[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 98 (Thursday, June 18, 2015)]
[Senate]
[Page S4293]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
EGYPT
Mr. LEAHY. Mr. President, last week Egyptian government investigators
working on behalf of a judge who is overseeing a 4-year-old case
against international and Egyptian nongovernmental organizations, NGOs,
visited the main office of the Cairo Institute for Human Rights
Studies, or CIHRS, and asked for registration and financial documents.
The investigators reportedly tried to pass off an informal search
warrant as legal cover, but CIHRS staff made clear they couldn't search
the office without an official one. The investigators left, but their
message was clear: a new crackdown is on the way.
According to information I have received, CIHRS is the second
organization to receive such a visit this year. The same investigators
previously visited another organization, the Egyptian Democratic
Academy, and looked into their activities and funding sources. Four
members of the academy have since been banned from leaving Egypt.
Some Senators may remember this case: it is the same one that led to
the conviction of 43 foreign and Egyptian NGO workers, including 16
Americans, in 2013. The fact that the Egyptian authorities have decided
to resuscitate this old case against these NGOs shows that President
Abdel Fattah al-Sisi's administration is confident that it can silence
critical voices with little international objection.
Since the 2011 revolution, the government has made several efforts to
replace a harsh 2002 law on associations--unevenly implemented under
former President Hosni Mubarak--with even more draconian regulations,
including a draft law that would have given the government and security
agencies effective veto power over NGO boards of directors, foreign
funding, and very existence. Although a new law has yet to be passed,
the authorities have previously raided or detained staff from respected
organizations such as the Hisham Mubarak Law Center, Human Rights
Watch, Amnesty International, and the Egyptian Center for Economic and
Social Rights.
I am deeply concerned with the reinvigoration of this 4-year-old case
and the message it sends about Cairo's intent to restrict independent
NGOs. I am similarly concerned with recent press reports alleging that
the authorities have disappeared a significant number of young people,
some of whom later died, in a coordinated campaign, activists say, to
silence dissent. Such actions, if true, are deplorable and are no way
to effectively combat terrorism and related insecurity.
Support for a strong and flourishing independent civil society is a
critical part of any pluralistic society, but we are seeing the reverse
in Egypt. As the ranking member of the Appropriations Subcommittee on
the Department of State and Foreign Operations which provides
assistance for Egypt, I am dismayed by the al-Sisi government's
rejection of basic freedoms, whether it is the right to express oneself
or the right to assemble. Such repressive tactics are not likely to
contribute to greater security or stability in Egypt--instead they are
likely to do just the opposite.
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