Egypt Country Reports on Human Rights Practices - 2002 Released by the Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor March 31, 2003 According to its Constitution, Egypt is a social democracy in which Islam is the state religion. The National Democratic Party (NDP), which has governed since its establishment in 1978, has used its entrenched position to dominate national politics and has maintained an overriding majority in the popularly elected People's Assembly and the partially elected Shura (Consultative) Council. In 1999 President Hosni Mubarak was reelected unopposed to a fourth 6-year term in a national referendum. The President appoints the Cabinet and the country's 26 governors and may dismiss them at his discretion. The judiciary generally was independent; however, this independence has been compromised by the State of Emergency legislation in force, under which the range of cases subject to its jurisdiction has been compromised due to the improper use of State Emergency Security Courts and military courts for inappropriate cases.
There are several security services in the Ministry of Interior, two of which have been involved primarily in the Government’s campaign against terrorism: The State Security Investigations Sector (SSIS), which conducted investigations and interrogated detainees, and the Central Security Force (CSF), which enforced curfews and bans on public demonstrations and conducted paramilitary operations against terrorists. The President is the commander-in-chief of the military; the military is a primary stabilizing factor within society but generally has not involved itself in internal issues. The security forces committed numerous, serious human rights abuses during the year; however, there continued to be no reports of the use of deadly force in the campaign against suspected terrorists.
Over the past decade, policy reforms encouraged a transition from a government-controlled economy to a free market system, although state-owned enterprises still dominated some key sectors of the economy. The country had a population of approximately 68 million, which increases by approximately 2 percent annually. The agricultural sector employed the largest number of persons, and was almost entirely privately controlled. Official statistics placed 34 percent of the employed labor force in the agricultural sector, and knowledgeable observers estimated that 3 to 5 percent of those were subsistence farmers. Income from tourism, remittances from approximately 2 million citizens working abroad, petroleum exports, and Suez Canal revenues were the other principal sources of foreign currency and are vulnerable to external shocks. Egypt is a middle income developing country, with poverty (according to the Government's definition) at 23 percent of the population.
The Government generally respected the human rights of its citizens in some areas; however, the Government’s record remained poor with respect to freedom of association, the improper use of State Security Emergency Courts and military courts, and torture, among other areas. The President and the entrenched NDP dominated the political scene to such an extent that citizens did not have a meaningful ability to change their Government.
The Emergency Law, which has been in effect since 1981 and was renewed for another 3 years in June 2000, continued to restrict many basic rights. The security forces continued to arrest and detain suspected members of terrorist groups. In combating terrorism, the security forces continued to mistreat and torture prisoners, arbitrarily arrest and detain persons, held detainees in prolonged pretrial detention, and occasionally engaged in mass arrests. In actions unrelated to the antiterrorist campaign, local police killed, tortured, and otherwise abused both criminal suspects and other persons. Most cases were not pursued, although the Government took disciplinary action against some police officers accused of abusing detainees, including prosecution of a number of offenders.
Prison conditions remained poor. The Emergency Law allows authorities to detain persons without charge, and the Government continued to arrest and detain persons arbitrarily. Thousands of persons were detained without charge on suspicion of illegal terrorist or political activity; others served sentences after being convicted on similar charges. There was a past practice of improper use of State Security Emergency Courts and military courts to try inappropriate cases which infringed on a defendant's normal right under the Constitution to a fair trial before an independent judiciary. During the year, the Government did not refer any new cases to military courts.
The Government used the Emergency Law to infringe on citizens' civil liberties. Although citizens generally expressed themselves freely, the Government partially restricted freedom of the press and significantly restricted freedom of assembly and association. On July 29, a State Security Court concluded a retrial with the conviction of Dr. Saad Eddin Ibrahim and his codefendants of defaming the state and illegally accepting foreign funds. The verdict was overturned by the Court of Cassation on December 4 and is scheduled to be retried in February 2003 by the Court of Cassation, rather than another State Security Court. Ibrahim's case had broad implications for freedom of expression, and had a deterrent effect on the activities of human rights organizations. The Government generally permitted human rights groups to operate openly. The Government placed some restrictions on freedom of religion.
Domestic violence against women was a problem. Although the Government banned the practice of female genital mutilation (FGM), it persisted in the traditional milieu. Women and Christians faced discrimination based on tradition and some aspects of the law.
The Government limited workers' rights. Child labor remained widespread, despite government efforts to eradicate it. Exposure of workers to hazardous working conditions and other abuses of the law by employers continued, and the Government did not enforce labor laws effectively. Egypt was invited by the Community of Democracies' (CD) Convening Group to attend the November 2002 second CD Ministerial Meeting in Seoul, Republic of Korea, as an observer.
RESPECT FOR HUMAN RIGHTS
a. Arbitrary and Unlawful Deprivation of Life
Human rights organizations and the press reported on the death in custody at police stations or prisons of 14 persons during the year: Ahmed Youssef; Sayyed Eissa; Adel Mohamed; Mohamed Mahmoud Osman; Nader Fathy Sayyed; Ahmed Mahmoud Mohamed; Mustafa Labib Hemdan; Mohamed Ali Shahine. Hussein Hassan Khater died after a hunger strike at Kanater prison. He maintained he was innocent. On October 26, it was reported that authorities were investigating the death of five inmates at Ghurbaniyat prison, all of whom died within a 2-week period in early October. Reportedly, their deaths were listed as due to "circulatory failure." The results of the investigation had not been publicized by year's end.
The retrial of 96 suspects accused of participating in the January 2000 violence in al-Kush, Sohag Governorate, that left 21 Christians and 1 Muslim dead, concluded its sessions on October 9. The State Security Court is scheduled to announce the verdicts in January 2003 (see Section 5).
b. Disappearance
The Egyptian
Organization for Human Rights (EOHR) reported one disappearance during the
year. On February 9, Adel Mohammed Kamiha, a coffee shop owner, reportedly
disappeared following his transfer from police custody to the custody of
State Security in Alexandria.
In December an
administrative court ordered the Ministry of the Interior to pay $46,200
(100,000 Egyptian pounds) to a family in compensation for the
disappearance of their son, detained in 1989. The Court also ruled that
the reasons for his detention were illegitimate and ordered his release by
a court in April 1990. The victim was an alleged member of the banned
al-Jihad terrorist organization and a student at Zaqaziq Faculty of
Medicine. The Interior Ministry reportedly failed to provide any
information about his fate.
At year's end,
46 other cases of disappearance from previous years documented by human
rights organizations remained unsolved. Human rights organizations
provided names to the U.N. Working Group on Enforced and Involuntary
Disappearances; the Government reportedly has denied any involvement in
the cases.
c. Torture and
Other Cruel, Inhuman, or Degrading Treatment or Punishment
The Constitution
prohibits the infliction of "physical or moral harm" upon persons who have
been arrested or detained; however, torture and abuse of detainees by
police, security personnel, and prison guards was common and persistent.
The November session of U.N. Committee Against Torture noted a systematic
pattern of torture by the security forces.
Under the Penal
Code, torture of a defendant or giving orders to torture are felonies
punishable by hard labor or 3 to 10 years' imprisonment. If the defendant
dies under torture, the crime is one of intentional murder punishable by a
life sentence at hard labor. Arrest without due cause, threatening death,
or using physical torture is punishable by temporary hard labor. Abuse of
power to inflict cruelty against persons is punishable by imprisonment of
no more than 1 year or a fine of no more than $61 (134 Egyptian pounds).
In addition, victims may bring a criminal or civil action for compensation
against the responsible government agency. There is no statute of
limitations in such cases.
Despite these
legal safeguards, there were numerous, credible reports that security
forces tortured and mistreated citizens. Reports of torture and
mistreatment at police stations remained frequent. While the Government
investigated torture complaints in criminal cases and punished some
offending officers, the punishments generally have not conformed to the
seriousness of the offense.
Incommunicado
detention is authorized for prolonged periods and frequently accompanied
allegations of torture (see Section 1.d.).
While the law
requires security authorities to keep written records of detained
citizens, human rights groups reported that such records often were
lacking, effectively blocking the investigation of complaints.
Human rights
groups believed that the SSIS continued to employ torture. Victims usually
were taken to an SSIS office, where they were handcuffed, blindfolded, and
questioned about their associations, religious beliefs, and political
views. Torture was used to extract information, coerce the victims to end
their oppositionist activities, and to deter others from similar
activities.
Principal
methods of torture reportedly employed by the police included: Being
stripped and blindfolded; suspended from a ceiling or doorframe with feet
just touching the floor; beaten with fists, whips, metal rods, or other
objects; subjected to electrical shocks; and doused with cold water.
Victims frequently reported being subjected to threats and forced to sign
blank papers to be used against the victim or the victim's family in the
future should the victim complain of abuse. Some victims, including male
and female detainees, reported that they were sexually assaulted or
threatened with the rape of themselves or family members.
In March the
EOHR reported 59 documented cases of torture in 2001 in police stations
and other detention centers, in which 11 victims died. The report included
nine cases of citizens apparently unaffiliated with any political group or
trend. In one case, four family members of a wanted defendant were
tortured. Twenty-two of the cases involved individuals on trial for
conspiracy to commit terrorism and membership in an extremist
organization, known as the "Wa'ad" ("The Promise") (see Section 1.e.). One
individual arrested in a police Internet "sting" claimed that he had been
tortured (see Sections 1.d., 1.f., and 2.a.).
In September 51
defendants in the Wa'ad case were convicted and 43 were acquitted. Of the
43 acquitted, 12 were rearrested. Twenty-eight of the 94 Wa'ad defendants
told the prosecution that they were tortured during interrogations.
