(Reuters) - An
Egyptian committee investigating political violence made a rare break on
Wednesday with judicial support for heavy-handed state tactics,
recommending the government should amend a law restricting protest. The government-ordered
inquiry is investigating acts of violence after the army toppled
President Mohamed Mursi in July 2013 and cracked down on his Muslim
Brotherhood supporters. Its
report echoed the findings of a government-appointed panel in March,
blaming much of the violence at protest sites on the Brotherhood - which
maintains it espouses only peaceful methods - while placing some
responsibility on the police for disproportionate use of force. But
in an unusual move, the inquiry advocated changes to a law which has
been used to imprison many of the leading lights of the 2011 Tahrir
Square uprising that forced veteran autocrat Hosni Mubarak from power. Its
report described the law, which restricts the freedom to protest, as
flawed, citing "inappropriately heavy punishments", the interior
minister's right to forbid any peaceful protest, and articles that
seemed to violate the constitution. "There is a need to form a committee of experts to reconsider the law ..." the report read. The
government is not obliged to implement any of the committee's
recommendations, but the report could be used as a basis for future
legal cases. The army
killed hundreds in the street and arrested thousands more after Mursi's
overthrow, and since then attacks from a growing Islamist insurgency
have killed more than 500 people, mostly police and soldiers, according
to government figures. The
committee called for better training to help police manage protests
less violently, criticising the use of live ammunition, and said the
government should pay out compensation for victims who were proven not
to have taken part in violent acts themselves.
Egyptian inquiry into political violence seeks changes to protest law
Reuters
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