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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Monday, April 3, 2017
American children's advocate languishes in Egyptian jail as Trump to meet Sisi
It is unclear whether Trump will raise plight of imprisoned Americans with Sisi in their first official meeting
Leaders Trump and Sisi to meet on 3 April (AFP)
Alex Kane-Sunday 2 April 2017
Aya Hijazi has been confined in an
Egyptian prison cell for almost three years. Police arrested the
Egyptian American activist on 1 May 2014 in a raid on the Belady
Foundation, an organization she founded for Cairo street children.
The
Egyptian government then charged Hijazi, her Egyptian husband and six
other employees of the foundation with human trafficking and sexual
exploitation. She was held in pretrial detention for more than two years
and authorities barred her from meeting privately with her lawyer.
Human
rights advocates and elected officials say there is no evidence for the
charges lodged against Hijazi. Her case has been riddled with delays
and legal experts say
her continued detention appears to be punitive, that Hijazi is being
“denied her liberty arbitrarily in violation of international law.”
Now,
advocates for Hijazi and six other Americans jailed in Egypt are
ramping up public pressure on the White House and the Egyptian
government ahead of a 3 April meeting between US President Donald Trump
and Egypt’s President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi.
They
want Trump to pressure Sisi to free Hijazi and the other imprisoned
Americans who have been swept up in the Egyptian government’s relentless
crackdown on civil society.
Activists
launched a Freedom First campaign by posting flyers in Washington DC
featuring the names and faces of some of the more than 40,000 Egyptians
in prison.
On
2 April, they are holding a vigil in the US capital featuring a speech
by Mohamed Soltan, an Egyptian American who was tortured and jailed for
almost two years before being freed.
Meet Aya Hijazi. She started an NGO for street kids & has spent 1055 days in pretrial detention for it #FreedomFirst
But it is unclear whether Trump will raise the plight of imprisoned Americans to Sisi in their first official meeting. The New York Times reported April
1 that under Trump, the US will no longer criticize Egypt in public
over human rights issues, and that the White House "aims to address
[Hijazi's] captivity in a way that would maximize the chances of its
being resolved."
The
US president has praised Sisi, whose security forces have killed,
tortured and detained tens of thousands of Egyptians, as a “fantastic
guy.”
Sisi
was the first world leader to congratulate Trump on his election win,
and the Egyptian president has high hopes that he will be welcomed by
the new administration after being snubbed by former President Barack
Obama, who never granted a White House meeting to the Egyptian leader
and temporarily cut off US military aid to Cairo.
“The
Trump administration wants cooperation with Egypt against ISIS,
possibly on some regional peace initiative on Israel, and maybe Libya,”
said Michele Dunne, the director and a senior fellow at the Carnegie
Endowment for International Peace’s Middle East Program. “I don’t know
how much the visit is going to get into domestic issues in Egypt from
the administration's point of view.”
Dunne
added: “It’s possible that for the moment we will see the push on these
issues more from Congress than from the administration.”
Congressional representatives have spoken out for Hijazi to be freed.
Securing her release is deeply important to her family, to her friends, to the community of which she was a part, and to me.-Congressman Don Beyer
“Securing
her release is deeply important to her family, to her friends, to the
community of which she was a part, and to me,” Congressman Don Beyer,
the Democratic representative from the Virginia district Hijazi is from,
told MEE via email. “The White House and the State Department should
bring pressure to bear on her behalf, and use any diplomatic means at
their disposal to secure her release.”
Thanks
to a sustained public campaign for Hijazi’s freedom, high-level US
officials have also advocated for her. Obama administration officials
repeatedly raised Hijazi’s case with their Egyptian counterparts,
although the Hijazi family has complained in the past that Washington could have been doing more.
Hanaa
Soltan, sister of Mohamed Soltan, told Middle East Eye that she has
shared what she learned during her family’s ordeal with the relatives of
other Americans detained in Egypt.
The
most fundamental piece of advice she offered is that it’s important for
the American public to get to know their family member in order to put a
human face on an issue taking place thousands of miles away.
In the case of her brother, awareness and public pressure worked, and the Obama administration secured his release in May 2015.
“When
the White House makes it clear that the health and well being of a US
citizen is a top priority, I don’t think that messaging goes away,” said
Soltan. “If it's on the agenda and the White House makes it a priority
and follows up on it, I don’t think there’s a way to maneuver around
that.”
In September of last year, then-US ambassador to the UN Samantha Power met with Hijazi's family.
Met family of Aya Hijazi, jailed w/o charges 865 days in #Egypt for running children’s shelter. Loss for Egypt
The
State Department says it is closely tracking Hijazi’s continued
detention, and that it is concerned with delays in her trial. On 23
March, a Cairo court decided to postpone issuing a verdict on Hijazi
until at least 16 April.
“We
join others in calling for a prompt resolution to her case and for her
immediate release,” Nicole Thompson, a State Department spokesperson,
told MEE in an emailed statement. “We are providing all possible
consular assistance to Ms. Hijazi. We meet with her frequently,” and US
officials have attended all of her court hearings.
Still, the question remains: Will President Trump get serious with Sisi over the jailing of Hijazi?
In the past, the US has withheld some
assistance from the Egyptian government over human rights concerns. In
October 2013, after a military coup deposed Egypt’s first elected
president and security forces massacred protesters, the Obama
administration suspended delivery of some weapons and equipment. But
Washington restored that military aid in 2015.
The Trump administration, however, has shown little interest in linking human rights concerns with US military aid.
In late March, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson decided to
jettison human rights conditions attached to a sale of fighter jets to
Bahrain, a key US ally that has launched its own repressive crackdown on
pro-democracy protesters. That decision could bode ill for the prospect
of using US military assistance to Egypt as leverage to free Hijazi and
other Americans.
According
to Joe Stork, deputy director of Human Rights Watch's Middle East and
North Africa division, the Trump administration is “embracing” a regime
“in which torture is once again the order of the day.”
“The
Sisi government is just running roughshod over every human rights
concern,” said Stork. “There’s been no public remonstrance from anyone
in the Trump administration, and no reason to think there’s been
anything in private either.”