person:giulio regeni

  • Egypt. Regeni lawyer discloses names of Egyptian suspects in murder case | MadaMasr
    https://madamasr.com/en/2018/12/06/feature/politics/regeni-lawyer-discloses-names-of-egyptian-suspects-in-murder-case

    The lawyer representing the family of Giulio Regeni says she has compiled a list of at least 20 people suspected of involvement in the death of the Italian PhD student, who was tortured and killed in Egypt nearly three years ago.

    Alessandra Ballerini made the comments at a press conference in Rome on Wednesday alongside Regeni’s parents and their supporters. She said the list was based on an extensive investigation with a legal team in Egypt, and that most of the suspects were generals and colonels in the Interior Ministry’s National Security Agency (NSA).

    “It is very unlikely that President [Abdel Fattah al-]Sisi was unaware of what was going on,” Ballerini said.

    Regeni, a PhD candidate who was researching independent trade unions in Egypt, disappeared from a metro station on January 25, 2016 — the fifth anniversary of the 2011 revolution — while on his way to meet a friend in downtown Cairo. His body was found several days later, bearing marks of severe torture, on the side of a highway on the outskirts of the city.

    Among the names Ballerini identified were the five Egyptian security officials Rome prosecutors placed under official investigation on Tuesday. They include Major General Tarek Saber, a senior official at the NSA at the time of Regeni’s death, who retired in 2017; Major Sherif Magdy, who also served at the NSA where he was in charge of the team that placed Regini under surveillance; Colonel Hesham Helmy, who served at a security center in charge of policing the Cairo district where Regeni lived; Colonel Asser Kamal, who was the head of a police department in charge of street works and discipline; and junior police officer Mahmoud Negm, according to the Associated Press.

    “These people should fear being arrested when they travel abroad because they murdered an Italian citizen,” Ballerini said.

  • Egypt. Regeni lawyer discloses names of Egyptian suspects in murder case | MadaMasr
    https://madamasr.com/en/2018/12/06/feature/politics/regeni-lawyer-discloses-names-of-egyptian-suspects-in-murder-case

    The lawyer representing the family of Giulio Regeni says she has compiled a list of at least 20 people suspected of involvement in the death of the Italian PhD student, who was tortured and killed in Egypt nearly three years ago.

    Alessandra Ballerini made the comments at a press conference in Rome on Wednesday alongside Regeni’s parents and their supporters. She said the list was based on an extensive investigation with a legal team in Egypt, and that most of the suspects were generals and colonels in the Interior Ministry’s National Security Agency (NSA).

    “It is very unlikely that President [Abdel Fattah al-]Sisi was unaware of what was going on,” Ballerini said.

    Regeni, a PhD candidate who was researching independent trade unions in Egypt, disappeared from a metro station on January 25, 2016 — the fifth anniversary of the 2011 revolution — while on his way to meet a friend in downtown Cairo. His body was found several days later, bearing marks of severe torture, on the side of a highway on the outskirts of the city.

    Among the names Ballerini identified were the five Egyptian security officials Rome prosecutors placed under official investigation on Tuesday. They include Major General Tarek Saber, a senior official at the NSA at the time of Regeni’s death, who retired in 2017; Major Sherif Magdy, who also served at the NSA where he was in charge of the team that placed Regini under surveillance; Colonel Hesham Helmy, who served at a security center in charge of policing the Cairo district where Regeni lived; Colonel Asser Kamal, who was the head of a police department in charge of street works and discipline; and junior police officer Mahmoud Negm, according to the Associated Press.

    “These people should fear being arrested when they travel abroad because they murdered an Italian citizen,” Ballerini said.

  • British universities criticised over pursuit of Egyptian links | Education | The Guardian

    https://www.theguardian.com/education/2018/aug/22/uk-colleges-accused-of-ignoring-human-rights-abuse-in-egypt

    Leading British universities have been accused of turning a blind eye to human rights abuses in Egypt in pursuit of opening campuses under the country’s authoritarian regime.

    More than 200 prominent academics and others in the UK university sector have signed a letter to the Guardian opposing the collaboration against the backdrop of unanswered questions about the abduction and murder of the Cambridge PhD student Giulio Regeni.

    The letter writers also highlight wider concerns about academic freedom, the welfare of LGBT staff, and the trend towards what they say is a marketisation of higher education.