During the year,
the Government expanded efforts to hold security personnel accountable for
torturing prisoners in their custody. Human rights organizations and the
press reported during the year 17 different instances in which personnel
were held publicly accountable. Some of the cases involved incidents that
took place in previous years. Some but not all of the cases prosecuted
involved the deaths of prisoners.
In June the EOHR
welcomed moves by the Ministry of Interior to combat torture. The EOHR
called for reviewing of all legislation on the subject, amending articles
of the Penal Code, and establishing a permanent mechanism for
investigating torture complaints. In addition, the Human Rights Center for
the Assistance of Prisoners (HRCAP), in an October report entitled "The
Truth," commended judicial efforts to try security officers for torture,
but outlined current obstacles, including a vague legal definition of
torture, and the inability of victims to sue perpetrators directly.
During the year,
the Government took some steps to hold torturers accountable. For example,
in March the Menoufiya Criminal Court sentenced the warden of Wadi Natroun
Prison to 10 years' imprisonment, a subordinate to 7 years' imprisonment,
and four other policemen to 5-year terms for torturing inmate Ahmed
Mohamed Eissa to death and falsifying documents to disguise the cause of
death. The defendants had contested the 2000 verdict and were tried before
a different circuit, which handed down the same sentences. Also in July,
the Cairo Criminal Court sentenced two policemen and a police informant to
5 years at hard labor for torture resulting in the February 23 death of
Ahmed Youssef, whose brother Yasser was wanted by the police. Ahmed was
taken instead to El Wayli police station where he was severely tortured to
obtain information on the whereabouts of his brother. In August the
Cairo Criminal Court sentenced the head of the investigations unit at the
Nasr City Police Station and a captain in the unit, to 3-years'
imprisonment and a fine of $924 (2,001 Egyptian pounds) each for the
torture to death of Sayyed Eissa and the severe torture of his friend,
Mustafa Abdel Aziz. The two defendants were detained without charge for 45
days on suspicion of car theft. The Minister of Interior personally
referred the case for prosecution. Two other defendants in the case, the
head of the auto theft unit and a police officer, were
acquitted. In addition to
prosecutions of police involved in cases of torture and abuse of
detainees, civil courts continued to review cases and frequently awarded
compensation to victims of police abuse. Human rights observers
recommended that rules and standards for victims be established to obtain
redress and parity in compensation.
In prominent
criminal cases, defendants alleged that they were tortured during
questioning by police. Attorneys for 52 allegedly homosexual men, arrested
in May 2001 and charged with debauchery and "insulting a heavenly
religion," claimed that their clients were abused physically during the
initial days of their detention, and that several had confessed under
torture. Defendants in other cases involving homosexuality also claimed
that they were tortured in order to extract confessions to the charge of
"debauchery" (see Sections 1.e. and 2.c.).
In the
Government's pending investigation of the alleged torture of dozens of
suspects detained during the investigation of a double murder in the town
of al-Kush, Sohag Governorate, in 1998, no interviews of village residents
took place and the investigation appeared to make no progress during the
year.
However, the CAT
report expressed concerns about: The continued implementation of the state
of emergency since 1981; consistent reports of torture and ill treatment,
especially at the hands of the SSIS; abuse of juveniles; abuse of
homosexuals; the continued use of administrative detention; the lack of
access by victims of torture to the courts and the length of proceedings,
in addition to disparities in the awarding of compensation; and
restrictions on NGOs.
The CAT
recommended that the Government consider: Ending the state of emergency;
the adoption of a clear legal definition of torture; the abolition of
incommunicado detention; the prompt investigation of complaints of
torture; the more frequent inspection of places of detention; the review
of military court decisions by a higher tribunal; the removal of
ambiguities in the law that allow the prosecution of individuals for their
sexual orientation; cessation and punishment of the abuse of minors and a
halt to their detention with adults; the acceptance of a visit by a U.N.
Special Rapporteur on Torture; the establishment of rules and standards
for victims to obtain redress and parity in compensation; and to allow
human rights organizations to pursue their activities unhindered.
The country's
delegation told the CAT that "incompatibility of timetables" had not made
possible a visit to the country by the U.N. Special Rapporteur on
Torture.
Prison
conditions remained poor and tuberculosis was widespread. Prisoners
suffered from overcrowding of cells, the lack of proper hygiene, food,
clean water, proper ventilation, and recreational activities, as well as
inadequate medical care. Some prisons continued to be closed to the
public.
On July 10,
HRCAP obtained an administrative court order that allows prisoners and
their lawyers to meet privately without any barriers between them (such as
standard mesh fencing).
Prisoners were
sometimes released on religious holidays without administrative delays,
reflecting the Ministry of Interior's decision for direct release from
prisons, rather than an intermediate transfer to security directorates for
out-processing. However, human rights organizations reported that
implementation of the policy in criminal cases was inconsistent, and that
the direct-release policy was not implemented in general in cases
involving political prisoners, especially in cases of detainees suspected
of membership in the Muslim Brotherhood.
Failure to
implement judicial rulings regarding the release of administrative
detainees or opening of prisons to visits continued to be a problem during
the year. Relatives and lawyers often were unable to obtain access to
prisons for visits. Restrictions were placed on visits to prisoners who
are incarcerated for political or terrorist crimes, limiting the number of
visits allowed for each prisoner and the total number of visitors allowed
in the prison at one time. In November a Ministry of the Interior decree
prohibited visits to inmates in three maximum security prisons, Istiqbal
Tora, Abu Za'abal, and Liman Abu Za'abal, citing security concerns. The
EOHR issued a statement regretting the move and asserting that the decree
contradicted previous court rulings and existing regulations governing the
treatment of prisons.
As required by
law, the public prosecutor continued to inspect prisons during the year.
Findings were not made public. However, the premises of the SSIS, where
torture was practiced, were excluded from mandatory judicial
inspection.
In December
2001, the People's Assembly approved an amendment banning flogging as a
disciplinary measure in prisons. Local human rights groups welcomed the
ban.
There were
separate prison facilities for men, women, and juveniles. However, the
separation of adults from juveniles did not always occur, and abuses of
minors were common. There were separate military prisons, and civilians
were not detained in them. Political prisoners generally were detained
separately from prisoners convicted of violent crimes.
In principle
lawyers, acting as de facto human rights monitors, were permitted to visit
prisoners in their capacity as legal counsel; however, in practice they
often faced considerable bureaucratic obstacles that prevented them from
meeting with their clients who were prisoners. The International Committee
of the Red Cross (ICRC) and other domestic and international human rights
monitors did not have access to prisons or to all places of detention.
d. Arbitrary
Arrest, Detention, or Exile
During the year,
security forces conducted large-scale arrests and detained hundreds of
individuals without charge. Police also at times arbitrarily arrested and
detained persons. Under the provisions of the Emergency Law, the police
may obtain an arrest warrant from the Ministry of Interior upon showing
that an individual poses a danger to security and public order. This
procedure nullified the constitutional requirement of showing that an
individual likely has committed a specific crime to obtain a warrant from
a judge or prosecutor.
The Emergency
Law allows authorities to detain an individual without charge. After 30
days, a detainee has the right to demand a court hearing to challenge the
legality of the detention order and may resubmit his motion for a hearing
at 1-month intervals thereafter. There is no maximum limit to the length
of detention if the judge continues to uphold the legality of the
detention order or if the detainee fails to exercise his right to a
hearing. Incommunicado detention is authorized for prolonged periods by
internal prison regulations. Human rights groups and the CAT both
expressed concern over the application of measures of solitary
confinement.
In addition to
the Emergency Law, the Penal Code also gives the State broad detention
powers. Under the Penal Code, prosecutors must bring charges within 48
hours or release the suspect. However, they may detain a suspect for a
maximum of 6 months pending investigation. Arrests under the Penal Code
occurred openly and with warrants issued by a district prosecutor or
judge. There is a system of bail. The Penal Code contains several
provisions to combat extremist violence, which broadly define terrorism to
include the acts of "spreading panic" and "obstructing the work of
authorities."
Hundreds,
perhaps thousands, of persons were detained administratively in recent
years under the Emergency Law on suspicion of terrorist or political
activity, in addition to several thousand others convicted and serving
sentences on similar charges (see Section 1.e.). In July Mohamed Zarei,
head of HRCAP, put the total figure at 15,000. Other estimates ranged
between 13,000 and 16,000. Zarei stated that the number reflected the
release of approximately 7,000 detainees over the past 3 years.
In March HRCAP
began the issuance of a series of lists of sick prisoners that it alleged
were detained illegally. As of October, the group counted 505 such
persons. The lists provided information on the date of arrest (all from
the 1990s), the number of court orders for release, their present place of
detention, and their ailment. The reports did not include information on
the reasons for detention (political or criminal). HRCAP forwarded the
lists to the President, urging the release of the detainees.
Between February
and June, newspapers and human rights groups reported the arrest of
several individual members of the Popular Egyptian Committee to Support
the Intifada and the Palestinian People. Tawfik Wail was arrested at the
Cairo Book Fair while gathering signatures for a petition and released 3
days later. The Committee claimed that Wail was tortured. The National
Committee in Defense of Prisoners of Conscience claimed in April that
Haytham Mahmoud Mohamed was arrested in Alexandria along with seven
members of the Popular Egyptian Committee to Support the Intifada and the
Palestinian People, for unspecified reasons. The Secretary General of the
Committee also was charged with possession of leaflets calling for
demonstrations in support of Palestine. On May 21, EOHR issued a statement
congratulating the prosecution for the release of the detainees.
