Sisi defends Egypt's rights record as Arab-European summit concludes

A two-day Arab-European summit
finished in Egypt yesterday with President Abdel Fattah El Sisi making an
impassioned and angry defence of his country’s human rights record.
Addressing a news
conference, Mr El Sisi appeared to have been incensed by a question on whether
the summit at the Red Sea resort of Sharm El Sheikh had discussed Egypt’s
widely criticised human rights record.
Arab League Secretary
General Ahmed Aboul Gheit volunteered to answer, saying that although human
rights were discussed generally, there was no mention of any specific nation’s
record.
European Commission
President Jean-Claude Juncker denied that human rights had not been discussed.
He said the issue was raised behind closed doors in bilateral meetings between
leaders, but did not identify the countries involved.
Mr El Sisi, who since 2013
has overseen the largest crackdown on dissent in Egypt’s modern history, was
not so diplomatic. He repeated what he has said since coming to power in 2014,
but the manner in which he spoke, and the high-profile forum at which he
delivered his remarks, gave them added significance.
“We are two different
cultures. Two regions, each with its own set of circumstances. The priority in
European nations is to give people prosperity; our priority here is to
safeguard our nations and prevent them from collapsing or plunging into ruin,”
said Mr El Sisi, whose government has been struggling to contain a militant
insurgency in the Sinai Peninsula while trying to revive Egypt’s economy.
“Please, when you speak
about the reality in our country, don’t do that in isolation of the rest of the
region and what is happening there. That is not to say we condone breaking the
law or violating human rights,” he said.
“Take this city [Sharm El
Sheikh] – it will take one terror attack to turn it into a ghost city for three
or four years,” he said. Turning to criticism of capital punishment in Egypt –
15 people convicted of terrorist-related crimes were executed this year – he
said families of the victims of terrorist attacks demand retribution, which was
delivered with due legal process.
“You will not teach us
humanity ... you must respect our values and ethics,” Mr El Sisi said, raising
his voice and winning applause from Egyptian journalists covering the
conference.
As the head of Egypt’s army,
Mr El Sisi led the military’s 2013 removal of Mohammed Morsi, the Islamist
president elected a year earlier whose rule proved divisive.
Mr El Sisi assumed office
the following year after being elected in a landslide victory. He won a second
four-year term last year, after he ran virtually unopposed.
This month, Egypt’s
parliament, packed with Mr El Sisi’s supporters, began proceedings to make
changes to the constitution that would give him the possibility of staying in
office another 15 years, enshrine a political role for the military and give
the president virtual control over the judiciary.
In the past five years,
Egypt has jailed thousands of Islamists, mostly Morsi supporters, along with
secular, pro-democracy activists behind the 2011 uprising that toppled
long-time leader Hosni Mubarak.
The authorities have also
blocked hundreds of independent online news outlets and silenced most critics
in the media, which is now largely under government control.
Mr El Sisi, who said his
priorities are the economy and security, embarked on an ambitious economic
reform programme that is winning praise in the West and pressed ahead with huge
infrastructure projects and the construction of new cities.
“Nations are not built by
bloggers,” he said in defence of the detention of local social media
influencers who were critical of his rule.
His outburst yesterday may
have, to some degree, shifted focus away from the highly symbolic yet important
gathering of Arab League and EU leaders. The two sides discussed methods to
fight terrorism together and deal with illegal migration.
As expected, no concrete
actions or resolutions emerged from the talks, and Mr El Sisi acknowledged that
there were differences on important issues. However, what had been agreed on
“may have gone beyond expectations,” he said.
“I am sure that you’ll agree
with me that the measure of success will not be what has been discussed but
rather how it turns into a new stage in deepening co-operation between our two
regions,” he said.
European Council President
Donald Tusk was also cautiously upbeat about the prospect of increased
co-operation between Europe and the Arab League.
“I believe this is just the
beginning of a new chapter of co-operation. It’s time we got serious about
partnership,” Mr Tusk said. “As neighbours, we have no alternative to working
together.”