    The British government and the advocacy group Universities UK are promoting partnerships between British higher education institutions and their Egyptian counterparts.

    A series of memorandum of understanding (MoU) agreements and talks have opened up the possibility of British bodies establishing international branch campuses and what Universities UK describes as “partnerships, collaborative research, student and staff exchange programmes, joint funding applications, and capacity building”.

  • Egypt After 2 years of investigations: Regeni and clues about his killers | MadaMasr
    https://www-madamasr-com.cdn.ampproject.org/c/s/www.madamasr.com/en/2018/02/01/opinion/u/after-2-years-of-investigations-regeni-and-clues-about-his-killers/amp/?platform=hootsuite

    Editorial Note: On January 25, 2018, the second anniversary of the disappearance of Italian researcher Giulio Regeni, the Italian newspapers Corriere della Sera and La Repubblica published a letter addressed to their editors in chief that was written by Giuseppe Pignatone, Rome’s chief prosecutor. In the letter, Pignatone summarizes the results of the Italian-Egyptian joint investigation into Regeni’s death. While Mada Masr published a story on the letter on January 26 titled “Italian General Prosecutor: Egyptian secret services complicit in Regeni case,” we have decided to translate Pignatone’s letter into English, preserving Corriere della Sera’s editorial framing, to give the full context of the prosecutor’s address.

    Dear editor in chief,

    Two years after Giulio Regeni was abducted in Cairo, here is a brief reflection on some aspects of the inquiry.

    The Cooperation

    The fact that the tragic events took place in Egypt naturally entailed that the Egyptian authorities had, first and foremost, the right, but also the duty, to carry out the investigations. As for us, Italian judicial magistrates and police, we can only cooperate and support the investigations of the Egyptian team by making suggestions and requests. We cannot possibly imagine gathering evidence that would allow us to identify those responsible for the crime from outside Egypt.

    This cooperation with our Egyptian colleagues is the first of its kind in the history of judicial cooperation. For the first time, I believe, a public prosecutor of another country came to Italy, in the absence of treaties, to share the results of his own investigations. We also traveled to Cairo for the same reasons: there have been seven meetings in total. For this, I must publicly thank Prosecutor General Nabil Sadek.

    In the absence of international agreements or conventions, as in this case, such complex and demanding judicial cooperation can be made possible only if the governments of both countries simultaneously initiate real cooperation. Undoubtedly, the pressure of public opinion – also at an international scale –played a major role in this.

    The Inquiry

    As magistrates, our activities have to comply with specific standards and methods, as well as with our established legal culture. It was not always easy to penetrate the mentality of the Arab world and measure ourselves against a judicial system with completely different investigative procedures and practices.

    To give an example of this: in order not to break the thread of cooperation, we had to acknowledge the legal impossibility of being present during witness hearings held before our Egyptian colleagues in Cairo.

    Sometimes, hurdles were overcome. At least in part. Another example: we had immediately asked that data from the mobile network in certain areas of Cairo, concerning the crucial dates of January 25 and February 3, 2016 (the disappearance of Giulio and the date the body was discovered), be delivered to us, but Egyptian law wouldn’t allow it. The problem was partly solved because we had access to the reports of Egyptian experts. However, accessing the crude data and analyzing it directly obviously would have made a huge difference.

    Despite all these obstacles, we continued with our work, and I think I can say we reached some tangible results. First, we wanted to avoid the investigations heading down the wrong track. Focusing on non-existent espionage activity by Giulio or the involvement of a group of common criminals, for example. Secondly, we wanted to establish some red lines within the framework for further investigations into the murder. First and foremost, the motive can be easily traced to his research activities during his months in Cairo. Light was shed on the role played by some of the people who Giulio met in the course of his research and who betrayed him. It has also become clear that Giulio attracted the attention of Egypt’s state apparatus for several months, attention which increased in intensity leading up to January 25.

    These are crucial elements in pursuing the investigation, and above all, in finding common ground with our Egyptian colleagues. Two years ago, no one would have expected that we could obtain such results.

