DUBAI, United
Arab Emirates (AP) -- United Arab Emirates authorities held an
Egyptian journalist without charge and subjected him to mistreatment in a
secret prison on accusation of membership in an Islamist group, a human
rights group said Monday.
The Emirates Centre
for Human Rights said Anas Fouda, employed with the Dubai-based MBC
media group, was arrested by state security officials on July 3 and held
until he was deported back to Egypt on Aug. 4. Fouda claims he was kept
in solitary confinement by authorities, who deprived him of sleep until
he was unable to stand.
The allegations come
as the UAE widens a crackdown on groups with suspected links to the
Muslim Brotherhood, the Islamist organization to which ousted Egyptian
President Mohammed Morsi belongs. The UAE, one of the Arab world's most
outspoken critics of the Brotherhood, has been quick to quash any Arab
Spring-inspired dissent and has noted its "satisfaction" at the turn of
events in Egypt.
In July of this year, 69
people accused of membership in a banned Islamist group backed by the
Brotherhood were convicted of plotting against the country's ruling
system. Another 30 suspects, including Egyptians, await trial for
alleged links to Brotherhood networks.
Emirati authorities could not be reached for comment on Fouda's case.
The
journalist says he is a member of the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt but
claims to be not politically active in the Emirates. Authorities
accused him however of being part of a Brotherhood cell in the UAE, he
told The Associated Press over the phone from Turkey.
He
says he was kept in solitary confinement in a windowless cell that was
kept constantly lit to keep him awake, and was unable to stand on his
own by the time of his release.
"I was not
able to sleep (except for) every 48 hours, when I would collapse from
exhaustion ... With every day my health worsened," he said.
Centre
director Rori Donaghy expressed concerns for the well-being of other
prisoners, including two other Egyptian journalists being held without
charge in the United Arab Emirates.
"We are concerned there are others being illegally held and subjected to the same harsh treatment as Anas," Donaghy said.
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