Over the course
of the year, security forces arrested approximately 300 persons allegedly
associated with the Muslim Brotherhood, which has been an illegal
organization since 1954. Charges leveled against members typically
included: Belonging to and attempting to revive the activities of a banned
organization; obstructing the laws and constitution of the country;
inciting the masses against the Government (usually organizing
demonstrations critical of the Government's position on the peace process
and relationship with the United States; and attempting to infiltrate
student bodies to spread the ideology of a banned organization.
Of the
approximately 300 detained, none remained in detention at year’s end,
according to a lawyer for the Muslim Brotherhood. Of those detained, 101
were arrested on charges of rioting, vandalism, and destruction of public
property in Raml district during the June 27 parliamentary elections.
Raml, near Alexandria, was the site of skirmishes between security forces
and supporters of two candidates affiliated with the Muslim Brotherhood.
Six lawyers affiliated with the campaign of (female) Islamist candidate
Gihan El Khalafawi also were arrested and detained by prosecutors for 15
days on suspicion of incitement to riot. In October the court acquitted 35
of the 101 defendants and sentenced the remaining 66 to 3 months (time
served). In an unusual statement, the judge in the case called on the
Government to repeal the Emergency Law and urged authorities to limit
referrals to the State Security Court to cases of an exceptional nature
with a direct impact upon national security (see Section 1.e.).
Arrests
targeting high level Muslim Brotherhood members included Ali Abdel Fattah,
who was arrested in May in Alexandria and released in August, for
allegedly planning a "million man march" in support of the Intifada, and
the September arrest in Cairo of Rashad Bayoumi and 17 others. In June
security forces impounded the offices of the Alexandria Physicians'
Syndicate, whose head and Secretary-General were members of the Muslim
Brotherhood. Syndicate offices allegedly were used as a base for
Brotherhood activities. In July a military court handed down rulings in
the case of 22 Muslim Brotherhood members who had been referred to the
court by presidential decree in November 2001. The court sentenced 5 of
them to 5-years' imprisonment, 11 to 3-years' imprisonment, and acquitted
6.
In compliance
with court orders, 35 members of the Muslim Brotherhood, including
Muhammad El-Sayed Habib, were released in August after 15 months in
detention. After a court ordered the release of 12 Muslim Brotherhood
members, having served three-quarters of their sentence, the Government
contested the ruling. In October prominent Brotherhood member Mokhtar Nouh
was released from prison. The Government
did not use forced exile.
e. Denial of
Fair Public Trial
The judiciary
was generally independent; however, under the Emergency Law, cases
involving terrorism and national security may be tried in military, State
Security, or State Security Emergency Courts, in which the accused does
not receive all the normal constitutional protections of the civilian
judicial system. The authorities ignored judicial orders in some cases.
In a number of
public statements during the year, Public Prosecutor Maher Abdel Wahed
stated his intention to support abolishment of State Security Emergency
Courts.
The Constitution
provides for the independence and immunity of judges and forbids
interference by other authorities in the exercise of their judicial
functions, and this provision generally was observed in practice. The
President appoints all judges upon recommendation of the Higher Judicial
Council, a constitutional body composed of senior judges. Judges are
appointed for life, with mandatory retirement at age 64. Only the Higher
Judicial Council may dismiss judges for cause, such as corruption. The
Higher Judicial Council is a set body headed by the president of the Court
of Cassation. The Council regulates judicial promotions and transfers. The
Government included lectures on human rights and other social issues in
its training courses for prosecutors and judges.
In the civilian
court system, there are criminal courts, civil courts, administrative
courts, and a Supreme Constitutional Court. There are three levels of
regular criminal courts: Primary courts, appeals courts, and the Court of
Cassation, which represents the final stage of criminal appeal. Criminal
courts also have a state security division to hear cases that the
Government considers to bear on state security; in these courts, the
defendant may appeal only on procedural grounds. Civil courts hear civil
cases and administrative courts hear cases contesting government actions
or procedures; both systems have upper-level courts to hear appeals. The
Supreme Constitutional Court hears challenges to the constitutionality of
laws or verdicts in any of the courts.
A lawyer is
appointed at the court's expense if the defendant does not have counsel.
Appointed lawyers are drawn from a roster that is chosen by the Bar
Association; however, expenses are borne by the State. Any denial of this
right is grounds for appeal of the ruling. However, detainees in certain
high security prisons continued to allege that they were denied access to
counsel or that such access was delayed until trial, thus denying counsel
the time to prepare an adequate defense. A woman's testimony is equal to
that of a man's in court. There is no legal prohibition against a woman
serving as a judge, but no women served as judges (see Section 5).
In 1992
following a rise in extremist violence, the Government began trying cases
of defendants accused of terrorism and membership in terrorist groups
before military tribunals. In 1993 the Supreme Constitutional Court ruled
that the President may invoke the Emergency Law to refer any crime to a
military court. This use of military and State Security Emergency Courts
under the Emergency Law since 1993 was broadly interpreted and deprived
hundreds of civilian defendants of their normal right under the
Constitution to be tried by a civilian judge. The Government defended the
use of military courts as necessary to try terrorism cases, maintaining
that trials in the civilian courts were protracted and that civilian
judges and their families were vulnerable to terrorist threats. No new
cases involving civilian defendants were referred to military courts
during the year.
Military
verdicts were subject to a review by other military judges and
confirmation by the President, who in practice usually delegated the
review function to a senior military officer. Defense attorneys claimed
that they were not given sufficient time to prepare defenses and that
judges tended to rush cases involving a large number of defendants.
Nonetheless, judges had guidelines for sentencing, defendants had the
right to counsel, and statements of the charges against defendants were
made public. Observers needed government permission to attend. Diplomats
attended some military trials during the year. Human rights activists have
attended, but only when acting in their capacity as lawyers for one of the
defendants.
On September 9,
a military court handed down verdicts in the trial of 94 defendants (5 of
whom remained at large) on charges of conspiracy to commit acts of
terrorism and membership in an illegal Islamist organization, the Wa'ad.
The court sentenced defendants to varying terms of up to 15 years at hard
labor, including Egyptian-American Muhammad Hisham Seif Iddin, or up to
3-years' imprisonment, and acquitted 43 other defendants. The release of
the acquitted reportedly was delayed, and 12 were rearrested, including
lead defendant Sheikh Nash'at Ibrahim. No new developments were reported
by year's end.
In the case of
170 defendants of the terrorist Islamic Group, there were no developments
during the year; available information indicated that they remained in
prison awaiting trial. In the case of the 22 Muslim Brothers, on July 30
the courts acquitted 6, sentenced 5 to 5 years in prison, and 11 to 3
years in prison.
The State
Security Emergency Courts shared jurisdiction with military courts over
crimes affecting national security. The President appointed judges to
these courts from the civilian judiciary upon the recommendation of the
Minister of Justice and, if he chose to appoint military judges, the
Minister of Defense. Sentences were subject to confirmation by the
President. There was no right of appeal. The President may alter or annul
a decision of a State Security Emergency Court, including a decision to
release a defendant.
During the year,
State Security Emergency Courts handed down verdicts in 5 cases involving
12 defendants.
In March a court
sentenced Sherif El-Filali to 15 years' hard labor on espionage charges.
On March 5, a court convicted eight persons from the city of Matariya of
"insulting a heavenly religion." Sentences ranged from 3 years in prison
to a 1-year suspended sentence (see Section 2.c.). In April courts
sentenced to 10 years at hard labor Mohammed El-Sayid Soliman, an alleged
member of the banned terrorist Islamic Jihad group, as well as an alleged
associate of Al-Qai'da leader Ayman Al-Zawahiri. In June a court sentenced
Magdi Anwar Tawfiq to 10 years at hard labor for spying for Israel. In a
July retrial, Mahmoud Abdel Ghani, an alleged member of the outlawed
terrorist Islamic Group, was sentenced to life in prison for having joined
the military wing of the group in Assiut and subsequently killing a police
officer. At his first trial, Abdel Ghani had been sentenced to 5 years,
but a military governor, on behalf of the President, refused to ratify the
ruling and ordered a retrial. There were no further judgments issued by
emergency courts after July.
In May President
Mubarak ordered a civilian court to retry 50 men in what was called the
"Queen Boat case," 23 of whom had been convicted in a State Security
Emergency Court of "habitual debauchery" in November 2001. At the same
time, the President ratified the verdicts against two of the original
defendants who had been convicted of "insulting a heavenly religion" and
"unorthodox religious beliefs and practices." The retrial of the 50 was
ongoing at year's end.
In July the
Military Governor's office rejected the appeal of Mamdouh Mehran, who had
been sentenced in 2001 to prison for 3 years for propagating false
information and "insulting a heavenly religion," by publishing an article
about the alleged sexual misconduct of a defrocked Coptic monk (see
Section 2.a.).
On February 6,
the Court of Cassation overturned Saad Eddin Ibrahim's May 2001 conviction
and ordered a retrial. On July 29, a State Security Court found Ibrahim
guilty of seeking to harm the reputation of the State, accepting foreign
funding without government approval, and defrauding a donor, and sentenced
him to 7-years' imprisonment. Three codefendants were convicted on fraud
charges and sentenced to 2- to 3-year terms, and three others received
1-year suspended sentences. The verdict was issued moments after formal
oral arguments had been concluded.
