US to deliver Apache helicopters to Egypt despite unprecedented Human Rights Violations

charrob

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[size=+2]US to deliver Apache helicopters to Egypt despite unprecedented Human Rights Violations[/size]


The US has given the go-ahead for the delivery of 10 Apache helicopters to Egypt that the Obama administration had withheld since the military-led overthrow of Mohamed Morsi last year.

Since Morsi's overthrow last year, following days of mass protests, Egypt's authorities have arrested more than 16,000 dissidents, and killed thousands. The crackdown first targeted Morsi's Islamist supporters, but has since enveloped any kind of opposition – including secular activists and journalists.

Egyptians will elect a new president next month in Egypt's first election since Morsi's overthrow – but several prominent candidates have dropped out, citing a lack of free speech. One, the moderate Islamist Abdel Moneim Aboul Fotouh, highlighted the impossibility of campaigning in an environment where political opposition has often been equated to terrorism.

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The Egyptian authorities are using every resource at their disposal to quash dissent and trample on human rights, said Amnesty International in a damning report published ahead of the third anniversary of the “25 January Revolution”.

The briefing entitled Roadmap to repression: No end in sight to human rights violations, paints a bleak picture of the state of rights and liberties in Egypt since the ousting of President Mohamed Morsi in July 2013.

“Egypt has witnessed a series of damaging blows to human rights and state violence on an unprecedented scale over the last seven months. Three years on, the demands of the ‘25 January Revolution’ for dignity and human rights seem further away than ever. Several of its architects are behind bars and repression and impunity are the order of the day,” said Hassiba Hadj Sahraoui, Middle East and North Africa Deputy Director at Amnesty International.

Across the board the Egyptian authorities have tightened the noose on freedom of expression and assembly. Repressive legislation has been introduced making it easier for the government to silence its critics and crack down on protests. Security forces have been given free rein to act above the law and with no prospect of being held to account for abuses.

“With such measures in place, Egypt is headed firmly down the path towards further repression and confrontation. Unless the authorities change course and take concrete steps to show they respect human rights and the rule of law, starting with the immediate and unconditional release of prisoners of conscience, Egypt is likely to find its jails packed with unlawful detained prisoners and its morgues and hospitals with yet more victims of arbitrary and abusive force by its police,” said Hassiba Hadj Sahraoui.

In recent months, the country has seen violence on an unprecedented scale, with security forces committing gross human rights violations, routinely using excessive, including lethal, force against opposition protesters and at demonstrations on university campuses.

Since 3 July 2013, 1,400 people have been killed in political violence, most of them due to excessive force used by security forces. No proper investigation has been carried out into the deaths of more than 500 Morsi supporters when excessive force was used to disperse a sit-in at Rabaa al-Adawiya in August 2013. Not a single member of the security forces has been charged in connection with the incident which was a callous bloodbath on an unprecedented scale.

“Instead of reining in the security forces, the authorities have effectively handed them a mandate for repression. Once again in Egypt, the rhetoric of ‘countering terrorism’ is being used to justify sweeping crackdowns that fail to distinguish between legitimate dissent and violent attacks,” said Hassiba Hadj Sahraoui.

“Security forces must be held to account for human rights violations. Far from it, by allowing them to operate with impunity, the authorities have emboldened them. The cycle of abuse will only be broken when the rule of law applies to all, regardless of their rank, and political affiliations”.

In the months following the military’s removal of Mohamed Morsi as president, army checkpoints, security personnel and government buildings have come under increased attack by groups described by the authorities as “terrorists”. While the Egyptian government has the right and duty to protect lives and prosecute those responsible for such crimes, human rights must not be sacrificed in the name of “countering terrorism”.

Ahead of the third anniversary of the uprising, Egypt’s interior minister, Mohamed Ibrahim, warned that prisons and police stations have been secured with heavy weapons. In a show of force, signalling how emboldened the security forces have become, he dared anyone to try to test their strength.

The most brazen clampdown has been on freedom of expression and assembly. Thousands of perceived Muslim Brotherhood supporters and members have been rounded up by the security forces for criticizing Mohamed Morsi’s ouster. Women, men and children peacefully expressing their opposition to the military have not been spared.

In December the Muslim Brotherhood was officially designated a “terrorist organization”, making it even easier for the authorities to crack down on the group. On 23 December at least 1,055 charities affiliated with the Muslim Brotherhood had their assets frozen.

Hundreds of students have also been arrested during protests and clashes. In one emblematic case in November, a 19-year-old student Mohamed Reda was shot dead at Cairo University when riot police fired teargas and shotguns inside the university grounds.

Secular activists and students have also been targeted in an apparent attempt by the government to quash all dissent, across the political spectrum. Prominent “25 January Revolution” activists are today in jail for daring to call for accountability and human rights.

A new protest law placing restrictions on public gatherings and demonstrations has been introduced posing a grave threat to freedom of assembly and granting security forces license to use excessive force against peaceful protesters. The result is a charter for state-sanctioned repression and carte blanche for security force abuses.

This has been coupled with attacks on journalists and media freedom as well as raids and attempts to place further restrictions on non-governmental organizations.

“There is a concerted effort underway to squeeze out any independent observers from activists, to journalists to nongovernmental organizations. This is a deliberate attempt to make it more difficult for them to operate in Egypt and continue their work documenting and reporting on state abuses,” said Hassiba Hadj Sahraoui.

