Opinion Egypt’s Civil Society Faces Continued Crackdown

Egypt’s Civil Society Faces Continued Crackdown

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The least harmed victims in the case are the American expatriates of groups such as Freedom House, the National Democratic Institute and the International Republican Institute, all but one of whom were allowed to leave the country last year. One, Robert Becker, remained behind until Tuesday; he left Egypt after receiving a two-year prison sentence. The bulk of the remaining defendants were Egyptians, many of them staffers of the U.S. groups or a German foundation, and could not leave. Some may go to jail — several sentences were suspended, and appeals are pending — and the organizations will be shuttered.

The bill submitted by President Mohamed Morsi to an Islamist-dominated legislative body last week would place tight restrictions on Egyptian civic groups and even stronger controls on any foreign organizations that try to work in Egypt in the future. Registration of the foreign groups and all foreign funding would be under the control of a committee with a government-appointed majority, including members of the intelligence services. All NGO activities and fundraising would be subject to review. If the government objects to a study of gender equality or torture or a fundraising campaign for a women’s shelter, it can bring a court case against the work that would almost certainly block it. Egyptian human rights groups, which receive 95 percent of their funding from foreign sources, would be particularly affected.

The law has drawn a broad chorus of disapproval: from a coalition of Egyptian NGOs, who say it is worse than the Mubarak regime’s law; from international human rights groups, including Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International, which say it is at odds with the terms of treaties Egypt has ratified; and from the State Department, European Union and United Nations Human Rights representative. Yet Mr. Morsi’s government appears increasingly unwilling to heed advice or warnings from its domestic opponents or Western governments. Those governments retain leverage, including hundreds of millions of dollars in economic aid pledged to the Morsi government by the Obama administration.

It’s essential that the United States show with actions as well as words that the suppression of Egypt’s civil society is unacceptable.

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The Washington Post

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The least harmed victims in the case are the American expatriates of groups such as Freedom House, the National Democratic Institute and the International Republican Institute, all but one of whom were allowed to leave the country last year. One, Robert Becker, remained behind until Tuesday; he left Egypt after receiving a two-year prison sentence. The bulk of the remaining defendants were Egyptians, many of them staffers of the U.S. groups or a German foundation, and could not leave. Some may go to jail — several sentences were suspended, and appeals are pending — and the organizations will be shuttered.

The bill submitted by President Mohamed Morsi to an Islamist-dominated legislative body last week would place tight restrictions on Egyptian civic groups and even stronger controls on any foreign organizations that try to work in Egypt in the future. Registration of the foreign groups and all foreign funding would be under the control of a committee with a government-appointed majority, including members of the intelligence services. All NGO activities and fundraising would be subject to review. If the government objects to a study of gender equality or torture or a fundraising campaign for a women’s shelter, it can bring a court case against the work that would almost certainly block it. Egyptian human rights groups, which receive 95 percent of their funding from foreign sources, would be particularly affected.

The law has drawn a broad chorus of disapproval: from a coalition of Egyptian NGOs, who say it is worse than the Mubarak regime’s law; from international human rights groups, including Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International, which say it is at odds with the terms of treaties Egypt has ratified; and from the State Department, European Union and United Nations Human Rights representative. Yet Mr. Morsi’s government appears increasingly unwilling to heed advice or warnings from its domestic opponents or Western governments. Those governments retain leverage, including hundreds of millions of dollars in economic aid pledged to the Morsi government by the Obama administration.

It’s essential that the United States show with actions as well as words that the suppression of Egypt’s civil society is unacceptable.

________________________________

The Washington Post