Africa News of Tuesday, 26 January 2021

Source: GNA

Amnesty decries Egyptian prison conditions 10 years after Arab Spring

File Photo: Amnesty International File Photo: Amnesty International

Human rights watchdog Amnesty International has decried Egyptian prison conditions 10 years after the Arab Spring.

Thousands continue to be held for months or years under often inhumane conditions in overcrowded prisons, according to a report published by the organization on Monday.

According to the report, prisoners receive unhealthy food, are kept in dark, poorly ventilated cells with little or no fresh air, and in unsanitary conditions with little access to water and toilets.

Inadequate health care makes prisoners suffer unnecessarily and in some cases may have resulted in death, Amnesty alleges.

Contact with relatives is greatly reduced or completely denied and the report also notes that there is no uniform strategy in the fight against the coronavirus.

In its report, Amnesty International documented the detention experiences of 67 individuals, 10 of whom had died in custody and two shortly after their release in 2019 or 2020.

Carried out primarily between February 2020 and November 2020, the research focused on 16 prisons.

Amnesty has evidence of prison authorities "targeting prisoners critical of the government and denying them adequate food or family visits," Markus Beeko, Secretary-General of Amnesty International in Germany, asserted.
The UN estimates that 114,000 people are in prison in Egypt.

The government has rejected reports of torture and bad conditions. The state news site Al-Ahram referred to what it called "negative rumours."

Last week, the Interior Ministry released a video from the notorious Torah prison in Cairo showing inmates being treated with the latest medical standards or reading, painting, and baking.