The authorities have also sought to use the criminal justice system as a tool of repression.

“The judiciary is being used to punish government opponents while allowing perpetrators of human rights violations to walk free,” said Hassiba Hadj Sahraoui.
 
So, back to the helicopters....

The posted article states " US to deliver Apache helicopters to Egypt "

All the rest of the article fails to address the particulars of these "delivered" helicopters...

Is this the US government giving away free shit or is it a US company making a sale?
 
Is this the US government giving away free shit or is it a US company making a sale?


This is part of the annual U.S. aid package to Egypt.

"Pentagon spokesman John Kirby said the delivery simply recognized Egypt's commitment to its 1979 peace treaty with Israel, the terms of which dictate that the US supply Egypt with annual deliveries of military aid."

What I particularly find immoral is that the U.S. Law prohibits the giving of military aid to countries whose governments were put in place via a military coup or whose governments are in violation of international human right's law. The current Egyptian military government fits both of those conditions, and yet we persist in giving weapons to a military dictatorship / police state that will surely use those weapons against their own people-- as Egypt under Mubarak always had done.
 
I can get completely behind not giving away war goodies to anyone..

What a ridiculous concept for a country that's borrowing and printing devalued currency just to exist...
 
The feds should give ME aid. :) I'd love to have an Apache. Or and F-14. I will sit in the pilot seat blasting "highway to the dangerzone" from a walkman. :D
 
The U.S. taxpayer spends around $1.3 billion annually for military aid given to the Egyptian Government. However, there are laws on the books stating that our government is not supposed to give aid to governments that result from military coups or who are engaged in human rights abuses.

Here's the latest on human rights abuses coming out of Egypt (yet Apache Helicopters are to be delivered to them courtesy of the U.S. taxpayer):

[size=+2]
Egyptian judge to rule on death penalty for 1,200 men
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--Muslim Brotherhood leader Mohamed Badie among defendants in mass trial amid crackdown in which 16,000 arrested.


More than 1,200 men face the death sentence in Egypt, as a judge deliberates on whether to uphold the sentences he gave 529 defendants in March.

The leader of the Muslim Brotherhood, Mohamed Badie, whose colleague Mohamed Morsi was removed from Egypt's presidency last July, is among the defendants in one of two mass trials.

Amnesty International has said the case of the 529 men is the largest batch of simultaneous death sentences in living memory. Along with the other case, in which 683 have been sentenced to death for killing a policeman, it forms the latest installment of a government crackdown during which at least 16,000 people have been arrested and more than 2,500 killed since the ousting of Morsi.

Prosecutors say the defendants in both cases are Brotherhood members who killed two police officers during nationwide violence last August. The 529 defendants are accused of lynching a policeman in Matay, a town in Minya province, southern Egypt. On the same day, 683 others – including the Brotherhood's Badie – are said to have killed another officer in the nearby town of Adwa.

But many of the defendants in both trials say they were neither present during the attacks, nor supporters of the Brotherhood. In some cases, they say they were not even in the province itself – and that they were reported to the police by informants acting on personal agendas.

Both verdicts would have been reached after just two court sessions in which defence lawyers said there was no time to assess thousands of pages of testimonies and court documents.

"There is nothing against me – no one has any evidence that I was there on that day," said Hagag Saber, a 34-year-old government electrician who is one of the 683 sentenced to death for the killing in Adwa. Currently at large, he claims he was in Cairo on the day of the attacks.

"There is no justice or integrity, nothing based on facts. Everything is based on an illegitimate investigation that took hearsay from people in the street," he said.

Saber's lawyer, Mohamed Abd-El Fatah Ali, said the judge – Saeed Youssef, who presided over both cases – could not have had time to read the thousands of pages of court documents relating to the case.

"There's no human who could read this amount of newspaper pages, let alone legal documents containing testimonies, in order to find the paragraph that relates to this case and these defendants in the time allowed," said Ali. "That would take three months."

Families have alleged that some defendants are not even mentioned in the documents.

One of Ali's colleagues, Ahmed Eid, was arrested because of personal differences with local policemen, his family has claimed. Previously a lawyer in the 529-strong case, Eid joined his clients in jail after the case had officially been referred to court. His wife said police arrested him because he had failed to pay them a bribe, and that investigators – with whom he was in daily contact on behalf of his clients – had never previously suggested he was involved in the case.

The sentences were reached despite an international campaign in which more than 1.5 million people signed a petition hosted by online activists Avaaz that called for a commuting of the sentences.

But in Egypt the outcry has not been universal. Many see the 529 death sentences as a fitting revenge on the Brotherhood, who are blamed for a wave of militancy across Egypt in recent months.

"The outrage over the conviction of 529 terrorists is in itself an outrage," said one commentator in a state-run newspaper this month.

After the initial sentences on the 529 in March, Egypt's foreign ministry released a statement defending the court's integrity. The verdict was announced in the separate mass trial of the other 683. "The sentence was issued by an independent court after careful study of the case," the statement read.
 
Here's your CIA/Mi5 covertly groomed Egyptian puppet dictator: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abdel_Fattah_el-Sisi
[h=1]Abdel Fattah el-Sisi[/h]
h_50944958-725x376.jpg


They spend billions of dollars grooming puppets over decades to get what they want.
 
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