    We do not intend to stop here, even though we remain extremely aware of the significant complexity of the investigation. Here is another example, to illustrate the hurdles we have already overcome and those we still have to face. During our last meeting in Cairo, in December, we wanted to share the meticulous reconstruction of all the evidence collected until now with our Egyptian colleagues. This information was compiled by the Raggruppamento Operativo Speciale and the Servizio Centrale Operativo, who did, one must say, an outstanding job these past two years. For this, they deserve our gratitude. In an ordinary investigation, the public prosecutor’s office would have been able to draw some conclusion, although incomplete, on the basis of the information filed. In this case, the cooperation between both offices imposes a slow and laborious process: sharing the information, waiting until our colleagues examine it, and then together assessing the next steps to take. This is a complex process based on a reciprocal sense of collaboration, and while it cannot be as quick as we all wish, it is the only possible one. The slightest rush on our part would boomerang and nullify all the evidence that has been painfully reconstructed until now.

    Cambridge

    Since the murderer’s motive is linked exclusively to Giulio’s research, one has to highlight how important it is to comprehend what led him to travel to Cairo and to identify all those he had contact with, both academics and Egyptian labor union members.

    This is why the obvious inconsistencies between the statements by university staff and what we uncovered from Giulio’s correspondence (recovered in Italy through his personal computer) required further investigations in the United Kingdom. These investigations were made possible thanks to the effective cooperation of the British authorities. The results of this cooperation – including the search and seizure of material – seem fruitful after an initial examination. They are currently being studied by our investigators.

    The family

    We met Giulio’s parents numerous times over the past 24 months. We were impressed by their dignity in the face of tragedy, and by their incessant efforts to pursue truth and justice. We can assure them, on our part, that we will continue deploying sustained efforts, doing everything necessary and useful to bring those responsible for the abduction, torture and the murder of Giulio to justice.

    Rome’s chief prosecutor

  • Why Was an Italian Graduate Student Tortured and Murdered in Egypt? - The New York Times
    https://www.nytimes.com/2017/08/15/magazine/giulio-regeni-italian-graduate-student-tortured-murdered-egypt.html?_r=0

    The target of the Egyptian police, that day in November 2015, was the street vendors selling socks, $2 sunglasses and fake jewelry, who clustered under the arcades of the elegant century-old buildings of Heliopolis, a Cairo suburb. Such raids were routine, but these vendors occupied an especially sensitive location. Just 100 yards away is the ornate palace where Egypt’s president, the military strongman Abdel Fattah el-Sisi, welcomes foreign dignitaries. As the men hurriedly gathered their goods from mats and doorways, preparing to flee, they had an unlikely assistant: an Italian graduate student named Giulio Regeni.

    He arrived in Cairo a few months earlier to conduct research for his doctorate at Cambridge. Raised in a small village near Trieste by a sales manager father and a schoolteacher mother, Regeni, a 28-year-old leftist, was enthralled by the revolutionary spirit of the Arab Spring. In 2011, when demonstrations erupted in Tahrir Square, leading to the ouster of President Hosni Mubarak, he was finishing a degree in Arabic and politics at Leeds University. He was in Cairo in 2013, working as an intern at a United Nations agency, when a second wave of protests led the military to oust Egypt’s newly elected president, the Islamist Mohamed Morsi, and put Sisi in charge. Like many Egyptians who had grown hostile to Morsi’s overreaching government, Regeni approved of this development. ‘‘It’s part of the revolutionary process,’’ he wrote an English friend, Bernard Goyder, in early August. Then, less than two weeks later, Sisi’s security forces killed 800 Morsi supporters in a single day, the worst state-sponsored massacre in Egypt’s history. It was the beginning of a long spiral of repression. Regeni soon left for England, where he started work for Oxford Analytica, a business-research firm.

    From afar, Regeni followed Sisi’s government closely. He wrote reports on North Africa, analyzing political and economic trends, and after a year had saved enough money to start on his doctorate in development studies at Cambridge. He decided to focus on Egypt’s independent unions, whose series of unprecedented strikes, starting in 2006, had primed the public for the revolt against Mubarak; now, with the Arab Spring in tatters, Regeni saw the unions as a fragile hope for Egypt’s battered democracy. After 2011 their numbers exploded, multiplying from four to thousands. There were unions for everything: butchers and theater attendants, well diggers and miners, gas-bill collectors and extras in the trashy TV soap operas that played during the holy month of Ramadan. There was even an Independent Trade Union for Dwarfs. Guided by his supervisor, a noted Egyptian academic at Cambridge who had written critically of Sisi, Regeni chose to study the street vendors — young men from distant villages who scratched out a living on the sidewalks of Cairo. Regeni plunged into their world, hoping to assess their union’s potential to drive political and social change.