In the Ibrahim
case, the charge of defrauding a donor stemmed from an E.U. Commission
grant of $246,266 (261,000 euros) to Ibrahim's Ibn Khaldoun Center for
Development Studies. Judges disregarded an affidavit from the chief of the
E.U. mission in the country that affirmed that the E.U. was fully
satisfied with the way the Center handled its grant. As in the first
trial, the defense was denied access to the files of the Ibn Khaldoun
center, seized by investigators at the time of Ibrahim's initial arrest in
2000. During the trial, judges did not address numerous defense motions,
and at year's end had not provided the defense with a copy of the court
transcript. Lawyers for Ibrahim and his codefendants filed appeals in
September. On December 4, the Court of Cassation overturned the State
Security Court's July 29 conviction and set a retrial date of January 7,
2003, later rescheduled to February 4. Since this was the second time the
court overturned a lower court's verdict, the Court of Cassation itself,
rather than another State Security Court, will retry the case.
On October 20, a
State Security Court began hearing the case of 26 persons, including three
Britons, accused of membership in the extremist "Islamic Liberation
Party," which allegedly aimed to overthrow the Government. Some defendants
have alleged they were tortured. One British defendant, who told the press
his confession had been coerced, incorporated the word "lies" into his
English signature on his confession. According to
local human rights organizations, there were approximately 13,000 to
16,000 persons detained without charge on suspicion of illegal terrorist
or political activity (see Section 1.d.), in addition to several thousand
others convicted and serving sentences on similar charges.
The Government
did not permit access by international humanitarian organizations to
political prisoners (see Section 1.c.). In October, an Amnesty
International (AI) delegation was permitted to visit the country, but
authorities denied the group's request to pay visits to detainees.
f. Arbitrary
Interference with Privacy, Family, Home, or Correspondence
The Constitution
provides for the sanctity and secrecy of the home, correspondence,
telephone calls, and other means of communication; however, the Emergency
Law abridges the constitutional provisions regarding the right to privacy,
and the Government used the Emergency Law to infringe on these rights.
Under the Constitution, police must obtain warrants before undertaking
searches and wiretaps. Courts have dismissed cases in which warrants were
issued without sufficient cause. Police officers who conducted searches
without proper warrants were subject to criminal penalties, although
penalties seldom were imposed. However, the Emergency Law empowers the
Government to place wiretaps, intercept mail, and search persons or places
without warrants. Security agencies frequently placed political activists,
suspected subversives, journalists, foreigners, and writers under
surveillance, screened their correspondence (especially international
mail), searched them and their homes, and confiscated personal
property.
In November the
upper house of Parliament, the Shura Council, approved a draft bill that
permits security agencies and the Interior Ministry to conduct telephone
and Internet wiretaps in the interest of national security. A draft
article that permitted such tapping without court approval faced
resistance among members and was withdrawn from the bill.
Although the law
does not explicitly criminalize homosexual acts, police have targeted
homosexuals using Internet-based "sting" operations leading to arrests on
charges of "debauchery." According to a press report, a senior Interior
Ministry official counted 19 arrests of suspected homosexuals via the
Internet. Local NGOs have counted 31 instances of Internet-based arrests
of homosexuals since police began the practice in 2001. There were
allegations of torture and convictions in the absence of evidence (see
Sections 1.c. and 2.a.).
The Ministry of
Interior has the authority to stop specific issues of foreign-published
newspapers from entering the country on the grounds of protecting public
order; it exercised this authority sporadically (see Section 2.a.).
Section 2
Respect for Civil Liberties, Including:
a. Freedom of
Speech and Press
The Constitution
provides for freedom of speech and of the press; however, the Government
partially restricted these rights. Citizens openly expressed their views
on a wide range of political and social issues, including vigorous
criticism of government officials and policies, but generally avoided
certain topics, such as direct criticism of the President.
The case of Dr.
Saad Eddin Ibrahim, director of the Ibn Khaldoun Center for Development
Studies, had broad implications for freedom of expression and a deterrent
effect on human rights groups. Local observers believed that Ibrahim was
prosecuted because of public remarks that he made regarding high-ranking
officials that exceeded unwritten limits regarding freedom of expression
(see Sections 1.e. and 4).
The Constitution
restricts ownership of newspapers to public or private legal entities,
corporate bodies, and political parties. There are numerous restrictions
on legal entities that seek to establish their own newspapers, including a
limit of 10 percent ownership by any individual.
The Government
owned stock in the three largest daily newspapers, and the President
appointed their editors in chief, who generally followed the government
line. The Government also held a monopoly on the printing and distribution
of newspapers, including those of the opposition parties. The Government
used its monopolistic control of newsprint to limit the output of
opposition publications.
Opposition
political parties published their own newspapers but received a subsidy
from the Government and, in some cases, subsidies from foreign interests
as well. Most newspapers were weeklies, with the exception of the dailies
Al-Wafd and Al-Ahrar, both of which had small circulations. Opposition
newspapers frequently published criticism of the Government. They also
gave greater prominence to human rights abuses than did state-run
newspapers. All party newspapers were required by law to reflect the
platform of their parties.
On July 15, the
Higher Council for the Press approved the publication of 10 new
periodicals and changes to the names of 2 existing publications. No
publications lost the right to publish. All 10 new newspapers were
independent.
In May the
Higher Administrative Court overturned a previous revocation of the permit
of the weekly tabloid An-Naba', following publication of an article
alleging sexual misconduct by a defrocked Coptic Orthodox monk (see
Section 1.e.).
In April the
Administrative Court ruled for the 14th time in favor of the return of
Al-Shaab newspaper, the official publication of the Labor Party. The court
decided that since the Labor Party was suspended, but not disbanded, its
newspaper could continue to publish.
Because of the
difficulties in obtaining a license, several publishers of newspapers and
magazines aimed at a domestic audience obtained foreign licenses. The
Department of Censorship in the Ministry of Information has the authority
to censor or halt their distribution.
The Center for
Human Rights and Legal Assistance in 1999 organized a legal challenge to
the constitutionality of the Information Ministry's censorship of offshore
publications. The Supreme Constitutional Court began hearing the case in
2000 and held another hearing in January, but still had not issued a
decision by year's end.
There were no
cases of censorship of foreign-licensed publications during the
year.
The Penal Code,
Press Law, and Publications Law govern press issues. The Penal Code
stipulates fines or imprisonment for criticism of the President, members
of the Government, and foreign heads of state. The Supreme Constitutional
Court agreed in 1998 to review the constitutionality of those articles of
the Penal Code that specify imprisonment as a penalty for journalists
convicted of libel, but had not begun hearing the case by year's end. The
Press and Publication Laws ostensibly provide protection against malicious
and unsubstantiated reporting. Financial penalties for violations were
increased substantially in 1996 when relevant provisions of the Penal Code
were revised, but the judicial process remained long and costly, creating
a bar to realistic legal recourse for those wrongly defamed. In recent
years, opposition party newspapers have published within limits articles
critical of the President and foreign heads of state without being charged
or harassed. The Government continued to charge journalists with libel. If
he were found to be negligent, an editor-in-chief could be considered
criminally responsible for libel contained in any portion of the
newspaper.
For example, one
of the six libel cases referred to the Constitutional Court during the
year was the 1999 case of Mohamed Abdellah, who was sentenced in 2001 to 3
months' suspended sentence and fined a total of $4,620 (10,000 Egyptian
pounds) for allegedly slandering Press Syndicate president Ibrahim Nafei.
The Constitutional Court held its first session to review it and five
other cases that were combined and heard together on March 18. The date of
the next session was not set by year's end.
During the year,
the courts tried a number of prominent cases of libel filed both by
government officials and private individuals. For example, in February the
Cairo Criminal Court acquitted Mustafa Bakry, chief editor of Al-Osbou'
newspaper but sentenced two journalists at the newspaper to a fine of
$6,930 (15,000 Egyptian pounds) each for libel against a member of the
People's Assembly. In April the Boulaq Court of Misdemeanors sentenced
Ahmed Haredi Mohamed, a member of the Press Syndicate and the chief editor
of Al Mithak Al Arabi, an electronic newspaper, to 6 months' imprisonment,
a fine of $462 (1,000 Egyptian pounds), and $924 (2,001 Egyptian pounds)
as temporary compensation. Haredi was charged with libel and slander
against Ibrahim Nafei, Press Syndicate President and chief editor of
Al-Ahram, who initiated the lawsuit.
In June the
Fayyoum Court of Misdemeanors acquitted journalist Maher Naguib of slander
and dismissed a civil suit against his newspaper, Akhbar El Youm, and its
chief editor Ibrahim Se'da. Naguib had published a feature story on the
allegedly improper acquisition of state owned land by private interests.
The court stated that the intent of the article was not to libel the
plaintiff but to defend public welfare. In November the Boulaq Court of
Misdemeanor sentenced chief editor of Al-Midan newspaper Said Abdel Khaleq
and a journalist to 3 months in prison at labor (suspended) for publishing
a photo of Anwar Sadat's body after his assassination.
The Public
Prosecutor may issue a temporary ban on the publication of news pertaining
to cases involving national security in order to protect the
confidentiality of the cases. The length of the ban is based on the length
of time required for the prosecution to prepare its case.
The law provides
penalties for individuals who disclose information about the State during
emergencies, including war and natural disasters. The penalties include
fines of up to $2,772 (6,000 Egyptian pounds) and prison sentences of up
to 3 years. There were no reports that the law was applied during the
year.
The law
prohibits current or former members of the police from publishing
work-related information without prior permission from the Interior
Minister.
Various
ministries legally are authorized to ban or confiscate books and other
works of art upon obtaining a court order; however, books may not be
confiscated from the market without a court order. There were no
court-ordered confiscations of books during the year.
