Has South Africa overlooked Egypt’s problematic participation at the forthcoming BRICS summit?
Dignifying its military leader Abdel Fattah Al-Sisi with the expected red-carpet treatment will in effect be an endorsement of regime change via military coup, which is how Cairo’s despot overthrew the democratically elected Morsi government to gain power.
This month marks a decade since Al-Sisi appeared on TV in a military beret to announce the constitution’s suspension and the end of Morsi’s presidency.
RSF (Reporters Without Borders) documents that as he spoke, security forces were preparing to storm the Cairo bureaus of the Qatari TV channels Al-Jazeera and Al-Jazeera Mubasher and arrest their journalists.
That same evening, Al-Sisi’s military goons led a purge against many more media outlets and shut them down for allegedly supporting Mohamed Morsi’s party, the Muslim Brotherhood, and arrested their directors.
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RSF’s research reveals that these events were just a foretaste of the purge that Al-Sisi would wage against the media.
“In the past ten years, at least 170 journalists have been jailed, dozens of others have been arbitrarily arrested and interrogated, access to more than 500 news websites has been blocked and six journalists have been killed,” the RSF said.
Fault lines in the architecture of global politics are clearly evident in the way Egypt’s notorious leader is misleadingly endowed with a crown of honour and respectability.Regrettably, most mainstream media has bolstered this faulty image, notwithstanding the fact that the regime of General Al-Sisi is undoubtedly one of the most repressive in the world.
Rights organisations have painstakingly compiled reports that point to a catalogue of horrors, detailing terrifying conditions of abuse and cruelty.
Forced disappearances styled on America’s notorious “renditions”, extrajudicial executions, detention without trial, draconian secret prisons, persecution of opponents especially members and leaders of the Muslim Brotherhood, is routine.
Unsurprisingly the Sisi regime and its spin doctors will deny that such atrocities exist. However dissidents and others who have managed to flee, including families of prisoners and employers of renowned journalists facing uncertainty behind bars, testify to the reality of severe repression and denial of human rights.
Ricard Gonzalez, a journalist and author who spent a number of years in Egypt, sketched the background to Al-Sisi’s bloody rise to power. “In 2013, a military coup put an end to Egypt’s democratic transition that began with the resignation of dictator Hosni Mubarak following a popular uprising that took place against the larger backdrop of the Arab Spring.”
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He confirms what is widely attested to by human rights organisations that Al-Sisi has since gone on to impose an authoritarian dictatorship even more brutal than that of Mubarak. All dissent is ruthlessly repressed and the regime’s security agencies have particularly targeted the Muslim Brotherhood, winner of the elections during the country’s brief democratic interlude.
A decade later, the bloodstained leader of Egypt’s extremely violent military coup, roams about the world as a respected “statesman” while thousands of anti-coup activists languish in jail.
Surely they, alongside fellow dissidents, would have the expectation that democratic countries such as South Africa as well as the African Union (AU) will not only raise concerns, but also agitate for their freedom?
The views expressed in this article belong to the author and do not necessarily reflect the editorial policy of Middle East Monitor.