    But by 2015 that kind of cultural immersion, long favored by budding Arabists, was no longer easy. A pall of suspicion had fallen over Cairo. The press had been muzzled, lawyers and journalists were regularly harassed and informants filled Cairo’s downtown cafes. The police raided the office where Regeni conducted interviews; wild tales of foreign conspiracies regularly aired on government TV channels.

    Continue reading the main story
    RECENT COMMENTS

    Manon 31 minutes ago
    Thank you for shedding light on the horrible death of my compatriot and the responsibilities of the Egyptian authorities.
    Emanuele Cerizza 31 minutes ago
    Great reporting. Thank you Mr. Declan Walsh for this solid view on Giulio Regeni’s ill fated death. More and more we Italians have to...
    oxerio 32 minutes ago
    If a foreign person come in NY or Palermo or Shanghai or Mexico City and became to investigate about local gang, or local mafia’s...
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    Regeni was undeterred. Proficient in five languages, he was insatiably curious and exuded a low-intensity charm that attracted a wide circle of friends. From 12 to 14, he served as youth mayor of his hometown, Fiumicello. He prided himself on his ability to navigate different cultures, and he relished Cairo’s unruly street life: the smoky cafes, the endless hustle, the candy-colored party boats that plied the Nile at night. He registered as a visiting scholar at American University in Cairo and found a room in Dokki, a traffic-choked neighborhood between the Pyramids and the Nile, where he shared an apartment with two young professionals: Juliane Schoki, who taught German, and Mohamed El Sayad, a lawyer at one of Cairo’s oldest law firms. Dokki was an unfashionable address, but it was just two subway stops from downtown Cairo with its maze of cheap hotels, dive bars and crumbling apartment blocks encircling Tahrir Square. Regeni soon befriended writers and artists and practiced his Arabic at Abou Tarek, a four-story neon-lit emporium that is Cairo’s most famous spot for koshary, the traditional Egyptian dish of rice, lentils and pasta.

    Photo

  • Le pouvoir égyptien dans l’imbroglio de l’affaire des îles Tiran et Sanafir
    http://orientxxi.info/magazine/le-pouvoir-egyptien-dans-l-imbroglio-de-l-affaire-des-iles-tiran-et-sana

    Le 25 janvier marque le sixième anniversaire du début des manifestations qui ont fait tomber le président Hosni Moubarak. Et aussi le premier anniversaire de la disparition et de l’assassinat du jeune étudiant italien Giulio Regeni, sans doute par la police égyptienne. Ces anniversaires suscitent les inquiétudes du pouvoir qui craint des manifestations. Le mécontentement s’est concentré sur la rétrocession des deux îles de Tiran et Sanafir à l’Arabie saoudite, décision rejetée par le haut tribunal (...)

    #Égypte #Diplomatie #Relations_bilatérales #Frontière #Arabie_saoudite

    http://zinc.mondediplo.net/messages/49127 via Orient XXI

  • Egypt While a bad year for civil society, all vow to find ways to continue | MadaMasr
    http://www.madamasr.com/en/2016/12/26/feature/politics/while-a-bad-year-for-civil-society-all-vow-to-find-ways-to-continue

    Between bills, court cases and security measures, civil society groups have been bearing the brunt of state repression. Yet, for many of them, the question is not whether to continue but how

    2016 was the first time that Karim-Yassin Goessinger felt paranoid and threatened.

    Goessinger set up the Cairo Institute for Liberal Arts and Sciences in 2013 with a small personal investment. Three years on, CILAS has grown to become a key learning space that provides a yearlong theoretical, discussion-based and practical educational program in the humanities, arts and culture and natural sciences.

    In the past year, CILAS offered courses on elitism, oppression and resistance. But despite the growth, 2016 has seen several hiccups, including authorities refusing to allow a development grant through and limiting the institute’s ability to continue to use the space from which they have operated since being established. The programming was disrupted; some team members left.

    Ominously, the year opened with the murder of Italian researcher Giulio Regeni, a commonly seen figure at CILAS. Regeni was found dead on a highway outside of Cairo in February, his body bearing signs of torture. In the course of the investigation, which is still ongoing, it emerged that the PhD student had been under surveillance by Egyptian security services.

