Editor’s Note: This is exactly the situation that contributing writer to Activist Post, Tony Cartalucci, cautioned about from the very beginning; one dictatorship has been replaced with another. His articles are a must-read for understanding the nature of the globalist agenda of fake revolutions, versus the agenda of free humanity which needs to seek real revolution.
Dees Illustration |
Mohannad Sabry
McClatchy
CAIRO — Egypt’s military rulers told human rights advocates Monday that at least 7,000 civilians have been sentenced to prison terms by military courts since Hosni Mubarak was ousted — an astoundingly high number likely to fuel debate over how much the revolution has changed the country.
Advocates said the military promised to review the cases and vacate any improper guilty verdicts and commute the sentences. But the advocates voiced skepticism and demanded more information about civilians in military custody.
“This is not the first time they’ve promised,” said Mona Seif, a member of a rights group called No Military Trials that met with the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces, Egypt’s ruling body. “We were offered no guarantees whatsoever.”
The use of military courts to try people who’ve been detained in anti-government protests in recent months is highly charged here. One of the complaints against Mubarak’s regime was that it silenced dissidents by quickly prosecuting them in military courts. The caretaker government that took over after Mubarak’s resignation has done little to alter the practice, however.
Seif said the military council told her group that 7,000 civilians had been tried in military courts since Mubarak resigned Feb. 11 and other cases were pending. But the council offered no details, Seif said. “We asked the council to provide the exact number and the names of any civilian held by military police,” she said.
Before Monday’s meeting, No Military Trials had demanded a halt to military trials of civilians, unless violations occur in military zones or facilities. It also asked that the government guarantee the security of peaceful gatherings and protests and release five oil field workers who were detained during a recent strike.
On Monday, the group announced a hotline to report cases of military violations, detentions or abuse.
Heba Morayef, a Cairo representative for Human Rights Watch who met with the council last week, said the military defended its use of military courts in civilian cases because of the heightened level of crime. She said it was hard to know the accuracy of the 7,000 figure the government cited.
“It includes protesters, activists, thugs, ordinary criminals and innocent passers-by,” she said. “They all received jail sentences.”
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