Egyptian
authorities should stop arbitrarily detaining Syrians and threatening to
summarily deport them. The authorities should release the Syrian detainees
unless they are promptly charged with a valid offense, and not deport Syrians
with visas or asylum seekers without their claims being impartially reviewed,
Human Rights Watch addressed in statement today.
On July 19 and 20, 2013,
Egyptian police and military police arrested at least 72 Syrian men and nine
boys at checkpoints on main roads in Cairo. Those who remain in custody,
including registered asylum seekers and at least nine Syrians with valid visas
or residence permits, have apparently not been charged with any offense. The
authorities have threatened to deport at least 14 of them to countries
neighboring Syria, Human Rights Watch said.
“There is growing hostility in Egypt to the Syrians who fled
there seeking refuge from the war,” saidNadim Houry, deputy Middle East and
North Africa director at Human Rights Watch. “But a tense political climate is
no excuse for police and army officers to pull dozens of Syrian men and boys
off of public transport and throw them in jail without regard for their
rights.”
Human Rights Watch is concerned
that Syrian asylum seekers may be deported without a fair examination of their
asylum claims, as required by international law. On June 24 a family member of
one of those detained told Human Rights Watch that deportation proceedings had
been initiated against seven of the adult Syrian detainees and that their
removal from Egypt was imminent. Lawyers who reviewed the case files of seven
detained children said they also were at risk of immediate deportation.
The United Nations refugee
agency, UNHCR, in Egypt has registered, or is in the process of registering,
some 90,000 asylum seekers from Syria. The Egyptian authorities should at a
minimum provide lawyers and UNHCR staff immediate access to all Syrians in
detention to ensure that there are no registered asylum seekers among them,
Human Rights Watch said.
Since the Egyptian military
removed Mohammed Morsy from power on July 3, regulations governing Syrians’
entrance to Egypt have changed. Since July 8, Syrians have been required to
obtain entry visas and security clearance before they arrive in Egypt, a
hardship for those fleeing fighting. Arrests of Syrians living in Egypt have
increased to levels that activists working with Syrian refugees in Cairo told
Human Rights Watch were unprecedented.
On July 10, Egyptian
television presenters on local channels including Faraeen and OnTV began
accusing the Syrian community of siding with Morsy supporters, fueling an
atmosphere of mistrust and xenophobia. One popular presenter, Tawfiq Okasha,
gave Syrians living in Egypt a 48-hour warning, telling them that the Egyptian
people knew where they lived and that if Syrians did not stop “supporting the
Muslim Brotherhood” after 48 hours, the Egyptians would destroy their homes.
Police and military police
arrested most Syrians being held by removing them from buses and microbuses at
checkpoints on Cairo roads. For example, police and military checkpoints
appeared in Obour City, a development on the outskirts of Cairo with a large
Syrian community, at the time of Morsy’s overthrow, community members told
Human Rights Watch. Starting on July 19, security officers began arresting
Syrians on microbuses and public transport and detaining them at the
checkpoints. One man who was detained but released, as well as relatives who
went to the checkpoint to bring passports to people who had been arrested, told
Human Rights Watch that security forces stopped vehicles, then asked all
Syrians to disembark and provide identification documents and passports. No
reason was given for their search or detention.
Witnesses told Human Rights
Watch that on July 19 they saw military police holding 50 to 60 Syrians and
three Bangladeshi men at a military police checkpoint on the Cairo-Ismailiya
Desert Road. Those detained that night at the checkpoint included two boys,
ages 14 and 16. The military police ordered the men and boys to board buses at
the checkpoint, which then drove them to unknown locations.
Relatives and lawyers provided
information to Human Rights Watch about the detention of approximately 40
Syrians apprehended at checkpoints and held in Qanater Prison on the outskirts
of Cairo, as well as 7 boys in al-Marg juvenile detention facility in Cairo.
Local activists who reached the detainees by telephone gave Human Rights Watch
the names of another 34 men and boys detained on July 20 and held in Shurouq
police station, in a northern Cairo neighborhood. Five of those men were
released on July 21, according to a local activist, but the rest remained in
custody.
Families of 16 detainees told
Human Rights Watch that neither they nor their relatives’ lawyers were able to
visit the detainees during their first three to four days of custody. Two of
the detained boys called their uncle at about 2:30 p.m. on July 21 and told him
they had been separated from the other members of the family with whom they had
been travelling. They said that Egyptian National Security was holding them,
and that officials had told them they would be deported. They said that they
had been blindfolded and handcuffed, and been given inadequate food.
The two boys have not been
held in accordance with international standards for the treatment of children,
including the Convention on the Rights of the Child. Their families told Human
Rights Watch that they had had no contact whatsoever with their sons for the
first 40 hours of their detention, and they had no way to call or meet with
them for several days. No charges are known to have been filed against the
boys.
“Syrian children in particular have already faced enormous
trauma at home, so separating them from their families and throwing them in
jail in Egypt is unconscionable,” Houry said. “The Egyptian authorities need to
treat all Syrians in accordance with the law and to inform their families of
their whereabouts and status.”
All seven members of the group
threatened with deportation had valid immigration documents and four are
registered as asylum seekers with UNHCR, according to the relative who told
Human Rights Watch about the situation. Lawyers representing seven detained
children said that the children’s case files referred to deportation orders and
that they were also at risk of imminent deportation. Children, regardless of
their immigration status, should be afforded special protection and should not
be deported and separated from their families, Human Rights Watch said.
Under international refugee
and human rights law, the Egyptian government may not send anyone to a place
where their life or freedom is threatened, or where they risk torture or
inhuman or degrading treatment. Before deporting anyone to Syria, Egyptian
authorities should ensure that all asylum seekers from Syria have access to
UNHCR, which under a 1954 agreement with Egypt conducts refugee status
determination procedures in the country.
“The Egyptian authorities should uphold
their obligations to Syrian asylum seekers under international law,” Houry
said. “That starts with ensuring that the security services immediately end
their campaign of picking up Syrians on the streets and threatening them with
summary deportation.”
Zaman Alwasl
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