Police officer and lower ranking police officer sentenced to life in prison

Nourhan Elsebahy
1 Min Read
Policemen arrest a supporter of ousted president Morsi during a protest in Ramses Square on 4 November 4, 2013 in Cairo. (AFP Photo)

The Criminal Court in western Tanta sentenced a police officer and lower ranking officer at Tanta police station to life in prison for “torturing a prisoner to death”.

They were also sentences to an additional year for injuring another prisoner by electrocution. According to Egyptian law, a life sentence amounts to 25 years in prison, putting their total sentence at 26 years.

The court accused Ahmed El-Safrawy and Ahmed Saleh of torturing citizens Ismail Abd El-Hamid and Yasser El-Malah at the Tanta police station. The court issued the verdict in absentia.

Head of the Independent Judiciary Council Nasser Amin told Daily News Egypt the ruling is the first of its kinds, and represents a major contribution to upholding human rights.

“It is a good step towards maintaining human rights in Egypt in general,” he said, adding that the ruling will make any authoritative figure fear punishment, which will contribute to ending crimes that violate human rights.

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Nourhan El-Sebahy is a journalist at DNE’s politics section. Just before joining DNE’s staff, she was working as a journalist at El-Watan newspaper “an Egyptian daily independent newspaper”. She holds a Master’s Degree of Journalism and Mass Communication from the American University in Cairo (AUC). She was awarded by Certificate of honor on the Fourth Scientific Day Celebration in 2013 and Graduate Student’s honor at AUC in 2012.