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Archive - Dec 2007

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December 30th

Torture In Egypt - Facts & Testimonies

Year of publication: 2007

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This booklet is the third report produced by El Nadim Center for the Management and Rehabilitation of victims of Violence and torture. It includes all center activities between 2003 and 2006.

Our ambition has always been to produce an annual report. However, we were not successful in doing so in view of the rapid development of events, the pressure of daily work and the difficulty for a staff member to work full time or the collection of the annual material, its classification, and editing to be produced as a booklet. He tried to fill this gap through the production of smaller booklets that address one or the other aspect of our work. We produced a book on
women in detention centers, another on the role of physicians in preventing torture and documenting its effects, a third one documenting the massacre committed against Sudanese refugees by the Egyptian police in December 2005, a another on torture in Sudan and a fifth booklet carrying the testimonies of the citizens of Arish, which Egyptian security authorities turned into a big detention center.

All of those publications carry the testimonies of the Nadim staff and its activities whether inside or outside the center, reaching out to victims of police violence, whether individual or collective.
The present report includes all center activities related to torture and collective state violence during the years 2003-2006. Although those years have witnessed the beginning of a political stir demanding democracy and justice, they have also, or may be because of that, witnessed an escalation of two forms of oppressive policies and police violations, some of which we document in this report.

December 29th

Prevention Through Documentation - Workshop Evaluation Report

Download PDF version.

Prevention
Through Documentation

Workshop
organized
by El Nadim and IRCT

Ain
Sokhna - Egypt

23-26
November 2007

 

The workshop "Prevention through Documentation" mainstreaming the use of the Istanbul protocol was organized in collaboration between El Nadim center and IRCT in the city of Ain Sokhna - Egypt in the period between the 23rd and 26th of November 2007. the workshop was preceded by a three months preparation period which was coordinated by Dr. Ragia El Gerzawy, physician at El Nadim center in cooperation of a national training team consisting of Dr. Shawki El Akabawi, Professor of Psychiatry and former chairperson of the neuropsychiatric department at Al Azhar university, Dr. Hisham Farag, Director of Forensic medicine in Kafr El Sheikh governorate, Mr. Mahmoud Qandik, independent lawyer and human rights activist, Mr. Ahmed Seif human rights activist and lawyer and founder of Hisham Mubarak Law Center, Dr. Mona Hamed and Dr. Aida Seif El Dawla from Nadim center. The workshop was joined by an international training team consistent of Ms. Hulya Uspinar, lawyer and activist form Turkey and member of the team who developed the Istanbul protocol and Dr. Rusudan, Professor of Forensic medicine and ice Dean of the university of Georgia. Representing IRCT was Ms. Susanne Kjer.

Identification
cards and preliminary assessment of participants

December 14th

Journal article: Torture in Egypt

Originally published in TORTURE Volume 17 November 2007

by Basma M. Abdel Aziz, M.Psych., M.Neur.

Abstract

This article is concerned with the increasing prevalence of torture in Egypt. Torture is a widespread problem in Egypt, being practiced in the majority of police stations and state security places. It has become a routine practice and is seen daily on a systematic basis. The number of people who are subjected every month to torture is unimaginable. In addition, there are deaths that occur as a result of the torture. However, the Egyptian govern- ment does not give clear answers about the issue. Everyone could be exposed to torture, and for different, illogic reasons. The case of Bany Mazar is a horribly clarifying one. The unclear political situation and the absence of democracy play the main role in the highly increasing rate of torture in Egypt.