Thursday, May 19, 2011

Amnesty urges probe of disorders of the Egypt

at least 840 people have died and more than 6,000 people were injured in the disturbances, Amnesty report said Egypt was still of work to do to give justice to those killed and injured during rallies that overturned the President Hosni MoubarakAmnesty International, explains.

In a report, Amnesty reports of violations of the rights of man in disorder and undertake a thorough investigation.


The rights group said that many victims remain to be compensated and the culprits punished.


It also calls for a reform of the security forces.

The Minister at the trial

In a 123-page report, Amnesty gives a graphic account of fundamental rights Abuse already widely reported occurred during the revolution in January and February.


The Organization describes how security forces opened fire on unarmed civilians, how they were violently demonstrations, conducted thousands of arrests, tortured and even killed those in custody to view.


Now, few, even in the Egyptian Government, challenging what was going on.


But Amnesty noted that an official report into the abuses still not released fully.


He says that the security forces must be reformed to prevent such abuses never be resumed.


The report comes just days before the former Minister of Interior Habib al-Adly is due to go to justice, accused of having given the order to open fire on the demonstrators.


The President Mubarak and other senior aides were imprisoned, while their role investigations continue.


But the Egypt is still far from becoming a country in which human rights and the rule of law are respected - in the manner in which protesters demanded.

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