During the year,
criminal and other lawsuits were brought or continued against several
authors for expressing their views on religious or political issues. Most
notable among these was the case of sociologist Saad Eddin Ibrahim whose
charges in the State Security Emergency Court included harming the
reputation of the State through his writings (see Sections 1.e. and 4).
The Ministry of
Interior regularly confiscated leaflets and other works by Islamists and
other critics of the State. Members of the illegal Muslim Brotherhood also
were arrested in connection with publications (see Sections 1.d. and 3).
In many cases, the press reported that police confiscated written
materials such as leaflets during the arrests.
The Ministry of
Interior sporadically prevented specific issues of foreign-published
newspapers from entering the country on the grounds of protecting public
order (see Section 1.f.). The Ministry of Defense may ban works about
sensitive security issues. The Council of Ministers may order the banning
of works that it deems offensive to public morals, detrimental to
religion, or likely to cause a breach of the peace.
The Government
controlled and censored the state-owned broadcast media. The Ministry of
Information owned and operated all ground-based domestic television and
radio stations. Two private satellite stations, al Mihwar and Dream TV,
began broadcasting in 2001 and operated without direct government
interference. The Government had a 20 percent financial stake in the first
and a 10 percent stake in the second. The Government did not block
reception of foreign channels via satellite. The percentage of residents
who received satellite television broadcasts was small, but many coffee
shops and other public places offered satellite television.
Plays and films
must pass Ministry of Culture censorship tests as scripts and as final
productions. However, many plays and films that were highly critical of
the Government and its policies were not censored. Plays and films must
pass Ministry of Culture censorship tests as scripts and as final
productions. However, many plays and films that were highly critical of
the Government and its policies were not censored.
The Ministry of
Culture also censored foreign films to be shown in theaters, but it was
more lenient regarding the same films in videocassette format. Government
censors ensured that foreign films made in the country portrayed the
country in a favorable light. The Censorship Department banned three films
from public viewing during the year: "From Hell," banned for its violent
and sexually explicit scenes; an Arabic film, "Hidden Shadows," which
dealt with relationships between spirits and humans; and "The Guard," a
science fiction story that depicted an "evil" spirit Talal, found in
southern Iraq, fighting the "good" spirit David.
The Ministry of
Communication and Information Technology estimated that approximately 1
million citizens were Internet users. The Government did not restrict
Internet use and did not monitor citizens' Internet use on a broad scale,
although there may have been some monitoring by law enforcement officials.
On July 7, the
Sayyeda Zeinab Court of Misdemeanors issued the first verdict of its kind.
It ordered a 1-year (suspended) prison term and a fine for Shuhdy Naguib
Serrour for posting on the Internet a poem written by his father
containing phrases that "violated public ethics." The political poem,
written in the early 1970s, was banned from publication at the time. The
prosecution considered posting the piece on the Internet to be a violation
of the ban. On August 26, Shuhdy contested the ruling before the Court of
Appeals. On October 14, the South Cairo Court of Appeals upheld the
previous decision.
In June the
Dokki Court of Misdemeanors sentenced Mohamed Hisham and his wife Hannan
Sayyed to 6 months imprisonment with labor and a fine of $3,210 (5,000
Egyptian pounds) each for posting nude pictures on the Internet. Other
cases of arrest related to the Internet also have included homosexuals in
police "sting" operations (see Section 1.f.).
The Government
did not restrict directly academic freedom at universities. However, deans
were government-appointed rather than elected by the faculty. The
Government justified the measure as a means to combat Islamist influence
on campus. The Government also occasionally banned books for use on
campuses, although no such cases occurred during the year.
b. Freedom of
Peaceful Assembly and Association
The Government
significantly restricted freedom of assembly. Citizens must obtain
approval from the Ministry of Interior before holding public meetings,
rallies, and protest marches. Many demonstrations were not approved;
however, the Government tightly controlled public demonstrations that did
occur to prevent them from spreading into the streets or other areas. The
Interior Ministry selectively obstructed meetings scheduled to be held on
private property and university campuses (see Section 4).
The Government
significantly restricted freedom of association. During the year, Law 84
entered into force. The law regulates the formation, function, and funding
of NGOs and private foundations. The law grants to the Minister of
Insurance and Social Affairs the authority to dissolve by decree NGOs, a
power previously reserved to the courts. The law also requires NGOs to
obtain permission from the Government before accepting foreign funds.
According to government officials, funds from foreign government donors
with established development programs in the country were excluded from
this requirement. Government officials said that the law, which went into
effect with the publication of executive regulations in October, would be
applied in a liberal spirit.
In 2000 the
Supreme Constitutional Court overturned the previous law, Law 153. Pending
the passage of Law 84 and the issuance of executive regulations, an
earlier law (Law 32) was reinstated, leaving many NGOs in an unsettled
registration status. No human rights organizations were registered as NGOs
during the year. Several other human rights organizations that applied for
registration in the past, including the EOHR, HRCAP, and the Cairo
Institute for Human Rights Studies (CIHRS) were not registered by year's
end.
Under
legislation governing professional syndicates, at least 50 percent of the
general membership of an association must elect the governing board.
Failing a quorum, a second election must be held in which at least 30
percent of the membership votes for the board. If such a quorum is
unattainable, the judiciary may appoint a caretaker board until new
elections can be scheduled. The law was adopted to prevent well-organized
minorities, specifically Islamists, from capturing or retaining the
leadership of professional syndicates. Members of the syndicates have
reported that Islamists have used irregular electoral techniques, such as
physically blocking polling places and limiting or changing the location
of polling sites.
c. Freedom of
Religion
The Constitution
provides for freedom of belief and the practice of religious rites;
however, the Government placed restrictions on this right and
discrimination against religious minorities existed. Only Islam,
Christianity, and Judaism are recognized by the Government as religions.
Most citizens
are Sunni Muslims. There is a small number of Shi'a Muslims. Approximately
8 to 10 percent of the population are Christians, the majority of whom
belong to the Coptic Orthodox Church. There are other small Christian
denominations, a small Baha'i community, and a Jewish community that
numbers approximately 200 persons.
Under the
Constitution, Islam is the official state religion and primary source of
legislation. Accordingly, religious practices that conflict with Shari'a
(Islamic law) are prohibited. However, the practice of Christianity or
Judaism does not conflict with Shari'a and, for the most part, members of
the non-Muslim minority worshipped without harassment and maintained links
with coreligionists abroad.
All mosques must
be licensed, and the Government was engaged in an effort to control them
legally. The Government appointed and paid the salaries of the imams who
lead prayers in mosques, proposed themes for them, and monitored their
sermons. In December 2001, the Minister of Awqaf announced that the
Government controlled 57,000 mosques and 13,000 mosques located in private
buildings. There were more than 80,000 mosques in the country, of which as
many as 10,000 may be unlicensed. In an effort to combat extremists, the
Government announced its intention to bring all unauthorized mosques under
its control.
Neither the
Constitution nor the Civil and Penal Codes prohibits proselytizing or
conversion. However, during the past two decades, several dozen Christians
who were accused of proselytizing or who had converted from Islam were
harassed by police or arrested on charges of violating Article 98(F) of
the Penal Code, which prohibits citizens from ridiculing or insulting
heavenly religions or inciting sectarian strife.
There are no
restrictions on the conversion of non-Muslims to Islam. However, in cases
involving conversion from Islam to Christianity, authorities have charged
several converts with violating laws prohibiting the falsification of
documents. In such instances, converts, who fear government harassment if
they officially register the change from Islam to Christianity, have
altered their identification cards and other official documents themselves
to reflect their new religious affiliation.
In 1996 human
rights activist Mamdouh Naklah filed a lawsuit challenging the
constitutionality of the 10 conditions for building a church, some dating
from the Ottoman era. The court requested in October 2001 that the State
Commissioners render an opinion on the constitutionality of the
conditions. No opinion was issued during the year.
In response to
strong criticism of the restrictive requirements dating back to the
Ottoman era, President Mubarak took several steps to facilitate church
repairs. In 1999 he issued a decree making the repair of all places of
worship subject to a 1976 civil construction code. The decree was
significant symbolically because it made churches and mosques equal under
the law. The practical impact of the decree was to facilitate
significantly church repairs; however, Christians reported that local
permits still were subject to approval by security authorities.
During the year,
the Government issued 12 permits for church-related construction. The
approval process for church construction suffered from delays and was
insufficiently responsive to the Christian community, although the
President reportedly approved all requests for permits that were presented
to him. The incidence of blocked or delayed orders varied, often depending
on the church's relationship with local security officials and the level
of support of the local governor.
In July
following a complaint by Muslim villagers, Sohag security authorities
closed a building used as a church since 1975 in Nag'a al Kiman on the
grounds that it had no permit, and briefly arrested some of the
congregation. Church officials maintained that most churches in the area
had no permit and the security authorities were aware of that fact. There
was no resolution of the problem by year's end.
The Constitution
requires schools to offer religious instruction. Public and private
schools provided religious instruction according to the faith of the
student.
The Government
occasionally prosecuted members of religious groups whose practices
deviated from mainstream Islamic beliefs and whose activities were
believed to jeopardize communal harmony. In May the President upheld the
convictions in a State Security Emergency Court of two citizens, charged
with insulting a heavenly religion. They allegedly advocated a belief
system combining Islam and tolerance for homosexuality (see Sections 1.d.
and 1.e.).
