Jailed Egyptian blogger Maikel Nabil Sanad is a prisoner of conscience who should be released (12/14
Jailed Egyptian blogger Maikel Nabil Sanad is a prisoner of conscience who should be released
Posted: 14 December 2011
Amnesty International has called for the immediate release of the imprisoned Egyptian blogger Maikel Nabil Sanad and criticised Egypts military rulers for a continuing pattern of abuse after his imprisonment was confirmed in a military retrial today.
The blogger, who is considered by Amnesty to be a prisoner of conscience, had his three-year sentence reduced to two years after a retrial before a military court earlier today. He was imprisoned in April for criticising the post-Mubarak military authorities on his Facebook page and for supposedly spreading lies and rumours about the armed forces on his blog.
On top of his conviction and two-year sentence today, Maikel was fined 200 Egyptian Pounds and required to pay 300 Egyptian Pounds in legal fees for a lawyer appointed for him by the military court (a sum of around £53). He had refused legal representation in protest over his trial before a military court.
Maikel has been on hunger strike since August in protest against his imprisonment and his trial before a military court, surviving on liquids. Recently, military officials have reportedly asked him to apologise to Supreme Council of the Armed Forces for his writings but he refused. Amnesty opposes the trial of civilians by military courts and considers these trials unfair as they violate defendants rights to a trial before an independent and impartial tribunal.
http://www.amnesty.org.uk/news_details.asp?NewsID=19861
Here is a link to four stories by Amira Al Hussaini on this detention and on Alaa abd El Fattah:
http://globalvoicesonline.org/?s=Sanad