  • Who murdered Giulio Regeni? | Alexander Stille | World news | The Guardian
    https://www.theguardian.com/world/2016/oct/04/egypt-murder-giulio-regeni

    When six senior Italian detectives arrived in Cairo in early February, following the discovery of the brutally battered body of 28-year-old Italian PhD student Giulio Regeni, they faced long odds of solving the mystery of his disappearance and death. Egyptian officials had told reporters that Regeni had probably been hit by a car, but clear signs of torture on his body had raised an alarm in Rome.

    The Egyptian authorities guaranteed “full cooperation”, but this was quickly revealed to be a hollow promise. The Italians were allowed to question witnesses – but only for a few minutes, after the Egyptian police had finished their own much longer interrogations, and with the Egyptian police still in the room. The Italians requested the video footage from the metro station where Regeni last used his mobile phone, but the Egyptians allowed several days to elapse, by which time the footage from the day of his disappearance had been taped over. They also refused to share the mobile phone records from the area around Regeni’s home, where he disappeared on 25 January, and the site where his body was found nine days later.

  • Giulio Regeni murder in Egypt
    Cambridge graduate had mysterious ’letters’ carved into his body by torturers in Egypt, post-mortem reveals

    http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2016/09/08/cambridge-graduate-had-mysterious-letters-carved-into-his-body-b

    Nick Squires, rome
    8 SEPTEMBER 2016 • 4:17PM
     

    A Cambridge University graduate who was murdered in Egypt had mysterious letters carved into his corpse during several days of torture, a post-mortem examination has revealed.

    Giulio Regeni, a 28-year-old Italian who was studying for a PhD at Girton College, disappeared in Cairo in January, on the fifth anniversary of the Tahrir Square demonstrations which led to the downfall of president Hosni Mubarak.

    He was researching the activities of anti-government trade unions. His horrifically tortured body was found dumped in a ditch on the outskirts of the Egyptian capital a week later.

    A post-mortem by the Italian authorities has found that not only was he sadistically beaten over a period of several days, his torturers used knives to carve what appeared to be four or five letters into his skin.

    A letter resembling an X was cut into his left hand, while other markings were carved into his back, above his right eye and on his forehead. “They used him like a blackboard,” his mother, Paola, said.

    The macabre details emerged from a 220-page post-mortem report conducted by two Italian coroners, Professors Vittorio Fineschi and Marcello Chiarotti.

  • #Égypte létale

    C’est encore pire qu’on le pensait. Cinq mois après la découverte du corps sans vie de l’étudiant italien #Giulio_Regeni, aux abords de l’autoroute Le Caire-Alexandrie, un rapport glaçant d’Amnesty International (AI) fait état de centaines de personnes torturées ou « disparues », victimes d’une vague de répression sans précédent depuis mars 2015. Étudiants, militants politiques ou protestataires, ados d’à peine 14 ans pour certains, ils ont subi la main de fer du président, Abdel Fattah al-Sissi.

    http://www.lecourrier.ch/140804/egypte_letale
    #disparitions

  • Mother of the World, against the world and outside of it | Mada Masr
    http://www.madamasr.com/opinion/mother-world-against-world-and-outside-it
    Mohamed Naeem

    Une effrayante vision du chauvinisme égyptien à travers l’histoire récente

    I have long known that the contemporary Egypt in which I was raised could easily produce a figure like General Ibrahim Abd al-Ati and his ill-famed sham device for vanquishing AIDS and hepatitis C. I knew that Egypt’s security doctrine could enable the killing of a young man like Giulio Regeni under torture, without the slightest trace of guilt. I also knew that Egypt’s strategic experts could believe that Freemasons actually rule the world. I was aware that the mentality of education officials in Giza would let them burn books deemed insulting to the nation. I was not surprised that a former chair of the Federation of Industries and a member of the board of trustees at a foreign university could say under the dome of that university that intellectuals are the greatest threat to society; or that state antiquities officials could destroy archeological inscriptions on a temple wall thinking that a foreign archeological mission had carved them.

  • Amid political tension over Regeni case, Italian energy projects in Egypt power ahead

    While Egyptian and Italian politicians trade barbs over the status of the investigation into the torture and murder of Italian researcher Giulio Regeni, bilateral cooperation on energy deals appears to be running much more smoothly.

    http://www.madamasr.com/news/economy/amid-political-tension-over-regeni-case-italian-energy-projects-egypt-powe
    #Italie #Egypte #énergie

  • Tensions rise between Italy and Egypt over Giulio Regeni murder - World Socialist Web Site

    http://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2016/04/20/ital-a20.html

    Tensions rise between Italy and Egypt over #Giulio_Regeni murder
    By Marianne Arens
    20 April 2016

    The brutal murder of Italian student Giulio Regeni in Cairo has resulted in an open diplomatic crisis between Egypt and Italy.