On March 5, a
State Security Emergency Court convicted eight persons from the city of
Matariya (near Cairo) of insulting a heavenly religion. They were arrested
in October 2001 for unorthodox Islamic beliefs and practices. Sentences
ranged from 3 years in prison to a 1-year suspended sentence.
In September
Sayed Tolba, who claimed to be a prophet, was sentenced to 3 years'
imprisonment for insulting religion and promoting extreme ideas. Twenty
followers received lesser sentences.
During the year,
several writers also were charged with expressing unorthodox religious
beliefs and practices (see Section 2.a.).
The Islamic
Research Center of Al-Azhar University had legal authority to censor all
publications dealing with the Koran and Islamic scriptural texts (see
Section 2.a.).
In September
2001, the Alexandria administrative court issued a decision canceling the
annual Jewish celebration at the tomb of Rabbi Abu Hasira in Beheira.
Reportedly, villagers complained about the behavior of pilgrims. The court
suspended a Ministry of Culture decree declaring the tomb a national
antiquity site. Although the Ministry reportedly contested the 2001
decision, the festival was not held during the year and the matter
remained unresolved at year's end.
The Constitution
provides for equal public rights and duties without discrimination due to
religion or creed. For the most part, the Government upheld these
constitutional protections; however, discrimination against minority
religions, including Christians and Baha'is, existed.
In a
well-received step on December 17, the President declared that January 7,
Coptic Christmas, would henceforth be a national holiday. The move was
warmly welcomed by Christians and also by the country's principal Islamic
leader, the Sheikh of Al-Azhar. Christian leaders stated that the
declaration gave Copts increased recognition and respect and raised the
consciousness of the country's Muslims toward non-Muslim fellow
citizens.
Although there
has been improvement in the past 2 years in some areas, such as the
introduction of the Coptic era into history curriculums in all government
schools and increased coverage of Christian subjects in the mass media,
discriminatory government practices persisted including suspected
statistical underrepresentation of the size of the Christian population
for the 1986 census, the last which indicated religion. The
approximately 6 million Coptic Christians were the objects of occasional
violent assaults by the Islamic Group and other terrorists. Some
Christians alleged that the Government was lax in protecting Christian
lives and property, as several riots and conflicts with injuries and
property damage occurred during the year (see Section 2.c.). However,
there were no reports of terrorist attacks against Christians. In a number
of cases, in particular regarding murder, it was difficult to determine
whether religion was a factor.
During the year,
the trial continued of 96 persons (58 Muslims and 38 Christians) for
crimes, including murder committed in al-Kush in Sohag Governorate in
2000. A trade dispute between a Christian clothing merchant and a Muslim
customer in December 1999 escalated into violent exchanges, resulting in
the deaths of 21 Christians and 1 Muslim. The Muslim victim was killed by
other Muslims who mistook him for a Christian. The violence also resulted
in the injury of 39 persons in al-Kush and 5 persons in the neighboring
municipality of Dar al-Salaam. Approximately 200 businesses and homes in
the area were damaged.
The first trial
of the 96 ended in February 2001, with the acquittal of 92 of the 96
defendants. The lead judge cited inadequate evidence in justifying the
verdicts. After an outcry from the Christian community, the Public
Prosecutor successfully appealed the verdicts, and a retrial opened in
November 2001, and completed sessions in October. The lead judge said the
verdict is expected to be announced in January 2003.
There were
reports of forced conversions of Coptic girls to Islam. Reports of such
cases were disputed and often included inflammatory allegations and
categorical denials of kidnaping and rape. Observers, including human
rights groups, found it extremely difficult to determine whether
compulsion was used, as most cases involved a Coptic girl who converted to
Islam when she married a Muslim. According to the Government, in such
cases the girl must meet with her family, with her priest, and with the
head of her church before she is allowed to convert. However, there were
credible reports of government harassment of Christian families that
attempted to regain custody of their daughters. The law states that a
marriage of a girl under the age of 16 is prohibited, and between the ages
of 16 and 21 is illegal without the approval and presence of her guardian.
The authorities also sometimes failed to uphold the law in cases of
marriage between underage Christian girls and Muslim boys.
There is no
legal requirement for a Christian girl or woman to convert to Islam in
order to marry a Muslim. However, if a Christian woman marries a Muslim
man, the Coptic Orthodox Church excommunicates her. Ignorance of the law
and societal pressure, including the centrality of marriage to a woman's
identity, often affect her decision. Family conflict and financial
pressure also are cited as factors. Conversion is regarded as a disgrace
to the convert's family, so most Christian families would object strongly
to a daughter's wish to marry a Muslim. If a Christian girl converts to
Islam, her family loses guardianship, which transfers to a Muslim
custodian, who is likely to grant approval. The law is silent on the
matter of the acceptable age of conversion.
In April a court
ruled in the case of Iman 'Atiya Soliman, born a Christian in 1982, who
"disappeared," or was "kidnaped," (according to her family) in 1999,
reportedly converted to Islam in 1999, and married in 2000. The girl's
father sued for custody and abolition of the marriage, alleging that
authorities had issued her a falsified identity card, which showed her to
be 22 at the time of her marriage. The court ruled that the father lost
custody of his daughter when she converted to Islam.
Anti-Semitism is
found in both the progovernment press and in the press of the opposition
parties, and increased late in 2000 and again during the year following
the outbreak of violence in Israel and the occupied territories. There
were no violent anti-Semitic incidents in recent years directed at the
tiny Jewish community.
Dream TV, a
station in which the Government had a 10 percent interest, aired a
historical drama series titled "Horseman without a Horse." The 41-episode
series contained numerous anti-Semitic depictions of Jewish characters and
included some references to the forged "Protocols of the Elders of Zion."
Following international protests, state-owned Egypt TV, one of many
stations in the Middle East that broadcast the series, edited 77 minutes
from the program and added a disclaimer, which noted that the historical
authenticity of the protocols had never been established and that the
series was the result of the author's imagination. There was some direct
criticism of the series in the local press, especially for the poor
scriptwriting and low production value, but also some criticism of the
anti-Semitic material. Progovernment newspapers published a denunciation
of the protocols by local historian Abdel Waheb Al-Messiry. In addition,
in late December, Presidential advisor Ossama El-Baz published a
three-part series in the progovernment newspaper Al-Ahram in which he
explained the origins of and criticized the phenomenon of
anti-Semitism.
In 1960
President Gamal Abdel Nasser issued a decree banning Baha'i institutions
and community activities. All Baha'i community properties, including
Baha'i centers, libraries, and cemeteries, were confiscated at that time.
The ban has not been rescinded. "Baha'i" is not allowable as a religious
identity, which is a required category on official documents. Its
prohibition constitutes an infringement on religious freedom.
For a more
detailed discussion see the 2002 International Religious Freedom
Report.
d. Freedom of
Movement within the Country, Foreign Travel, Emigration, and
Repatriation
Citizens and
foreigners were free to travel within the country, except in certain
military areas. Males who have not completed compulsory military service
may not travel abroad or emigrate, although this restriction may be
deferred or bypassed under special circumstances. Unmarried women under
the age of 21 must have permission from their fathers to obtain passports
and travel. Married women no longer legally require the same permission
from their husbands; however, in practice police reportedly still required
such permission in most cases (see Section 5). Citizens who leave the
country had the right to return.
The Constitution
provides for the granting of asylum and refugee status in accordance with
the 1951 Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees and its 1967
Protocol; however, the Government maintained several reservations to the
convention that limited the ease with which the refugee population could
integrate locally. Because the country lacked national legislation or a
legal framework governing the granting of asylum, the Office of the U.N.
High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) assumed full responsibility for the
determination of refugee status on behalf of the Government. The
Government generally cooperated with the UNHCR and treated refugees in
accordance with minimum standards and agreed arrangements. The UNHCR
provided recognized refugees with a refugee identification card that was
considered a residence permit and bore the stamp of the national
authorities. Refugees generally may not obtain citizenship. During the
year, approximately 9,000 recognized refugees, the majority of whom were
Sudanese, resided in the country, in addition to the 70,000 Palestinian
refugees registered with government authorities. There were also
approximately 16,000 asylum seekers awaiting status determination.
Although there was no pattern of abuse of refugees, during random security
sweeps the Government temporarily detained some refugees who were not
carrying proper identification. Following intervention by the UNHCR, the
refugees were released.
There were no
reports of the forced return of persons to a country where they feared
persecution.
Section 3
Respect for Political Rights: The Right of Citizens to Change Their
Government
The ruling
National Democratic Party dominated the 454-seat People's Assembly, the
264-seat Shura Council, local governments, the mass media, labor, and the
large public sector, and controlled the licensing of new political
parties, newspapers, and private organizations to such an extent that, as
a practical matter, citizens did not have a meaningful ability to change
their government.
In September
1999, President Hosni Mubarak was elected unopposed to a fourth 6-year
term in a national referendum. According to official results, he received
94 percent of the vote. Mubarak had been previously nominated by the
People's Assembly. Under the Constitution, the electorate is not presented
with a choice among competing presidential candidates.
Despite the
overall improvement in the electoral process, there still were problems
affecting the fairness of the 2000 parliamentary elections, particularly
in the period leading up to elections and outside some polling stations on
election day. During the months preceding the elections, the Government
arrested thousands of members of the Muslim Brotherhood on charges of
belonging to an illegal organization. Most observers believed that the
Government was seeking to undermine the Muslim Brotherhood's participation
in the People's Assembly and professional syndicate elections through
intimidation. In addition, previous convictions on such charges legally
precluded many potential candidates from running.
