Date: Nov 17, 2010
Source: Associated Press
Amnesty urges Egypt to investigate torture claims

CAIRO – Amnesty International called on Egyptian authorities Tuesday to investigate allegations that police tortured a young man to death in Alexandria and dumped his mutilated body into a canal.


According to the rights group, the family of Ahmed Shabaan said police officers beat him at the Sidi Gaber police station, which has been at the center of abuse allegations before.


Amnesty said the 19-year-old man went missing Nov. 7 and his body was recovered in a canal four days later.
Egypt's Interior Ministry denied the allegations and said it has no record of police ever arresting Shabaan. It said Shabaan had stolen the mobile phone from a passer-by, but had escaped arrest.


His family said witnesses told them their son was taken to the Sidi Gaber police station and they were denied access to him when they tried to visit.


According to the Interior Ministry, a preliminary autopsy revealed no evidence that Shabaan was beaten.
Two officers from the same police station are being tried in the killing of another man, Khaled Said, who witnesses say was dragged out of an Internet cafe by plainclothes officers and beaten to death on the sidewalk.

 

The government maintains that Said died of suffocation after swallowing a packet of drugs — a claim met with derision by many after photos were circulated on social networking sites showing Said's body covered with bruises, his teeth broken and jaw smashed.


Said's death become a rallying cry for groups campaigning against Egypt's decades-old emergency law, which they say has led to abuses by the security forces.