    On April 8, the government in Rome recalled its ambassador to Egypt. Prime Minister Matteo Renzi said that Italy had a duty to Regeni’s family “but also to the dignity of us all” to bring the “genuine truth” to light.

    #italie #égypte
    Italian student and journalist Giulio Regeni was tortured to death in Egypt in January in a bestial manner. On January 25, the fifth anniversary of the Egyptian revolution, he disappeared without a trace close to Tahrir Square. Then on February 3, his horrifically disfigured body was found in a ditch by a highway.

  • Giulio Regeni est des nôtres
    Un chercheur italien torturé à mort en Égypte
    Zoé Carle, 19 avril 2016
    http://www.vacarme.org/article2883.html

    Que la recherche puisse devenir activité politique à part entière n’a rien de nouveau, mais dans ce champ particulier que sont les études arabo-musulmanes, une mutation est en cours depuis une quinzaine d’années. La figure du chercheur incarnée par Regeni est l’une des formes possibles d’un cosmopolitisme contemporain. La solidarité envers les chercheurs sur place doit aussi être un enjeu pour nous aujourd’hui. Solidarité et non soutien, pour se prémunir des tentations de passivité et de paternalisme. C’est le sens que doivent ainsi prendre des initiatives telles que les Universitaires pour la Paix et la solidarité qui s’exprime envers les universitaires de Turquie réduits au silence par le régime d’Erdoğan. Pour l’heure nous tâtonnons, mais d’ores et déjà, réclamons avec les citoyens égyptiens et italiens « la vérité pour Giulio », car nous ne parviendrons à réinventer le « citoyen du monde » qu’à la condition de lui rendre justice.

    #égypte #répression #cosmopolitisme #italie

  • Enquête sur les disparitions forcées en Égypte
    http://orientxxi.info/magazine/enquete-sur-les-disparitions-forcees-en-egypte,1286,1286

    L’assassinat de l’étudiant italien Giulio Regeni au Caire, le refus des autorités égyptiennes d’enquêter sérieusement ont amené Rome à rappeler son ambassadeur au Caire. Aussi dramatique soit-il, ce cas ne doit pas faire oublier les centaines de disparus égyptiens dans les prisons du régime. Une situation qui ne semble pas émouvoir l’Union européenne, ni la France dont le président, François Hollande doit effectuer dimanche 17 avril une visite d’État en Égypte. C’est le 22 juin 2015 que l’expression « (...) Source : Orient XXI

  • Denying the obvious in Egypt : Sisi regime fights back over Regeni’s death
    http://www.al-bab.com/blog/2016/march/egypt-regeni-sisi.htm#sthash.4us0WulK.MEvGcjCG.dpbs

    Brian Whitaker n’oublie pas. Le point sur ce dossier qui ne remue guère les belles âmes tellement promptes à s’enflammer sur des causes qui les servent davantage.

    The killing of postgraduate student Giulio Regeni, apparently at the hands of Egypt’s security apparatus, has put the Sisi regime on the spot. In the face of an international outcry, the regime is responding with a mixture of bluster, conspiracy theories and diversionary tactics.

    #égypte

  • Il y a des contrées où chercher à comprendre peut entraîner la mort…
    http://quadruppani.blogspot.fr/2016/02/il-y-des-contrees-ou-chercher.html

    Feb
    7
    Il y a des contrées où chercher à comprendre peut entraîner la mort…
    Giulio était un de ceux qui, au grand scandale des matamores gouvernementaux, cherchent à comprendre
    (cliquer pour tout lire, notamment le dernier article de Giulio)