The People's
Assembly debated Government proposals, and members exercised their
authority to call cabinet ministers to explain policy. The executive
initiated almost all legislation. The Assembly exercised limited influence
in the areas of security and foreign policy, and retained little oversight
of the Interior Ministry's use of Emergency Law powers. Many executive
branch initiatives and policies were carried out by regulation through
ministerial decree without legislative oversight. Votes generally were
reported in aggregate terms of yeas and nays, and thus constituents had no
independent method of checking a member's voting record.
The Shura
Council, the upper house of Parliament, had 264 seats; two-thirds of which
were elected and one-third of which were appointed by the President. In
2001 President Mubarak appointed 45 members to the Shura Council,
including 8 women and 4 Christians.
There were 16
recognized opposition parties. In 2001 the courts accepted one party, El
Geel ("the generation") Democratic Party and upheld the Political Parties
Committee's rejection of the Republican Party. Seven appeals were pending
before the Administrative Court by parties that had been rejected by the
Political Parties Committee.
The Political
Parties Committee also may withdraw recognition from existing political
parties. The Labor Party, which lost recognition in 2000 under similar
circumstances, remained suspended (see Section 2.a.).
The Muslim
Brotherhood remained an illegal organization and may not be recognized as
a political party under the law, which prohibits political parties based
on religion. Muslim Brotherhood members were known as such publicly and
openly spoke their views, although they did not explicitly identify
themselves as members of the organization. They remained subject to
government pressure (see Section 1.d.). Seventeen candidates affiliated
with the Muslim Brotherhood were elected to the People's Assembly (as
independents) in 2000.
In November
several opposition parties and human rights organizations announced the
formation of a coalition termed the "Committee for the Defense of
Democracy." The committee's stated mandate was to advocate political and
economic reforms. The committee's first objectives were to block the
extension of the Emergency Law (in force since 1981 and due for renewal in
May 2003) and to oppose implementation of a law that regulates NGOs.
The total number
of women in the People's Assembly was 11. The total number of People's
Assembly members from religious minorities (all Christian) was seven. Two
women and 2 Christians served among the 32 ministers in the Cabinet. There
were no women and no non-Muslims on the Supreme Court.
Section 4
Governmental Attitude Regarding International and Nongovernmental
Investigation of Alleged Violations of Human Rights
In June the
Government passed a law governing the regulation and operation of NGOs.
The new law replaced one struck down by the Supreme Constitutional Court
in June 2000 on procedural grounds. The new law, and its subsequent
implementing regulations, were controversial and drew criticism from local
NGOs and international activists, some of whom charged that the law and
regulations placed unduly burdensome restrictions on NGO operations. Of
particular concern was a new provision in the law that granted the
Minister of Social Affairs the authority to dissolve an NGO by decree,
rather than requiring a court order.
The status of
many NGOs remained unclear during the year, as their previous
registrations were invalidated with the annulment of Law 153/1999. Under
the implementing regulations of the new law, issued on October 23, NGOs
were given 1 year in which to reregister. No human rights organizations
were registered as NGOs during the year. Several human rights
organizations that applied for registration in 1999 or 2000, including the
EOHR, HRCAP, and CIHRS, were not registered by year's end (see Section
2.b.).
Despite years of
nonrecognition, the EOHR and other groups at times obtained the
cooperation of government officials. EOHR field workers visit some prisons
in their capacity as legal counsel, but not as human rights observers.
They call on some government officials and receive funding from foreign
human rights organizations. In an unusual and positive development, in
September 2001 the Ministry of Interior issued a detailed written rebuttal
to a March 2001 report by the HRCAP regarding torture and lawsuits related
to torture (see Section 1.c.).
Government
restrictions on NGO activities, including limits on organizations' ability
to accept funding, continued to inhibit significantly reporting on human
rights abuses. The case of Saad Eddin Ibrahim, director of the Ibn
Khaldoun Center for Development Studies, had a significant deterrent
effect on the work of human rights organizations, which existed largely on
foreign funding (see Sections 1.e. and 2.a.).
During the year
the Government permitted the CIHR and other human rights organizations,
including HRCAP, EOHR, Arab Center for Independence of Judiciary, and "The
Land Center," to hold conferences and to participate in international
conferences.
In July LCHR
issued a statement signed by eight other human rights organizations in
which they complained of harassment by security officials and the Azbakiya
Public Prosecutor's office regarding its irregular publication "Al Ard."
According to LCHR, a prosecutorial investigation was continuing at year's
end (see Section 2.b.).
The Government
generally cooperated with international organizations. However, it has not
agreed to a requested visit by the UNCHR Special Rapporteur on Torture,
according to the delegate to the November session of the CAT, because of
an incompatibility of timetables (see Section 1.c.).
Section 5
Discrimination Based on Race, Sex, Disability, Language, or Social
Status
The Constitution
provides for equality of the sexes and equal treatment of non-Muslims;
however, aspects of the law and many traditional practices discriminated
against women and religious minorities.
Women
Domestic
violence against women was a significant problem and was reflected in
press accounts of specific incidents. The law does not prohibit spousal
abuse specifically; provisions of law relating to assault in general are
applied. According to a 1995 national study, one of every three women who
have ever been married had been beaten at least once during marriage.
Among those who had been beaten, less than half had ever sought help. Due
to the value attached to privacy in the country's traditional society,
abuse within the family rarely was discussed publicly. Spousal abuse is
grounds for a divorce; however, the law requires the plaintiff to produce
eyewitnesses, a difficult condition to meet. Several NGOs offered
counseling, legal aid, and other services to women who were victims of
domestic violence. Activists believed that in general the police and the
judiciary considered the "integrity of the family" more important than the
well being of the woman. The Ministry of Insurance and Social Affairs
operated more than 150 family counseling bureaus nationwide, which
provided legal and medical services.
The Government
prosecuted rapists, and punishment for rape ranges from 3 years in prison
to life imprisonment with hard labor. Although reliable statistics
regarding rape were not available, activists believed that it was not
uncommon, despite strong social disapproval. If a rapist is convicted of
abducting his victim, he is subject to execution. Marital rape is not
illegal.
"Honor killings"
(a man murdering a female for her perceived lack of chastity) were not
common. In practice the courts sentenced perpetrators of honor killings to
lesser FGM was common
despite the Government's commitment to eradicating the practice and NGO
efforts to combat it. Traditional and family pressures remained strong; a
study conducted in 2000 estimated the percentage of women who have ever
been married and had undergone FGM at 97 percent. The survey showed that
attitudes may be changing slowly; over a 5-year period, the incidence of
FGM among the daughters (from ages 11 to 19) of women surveyed fell from
83 to 78 percent. FGM was equally prevalent among Muslims and
Christians.
In 1996 the
Minister of Health and Population issued a decree banning FGM. In addition
to attempting to enforce the decree, the Government supported a range of
efforts via television and by religious leaders to educate the public.
However, illiteracy impedes some women from distinguishing between the
deep-rooted tradition of FGM and religious practices. Moreover, many
citizens believed that FGM was an important part of maintaining female
chastity, and the practice was supported by some Muslim religious
authorities and Islamist political activists.
Prostitution and
sex tourism are illegal but occurred, mostly in Cairo and Alexandria.
Sexual
harassment is not prohibited specifically by law; there were no statistics
available regarding its prevalence.
The law provides
for equality of the sexes; however, aspects of the law and many
traditional practices discriminated against women. By law unmarried women
under the age of 21 must have permission from their fathers to obtain
passports and to travel. Married women do not, but police sometimes did
not apply the law consistently. Only males may confer citizenship;
children born to women with foreign husbands are not conferred the
benefits of citizenship. In rare cases, this meant that children born to
Egyptian mothers and stateless fathers were themselves stateless. A
woman's testimony is equal to that of a man's in the courts. There is no
legal prohibition against a woman serving as a judge, although in practice
no women served as judges. At year's end, the Court of Cassation still was
examining the cases of two female attorneys, Fatma Lashin and Amany
Talaat, who challenged the Government's refusal to appoint them as public
prosecutors. (To become a judge, one must first serve as a public
prosecutor.)
Laws affecting
marriage and personal status generally corresponded to an individual's
religion. In 2000 the Parliament passed a new Personal Status Law that
made it easier for a Muslim woman to obtain a divorce without her
husband's consent, provided that she was willing to forego alimony and the
return of her dowry. (The Coptic Orthodox Church permits divorce only in
specific circumstances, such as adultery or conversion of one spouse to
another religion.)
Under Islamic
law, non-Muslim males must convert to Islam to marry Muslim women, but
non-Muslim women need not convert to marry Muslim men. Muslim female heirs
receive half the amount of a male heir's inheritance, while Christian
widows of Muslims have no inheritance rights. A sole female heir receives
half her parents' estate; the balance goes to designated male relatives. A
sole male heir inherits all his parents' property. Male Muslim heirs face
strong social pressure to provide for all family members who require
assistance; however, this assistance is not always provided.
Labor laws
provide for equal rates of pay for equal work for men and women in the
public sector. According to government figures, women constituted 17
percent of private business owners and occupied 25 percent of the
managerial positions in the four major national banks. Educated women had
employment opportunities, but social pressure against women pursuing a
career was strong, and women's rights advocates claimed that Islamist
influence inhibited further gains. Women's rights advocates also pointed
to other discriminatory traditional or cultural attitudes and practices,
such as FGM and the traditional male relative's role in enforcing
chastity.
A number of
active women's rights groups worked in diverse areas, including reforming
family law, educating women on their legal rights, promoting literacy, and
combating FGM.
