Human Rights First Publishes an Article Detailing the Significance of the EPA on the Occasion of Its Launch

July 03, 2022 at 10:00 a.m. EDT

EPA | Human Rights First Publishes an Article Detailing the Significance of the EPA on the Occasion of Its Launch



Brian J. Dooley, Senior Advisor to Human Rights First.

New Database Released Today on Egypt Prisons

No-one really knows how many political prisoners there are in Egypt. In a January 2019 interview Egypt’s President Sisi told BCS show 60 Minutes there were no political prisoners in his jails, but we know that’s not true.

In a 2019 report into torture in Egyptian detention we cited a figure of about 65,000, but we understand that/s an educated guess at best. Hard figures are hard to pint down, and change from day to day and more people are arrested, and some released.

Now a new initiative aims at compiling how many women and children were or have been prisoners since 2013 across 223 Egyptian jails. It’s an ambitious project, called the Egypt Prison Atlas (EPA). It’s lead by the NGO Belady, founded by former American/Egyptian political prisoner Aya Hijazi.  She spent nearly three years in jail for her human right work. We and others campaigned for her release, and she was eventually freed in 2017.

The EPA is an impressive, searchable database of 2623 women and child prisoners. It promises to provide “data on the following: arrested women and children, judges presiding over terrorism courts with a breakdown of the verdicts they issue, an overview of prisons in which political prisoners are detained and, finally, it provides a tally of deaths that occur in prisons.”

Details of the cases are featured, including sentences and ages of child prisoners. It’s possible to search by age, gender and region where the prisoner was arrested. For example, “Ahmed Bassiouny, aged 15, was arrested as a minor from his friend’s home in Alexandria while he was going to study on January 1, 2014. He was accused of killing two people, attempting to kill a third, and joining a terrorist group. He was sentenced to 5 years in prison on September 2, 2015. He appealed the sentence and he was acquitted on August 18, 2019 and released on August 24, 2019….He was tortured and his glasses were constantly broken.”

Or Nour Al-Khatib, “arrested in her home in Alexandria on June 14, 2020 and forcibly disappeared for 4 days until she appeared before the prosecution accused of joining [an illegal] group, spreading false news and abusing social media. She was detained pending investigations.”

In an innovative move too, the website features details of 14 judges, listing their backgrounds, the cases they have presided over in terrorism courts, and the verdicts and sentences they have handed down.  

It includes Hassan Farid, born in 1955. The website presents that  “He obtained a Bachelor of Law in 1979.  He started his judicial career as a prosecutor in Port Said Prosecution; president in Mansoura Prosecution; president in Benha Felony; president in Al Ismailia Felony circuit; president in Tanta Felony circuit, in which he reviewed terrorist cases before he became a president in a criminal circuit of Cairo Appeal Court.” 

The site features details of cases he has judged, including the 2017 mass trial of 68 defendants in the Helwan Department Raid, where he ordered the execution of eight prisoners, life sentences for 50 more, 10 years for seven defendants and five years for three others.

Judge Mohamed Shereen Fahmy is also featured. The site says he has judged 37 terrorism cases, including a 2019 verdict in the Council of Minister case, where he gave a 15 year prison sentence to prominent blogger and activist Ahmad Douma.

The new site doesn’t pretend to answer every question about Egypt’s huge prison system, but it offers new light on who is consigning people to detention, in what cases, and helps catalogue the number of women and children who have been detained.

Our 2021 report on Egyptian prison conditions shows how abuse and detention in Egypt detention fuels recruitment into ISIS.  Finding out the scale of the problem was a challenge, but for us and other researchers looking at human rights issues in Egypt, this new Belady initiative will prove an invaluable resource.