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ُEttehadiya case is a controversial legal case in Egypt where thousands of protesters went down to the Ittihadiya Palace, the Presidential offices in Cairo, asking for the repeal of the newly issued protest law as part of the international day for the solidarity with the Egyptian detainees on 21 June 2014.〔(تجمع"ثوار" بمترو الأهرام استعدادا لمسيرة الاتحادية ضد قانون التظاهر )〕 〔(بالفيديو..محامي متظاهرو الاتحادية: 24 متهماً في القضية أبرزهم شقيقة “علاء عبد الفتاح” )〕 The march headed for the Heliopolis presidential Palace was demanding the repeal of the protest law and the release of prisoners of conscience - including the prominent human rights Activists Alaa Abd El-Fattah - was attacked by security forces using teargas and at least 30 activities were arrested among them awarded Human Rights defender Yara Sallam, young activist and filmmaker Sanaa Seif and contemporary art dancer Mohamed Anwar Masoud Moftah (known as Anno). == The march and detainees == Acting president Adly Mansour signed a new Egyptian protest law on November 24, 2013 (Act 107, Year 2014). The law, passed by decree in the absence of any democratically elected authority in the country, gives the government sweeping powers to approve or ban any demonstration. It mandates prison terms of 2–5 years for protesters “calling for disrupting public interests.”〔(Yara Sallam in jail, and the moral bankruptcy of the United States )〕 The law was quickly used to imprison prominent dissidents, including Alaa Abd El-Fattah and human rights lawyer Mahienour El-Massry, as well as many other peaceful anti-government protesters. Egyptian activists called for an international day of solidarity in opposition to the protest law, for June 21, 2014. On that day, a demonstration numbering at least several hundred people gathered in the Heliopolis neighborhood of Cairo and moved toward the presidential palace. Security forces fired tear gas and arrested 30 or more demonstrators, a few of the detainees later released from jail told local human rights organizations that "a number of the arrested protesters were beaten and threatened to be charged with belonging to the banned Muslim Brotherhood" or the revolutionary April 6 Youth Movement.〔(EIPR. Rights Groups: Fabricating Charges for Peaceful Protesters and Rights Defenders Continue )〕 24 protesters were arrested (including one infant who tried separately) and being held at Heliopolis police station including Seven women and 17 men: *Yara Sallam *Sanaa Seif *Hanan Mustafa Mohamed *Salwa Mihriz *Samar Ibrahim *Nahid Sherif (known as Nahid Bebo) *Fikreya Mohamed. *Ibrahim Ahmed EL said *Ahmed Samir Mahmoud Mohamed (known as Abo Samra) *Mohamed Ahmed Youssef Saad (known as Meza) *Islam Tawfeek Mohamed (known as Gevara) *Omar Ahmed Mohamed Mahmoud Moussa *Ahmed Mohamed Abd El Hamed Oraby *Islam Mohamed Abd El Hamed Oraby *Moataz Mohamed Mansour *Karam Mostafa Yasin Helmy (known as Ortiga) *Mohamed El Beyally *Mostafa Mohamed Ibrahim *Basam Mohamed Ali El saied *Yaser Saied Fadl El Qot (known as Yaser El Qot) *Mohamed Anwar Masoud Moftah (known as Anno) *Mohamed El saed Mohamed El Araby *Mahmoud Hesham Hussein Abd El Aziz *Mo'men Mohamed Radwan. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Ettehadiya case」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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