Mina Thabet, a human rights activist
specialising in Coptic and Minority rights, was arrested yesterday at his home
in the early hours of the morning by plainclothes police officers.
Mr Thabet is Minority Rights Program Director
at the Egyptian Commission for Rights and Freedoms (ECRF). He was arrested at
his home at 3.30am on 19 May and taken away in an unmarked car. Earlier in the
day a national security agent had visited Mr Thabet's family and made enquiries
about him. Mr Thabet is in police detention after being charged with belonging
to a terrorist group, inciting violence and public assembly, spreading
fabricated information for terrorist purposes, inciting attacks on police
stations, and possession of leaflets undermining national security and the
ruling regime.
The evidence against Mr Thabet is reported to include an introductory paper on the Bread and Freedom Party, a notebook containing Virgin Mary pictures and documents on international law relating to the rights of minorities.
The ECRF’s work includes a focus on minority
rights, including the Coptic community, and Mr
Thabet has worked on several cases, including the Coptic students from El Minya
province who were convicted of blasphemy and
related charges in February.
Mr Thabet's arrest is part of an intensified
crackdown on NGOs and human rights defenders in Egypt that has resulted in the
arrests of human rights defenders across the country and the imposition of
multiple travel bans and asset freezes. In June 2015, Mohamed Lofty, the
Executive Director of the ECRF was detained and had his passport confiscated in
Cairo airport as he attempted to travel to Germany.
The President of the Board of the ECRF, Ahmed
Abdallah, was arrested at his home in April and faces the same charges as Mina
Thabet. The continued targeting of human rights defenders has been condemned by
United States Secretary of State, the United Kingdom Foreign and Commonwealth
Office, the Federal Foreign Office in Germany and the UN High Commissioner for
Human Rights.
Mervyn Thomas, Chief Executive of Christian Solidarity Worldwide (CSW), said, “We are deeply concerned by the arrest of Mina Thabet and the worrying crackdown on civil society and human rights defenders. Egypt undoubtedly faces an unprecedented terrorist threat that sometimes necessitates extraordinary measures; however human rights defenders ought to be viewed as allies in the effort to create a just and equitable society and accountable governance Mr Thabet and the ECRF perform invaluable work in highlighting the difficulties encountered by minority groups and assisting victims of violations to seek redress. We urge the authorities to ensure that he receives due process and it is our hope that the exaggerated charges filed against him are dropped.
We further call upon the Egyptian authorities to adhere to the
UN Declaration on Human Rights Defenders, which Egypt supported in 1998, which
says that States should guarantee the rights of individuals, including in
association with others, to promote and protect fundamental freedoms, which is
what Mr Thabet and his colleagues are doing.”