    "Giulio Regeni avait 28 ans. De nationalité italienne, il préparait un PHD (doctorat) à l’Université de Cambridge. Il résidait en Egypte pour réaliser son terrain d’enquête sur la question du syndicalisme et les mouvements ouvriers égyptiens, rencontrant de nombreux activistes.
    Il collaborait par ailleurs au journal de la gauche italienne « Manifesto », connu pour ses positions critiques à l’égard de la dictature du maréchal Sissi.
    Après plusieurs jours de disparition, le corps de Giulio a été retrouvé portant de nombreuses traces de sévices et de tortures. En l’état actuel, rien ne filtre sur l’enquête officielle conduite par la police égyptienne, dont on ne doute qu’elle va s’acharner à effacer les preuves de l’implication des milieux sécuritaires."
    La dernière phrase de cet extrait d’un communiqué de Vincent Geisser est malheureusement prophétique. Selon le Huffington Post italien, le régime du maréchal Sissi cherche à accréditer la thèse selon laquelle Giulio aurait été victimes d’obscurs comploteurs cherchant à discréditer le pouvoir égyptien !
    En réalité, Giulio s’est retrouvé noyé dans une sorte de fleuve souterrain, celui des disparus de la dictature égyptienne. Etudiants, blogueurs, militants ouvriers ou des droits humains, médecins, journalistes indépendants, sympathisants des Frères Musulmans ou simples citoyens, disparus en allant au travail, devant chez eux ou enlevés à la maison ou pendant qu’ils se promenaient entre amis. Selon l’Egyptian Commission for Fights and Freedom, les quatre premiers mois de l’année 2015 ont vu disparaître 1250 égyptiens, et il y a eu 1700 disparus en onze mois. S’il y a eu quelques cas de libérations, il arrive aussi, comme le montre le cas de Giulio, qu’on ne ré-émerge pas vivant de ce fleuve-là. Rien qu’en 2015, on a retrouvé 16 cadavres dans le même état que Giulio : tabassés, torturés.

  • Lundimatin 8 février | n°47

    Mort du manager de Céline Dion
    https://lundi.am/Mort-du-manager-de-Celine-Dion

    Prière Païenne

    Carnaval à Rennes : l’équipe bleue disqualifiée
    https://lundi.am/Carnaval-a-Rennes-l-equipe-bleue-disqualifiee

    « Une cocotte-minute, un gendarme moustachu, une chouette, un Valls teigneux, un bateau pirate, un bourgeois-cochon, un char spécial enfants, une vache avionovore prennent alors place en haut du parvis, surplombant le banquet en pleine préparation.nombreuses surprises carnavalesques prévues pendant le cortège. Mais ce n’est que partie remise ! »

    Micro-trottoir à la Zad de Notre-Dame-des-Landes
    https://lundi.am/Micro-trottoir-a-la-Zad-de-Notre-Dame-des-Landes

    Que sera la ZAD dans 10 ans?

    Le printemps des plans B
    https://lundi.am/Le-printemps-des-plans-B

    « Il faut replier l’économie »

    Heidegger, Gagarine et l’esprit de la zad
    https://lundi.am/Heidegger-Gagarine-et-l-esprit-de-la-zad

    Par rabbi Charles Atlan

    Il y a des contrées où chercher à comprendre peut entraîner la mort…
    https://lundi.am/Il-y-a-des-contrees-ou-chercher-a-comprendre-peut-entrainer-la-mort

    Egypte : traduction du dernier article rédigé par Giulio Regeni avant sa mort.

    1973-1974 : Intermède
    https://lundi.am/1973-1974-Intermede

    Oreste Scalzone contre la montre

    Cauchemars et facéties #16
    https://lundi.am/Cauchemars-et-faceties-16

    Sur l’internet...

  • Il y a des contrées où chercher à comprendre peut entraîner la mort…
    http://quadruppani.blogspot.fr/2016/02/il-y-des-contrees-ou-chercher.html

    Giulio Regeni avait 28 ans. De nationalité italienne, il préparait un PHD (doctorat) à l’Université de Cambridge. Il résidait en Egypte pour réaliser son terrain d’enquête sur la question du syndicalisme et les mouvements ouvriers égyptiens, rencontrant de nombreux activistes. Il collaborait par ailleurs au journal de la gauche italienne « Manifesto », connu pour ses positions critiques à l’égard de la dictature du maréchal Sissi. Après plusieurs jours de disparition, le corps de Giulio a été retrouvé portant de nombreuses traces de sévices et de tortures. En l’état actuel, rien ne filtre sur l’enquête officielle conduite par la police égyptienne, dont on ne doute qu’elle va s’acharner à effacer les preuves de l’implication des milieux sécuritaires. Source : Les contrées (...)