El-Massry dedicated the award she received in Italy to fellow activists still in prison
Egyptian activist Mahienour El-Massry received the 2014 Ludovic Trarieux international human rights award in Florence on Friday.
El-Massry was announced as the winner of the award in June while in prison in Egypt serving a two-year sentence for organising an unauthorised protest. Her sentence was reduced and then suspended in September.
In her acceptance speech, the lawyer dedicated the award to the eight other activists who were convicted with her in the same case, but remain in prison.
She also dedicated it to others imprisoned activists, many of whom had, like El-Massry, been jailed for violating the controversial law which bans unauthorised demonstrations.
“Being a lawyer opens your eyes to the amount of injustice in society and lawyers have to choose whether they want to serve justice or to serve the law, even if it is against the people’s interest,” she said at the awards ceremony.
Read more at Ahram Online
Categories: Egypt, Free speech, Human rights, Top stories, World news
This is one of the cases that let me distrust HR awards to people from the middle east. It turns to be political awards for press fake heroes who don’t deserve it
Mahienour broke the laws deliberately and refused to ask for assembly liiscence as a gestuure of contempt of authorities.. Even so, the judge suspended her 6 months sentence and she is released
If you award disrespect of the laws in your country everyone will break it
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Civil disobedience is a time-honoured method of protesting injustice and political oppression. Henry David Thoreau, Gandhi, Martin Luther King, Nelson Mandela, Vaclav Havel, as well as the protests of the Occupy movement, Tahrir Square and Taksim Gezi Park are just a few examples of people who have peacefully resisted injustice. The Wikipedia entry on civil disobedience notes:
I understand your point. But the right to peaceful protest is a core constitutional right in America. It is also regarded as a universal human right:
UN Special Rapporteur on the rights to freedom of peaceful assembly and of association
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This is a simple case not like wall streat , and there’s no apartheid or occupation to make a comparison with S.Africa and India
Making a coparison sometimes is misleading.
An obvious example is the Brotherhood comparing Morsi to Mandela.
They call Morsi ‘Mandella of the Arab’ because both were imprisoned.
They don’t compare the reasons in each case
The new law in Egypt is temporal and will be checked by the coming Parliament
It is not banning the right of demonstrating but it is emphacizing at getting a permission first like in any other country. Adding this item is necessary to control the violent incessant protests of Brotherhood that have vandalized the infrastructure
I have nothing against Mahienour but that she is making a show at the wrong time in Egypt by protesting an ordinary law that is not even strict like in US.
I searched protesting laws in many countries and I found that they all call for permission and they all allow violent response against the protestors if they attacked soldiers or police buildings
This video is not from the middle east, the place and police outfit look like in the West especially in UK
I am not sure about it anyway but it,s titled ‘Police response in Australia’
I am against what’s happening in this video 100% but where’s the HR to condemn it instead of awarding disrespect of the laws?
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Excellent reply, Fada. Of course, like I said, I understand your point of view. Egypt is struggling with Islamist extremism, fanatics who attack Egyptian police and military personnel. Under such conditions, it is natural for a nation to impose extraordinary measures.
My criticism is not self righteous, because we Americans are humans too, and we are guilty of every crime of human beings too.
Morsi is no Mandela.
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Likening Morsi to Mandela made the great leader turn in his grave
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Thanks for the Facebook link. That is interesting. It is nice to see Egypt through Egyptian eyes. Egypt and Facebook will forever be joined in history. 🙂
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