains that the islands belong to the Saudis and has angrily demanded an end to public criticism of the deal. A massive police deployment on April 25 stifled the planned demonstrations, prompting activists to stage small, flash protests in various parts of the capital. More than 1200 arrests were made in the run-up to April 25 and on the day. Most of them have been released but nearly 300 faced formal charges and were referred to trial for breaking the protest law. The arrests and Saturday's sentences signalled the government's zero tolerance for dissent. El-Sissi says he has to balance safeguarding rights with his government's fight against a resilient insurgency by Islamic militants in Sinai and efforts to revive the economy. He has repeatedly insisted that Egypt's human rights record must not be judged by Western standards.

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