Sisi takes on Egypt’s judiciary

THOUGH it presented no evidence, the Egyptian government wasted little time in blaming the Muslim Brotherhood for the car bomb that killed Hisham Barakat, the prosecutor general, in June 2015. Abdel-Fattah al-Sisi, Egypt’s president, naturally concurred—he had, after all, booted the Brotherhood from power—but he also had harsh words for the judicial system. “The arm of justice is being chained by the law,” said Mr Sisi at the time. He did not mean this as a compliment. Long appeals delay executions, he grumbled. (Much of the Brotherhood’s leadership sits on death row.) As the president left Mr Barakat’s funeral, he dressed down a crowd of judges, saying: “No courts should work this way.”

Most Egyptian judges come from the country’s elite and are “fundamentally pro-regime and fundamentally conservative”, says Nathan Brown of George Washington University. Some took to issuing mass death sentences to hundreds of Brotherhood members after the group was forcibly removed from power. But the president has nonetheless appeared vexed by the judiciary’s protracted procedures, its semblance of independence and its occasional checks on his power. The Court of...Continue reading

Source: Middle East and Africa http://ift.tt/2qDVFVR

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