Children
The Government
remained committed to the protection of children's welfare and attempted
to do so within the limits of its budgetary resources. The Child Law
provides for privileges, protection, and care for children in general. Six
of the law's 144 articles set rules protective of working children (see
Section 6.d.). Other provisions include a requirement that employers set
up or contract with a child care center if they employ more than 100
women; the right of rehabilitation for children with disabilities; a
prohibition on sentencing defendants between the ages of 16 and 18 to
capital punishment, hard labor for life, or temporary hard labor; and a
prohibition on placing defendants under the age of 15 in preventive
custody, although the prosecution may order that they be lodged in an
"observation house" and be summoned upon request. International donors
provided many of the resources for children's welfare, especially in the
field of child immunization.
The Government
provided public education, which is compulsory for the first 9 academic
years (typically until the age of 15). The Government treated boys and
girls equally at all levels of education.
There were no
statistics available regarding the prevalence of child abuse.
Children with
foreign fathers were not considered citizens and thus could not attend
public school or state universities, were barred from certain professional
schools, and could not work without meeting foreign residency requirements
and obtaining work permits. There were an estimated 400,000 such children
in the country.
FGM generally
was performed on girls between the ages of 7 and 12 (see Section 5,
Women).
Persons with
Disabilities
There are no
laws specifically prohibiting discrimination against persons with physical
or mental disabilities, but the Government made serious efforts to address
their rights. It worked closely with U.N. agencies and other international
aid donors to design job-training programs for persons with disabilities.
The Government also sought to increase the public's awareness of the
capabilities of persons with disabilities in television programming, the
print media, and in educational material in public schools. There were
approximately 5.7 million persons with disabilities, of whom 1.5 million
were disabled severely.
By law all
businesses must designate 5 percent of their jobs for persons with
disabilities, who are exempt from normal literacy requirements. Although
there was no legislation mandating access to public accommodations and
transportation, persons with disabilities may ride government-owned mass
transit buses free of charge, were given priority in obtaining telephones,
and received reductions on customs duties for private vehicles. A number
of NGOs were active in efforts to train and assist persons with
disabilities.
Section 6 Worker
Rights
a. The Right of
Association
There are no
legal obstacles to establishing private sector unions, although such
unions were not common. Workers may join trade unions but are not required
to do so. A union local, or workers' committee, may be formed if 50
employees express a desire to organize. Most union members, about
one-quarter of the labor force, were employed by state-owned enterprises.
Unionization decreased in the past several years as a result of early
retirement plans in public sector enterprises, and the privatization of
many of these enterprises. The law stipulates that "high administrative"
officials in Government and in public sector enterprises may not join
unions.
There were 23
trade unions, all required to belong to the Egyptian Trade Union
Federation (ETUF), the sole legally recognized labor federation. The
International Labor Organization's (ILO) Committee of Experts repeatedly
emphasized that a law that requires all trade unions to belong to a single
federation infringes on freedom of association. The ILO also consistently
criticized ETUF control over the nomination and election procedures for
trade union officers, as well as the lack of protection of the right of
workers' organizations to organize their administration, including their
financial activities, without interference from public authorities.
However, the Government showed no sign that it intended to accept the
establishment of more than one federation. ETUF officials had close
relations with the NDP, and some were members of the People's Assembly or
the Shura Council. They spoke vigorously on behalf of worker concerns, but
public confrontations between the ETUF and the Government were rare.
Some unions
within the ETUF were affiliated with international trade union
organizations. Others were in the process of becoming affiliated.
b. The Right to
Organize and Bargain Collectively
Collective
bargaining did not exist in any meaningful sense because by law the
Government sets wages, benefits, and job classifications. The ILO for
years claimed that the Labor Code undermined the principle of voluntary
bargaining by providing that any clause of a collective agreement that
might impair the economic interest of the country was null and void. Under
the law, unions may negotiate work contracts with public sector
enterprises if the latter agree to such negotiations, but unions otherwise
lacked collective bargaining power in the public sector.
The labor laws
do not provide adequately for the right to strike. The Government
considered strikes a form of public disturbance and therefore illegal.
Workers who strike may face prosecution and prison sentences of up to 2
years; however, there were no such prosecutions during the year.
There were
approximately a dozen strikes during the year. Strikes mainly concerned
delayed payment of salaries, wage cuts, terminations, increased working
hours, and suspension of job promotions. In one incident, 170 subway
assistant drivers staged a hunger strike for more than 1 week because they
were not promoted. The strike was significant because it took place in one
of the "public utilities that provide vital services." Under the new labor
law that was approved in June, workers in such utilities are denied the
right to strike. Some members of parliament have threatened to challenge
the constitutionality of the new law.
Firms, apart
from large ones in the private sector, generally did not adhere to
government-mandated standards. Although they are required to observe some
government practices, such as the minimum wage, social security insurance,
and official holidays, firms often did not adhere to government practice
in nonbinding matters, including award of the annual Labor Day
bonus.
Labor law and
practice are the same in the six existing export processing zones (EPZs)
as in the rest of the country.
c. Prohibition
of Forced or Bonded Labor d. Status of
Child Labor Practices and Minimum Age for Employment
Child labor was
widespread and the Government took seriously the problem of child labor;
however, in general it did not devote adequate resources to implement its
child labor policies. The minimum age for employment is 14 years of age in
nonagricultural work. UNICEF reported on the widespread practice of poor
rural families making arrangements for a daughter to be employed as a
domestic servant in the homes of wealthy citizens (see Section
6.c.).
The Labor Law of
1996 and associated ministerial decrees greatly limit the type and
conditions of work that children below the age of 18 may perform legally.
Provincial governors, with the approval of the Minister of Education, may
authorize seasonal work for children between the ages of 12 and 14,
provided that duties are not hazardous and do not interfere with
schooling. During the summer, the President and the Ministry of Education
authorized governors to delay the start of the school year in their
governorates pending the end of the crop season. According to media
reports, one provincial governor delayed school for 1 week pending the end
of a crop season.
Preemployment
training for children under the age of 12 is prohibited. Children are
prohibited from working for more than 6 hours a day and one or more breaks
totaling at least 1 hour must be included. Children may not work overtime,
during their weekly day off, between 8 p.m. and 7 a.m., or for more than 4
hours continuously.
The Government
continued to take steps during the year to address the problem of child
labor. The Government worked closely during the year with international
organizations--in particular UNICEF and the ILO--as well as international
and domestic NGOs and labor unions to implement programs designed to
address child labor and its root causes.
In 2000 the
Ministry of Manpower child labor unit created a database for tracking
child labor in the country and inspectors began raids to uncover
violations in 2001. However, the Government did not take any effective
action against employers, as the fines assessed were as low as $9 (20
Egyptian pounds), which did not deter violators. Inspection raids
increased during the year. In 2001 The Minister of Justice also issued
decree 2235, establishing the General Department for Judicial Protection
for Children.
Statistical
information regarding the number of working children was difficult to
obtain and often out-of-date. NGOs estimated that up to 1.5 million
children worked. Government studies indicate that the concentration of
working children was higher in rural than in urban areas. Nearly 78
percent of working children were in the agricultural sector. However,
children also worked in light industry. The Central Agency for Public
Mobilization and Statistics (CAPMAS) conducted at the request of NCCM a
household survey on child labor in 2001-02 that was analyzed by the NCCM
for policy formulation. Results of the survey are expected to be made
public in 2003.
While local
trade unions reported that the Ministry of Labor adequately enforced the
labor laws in state-owned enterprises, enforcement in the private sector,
especially in the informal sector, was lax. Many working children were
abused, overworked, and exposed to potentially hazardous conditions by
their employers, and the restrictions in the Child Law have not improved
conditions due to lax enforcement on the part of the Government.
The law does not
prohibit specifically forced and bonded labor by children. e. Acceptable
Conditions of Work
During the year,
the minimum wage for government and public sector employees increased to
$81 (176 Egyptian pounds) per month for a 6-day, 36-hour workweek. The
Labor Law stipulates that 48 hours is the maximum number of hours that may
be worked in 1 week. Overtime for hours worked beyond 36 per week is
payable at the rate of 25 percent extra for daylight hours and 50 percent
extra for nighttime hours. The law also stipulates a maximum of 7 hours
per day and 42 hours per week for work in "hazardous industries." Some
government agencies instituted a 5-day, 36-hour workweek. The nationwide
minimum wage generally was enforced effectively regarding larger private
companies; however, smaller firms did not always pay the minimum wage. The
minimum wage did not provide a decent standard of living for a worker and
family; however, base pay commonly was supplemented by a complex system of
fringe benefits and bonuses that may double or triple a worker's take-home
pay and provide a decent standard of living.
The Ministry of
Labor set worker health and safety standards, which also apply in the
EPZs; however, enforcement and inspections were uneven.
The law
prohibits employers from maintaining hazardous working conditions, and
workers had the right to remove themselves from hazardous conditions
without risking loss of employment.
In August the
Minister of Manpower said that the total number of foreign workers holding
work and residence permits was 18,177, not including Sudanese,
Palestinians, and foreigners married to citizens. Unofficial estimates of
undocumented workers were as high as 116,000. Foreign workers with the
required permits enjoyed legal protections. There were occasional reports
of employer abuse of undocumented workers, especially domestic workers. A
few employers were prosecuted during the year for abuse of domestic
workers, but many claims of abuse were unsubstantiated because
undocumented workers were reluctant to make their identities public. The law does not
prohibit specifically trafficking in persons; however, the law prohibits
prostitution and sex tourism. There were anecdotal reports of trafficking
of persons from sub-Saharan Africa and Eastern Europe through the country
to Europe and Israel.
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