The Limited Times

Now you can see non-English news...

Italy: new trial for four Egyptians after the murder of student Giulio Regeni in Cairo

2024-02-20T11:00:51.261Z

Highlights: Italy: new trial for four Egyptians after the murder of student Giulio Regeni in Cairo. The four accused (General Tareq Saber, the Colonels Aser Kamal and Hicham Helmi and Commander Magdi Cherif) are tried in absentia (contumacious) The accused are accused of kidnapping while Commander Cherif is accused of having given Regeni the blows which caused his death from respiratory failure. On January 25, 2016, this doctoral student at the University of Cambridge was kidnapped by unknown persons and his body was found mutilated a few days later.


A new trial in Italy of four members of the Egyptian security services accused of torturing an Italian student to death in 2016...


A new trial in Italy of four members of the Egyptian security services accused of torturing an Italian student to death in 2016 in Cairo opened in their absence on Tuesday in Rome.

This trial before the Rome Assize Court should not, however, bring any revelations to this affair, which has poisoned relations between Egypt and Italy, given that the four accused (General Tareq Saber, the Colonels Aser Kamal and Hicham Helmi and Commander Magdi Cherif) are tried in absentia (contumacious).

“It’s a very important day

,” said the victim’s parents, Claudio and Paola Regeni, upon their arrival at the court Tuesday morning, in front of a

“Truth for Giulio Regeni”

banner bearing the Amnesty International logo, noted an AFP journalist.

Political figures, including center-left MP Laura Boldrini, came to lend their support.

The accused are accused of kidnapping while Commander Cherif is accused of having given Giulio Regeni, then aged 28, the blows which caused his death from respiratory failure.

On January 25, 2016, this doctoral student at the University of Cambridge was kidnapped by unknown persons and his body was found mutilated a few days later in the suburbs of the Egyptian capital.

He was researching unions, a very sensitive subject in Egypt.

In October 2021, a first trial in absentia in Rome of the four men prosecuted for kidnapping, torture and murder was suspended sine die as soon as it opened because the court noted the impossibility of prosecuting them on the grounds that they must have been officially informed of the proceedings against them, while Egypt has always refused to provide their contact details to Italian justice.

“Absolutely untraceable”

The Italian constitutional court overturned this decision in September, paving the way for the new trial.

The four accused

“are absolutely impossible to find

,” Colonel Kamal’s court-appointed lawyer, Tranquillino Sarno, confirmed to AFP last week, recalling that

“Egypt has always denied that its services kidnapped and killed Regeni.”

.

“What is certain is that even if they are found guilty, they will not serve their sentence

,” added Master Tranquillino.

In December 2021, the special parliamentary commission on the death of Giulio Regeni concluded, after two years of investigations, that the Egyptian security services were responsible for his death:

“responsibility for the kidnapping, torture and murder of Giulio Regeni rests directly on the security apparatus of the Arab Republic of Egypt and in particular on members of the National Security

.

According to Italian investigators, the four members of the Egyptian National Security

“tortured [the student] for days by inflicting burns, kicks, punches and using bladed weapons and sticks”

, before To kill him.

A thesis strongly rejected by Cairo: in December 2020, the Egyptian prosecutor's office had also cleared them, ruling out any legal action.

Italy has, on several occasions, accused the Egyptian authorities of not cooperating, or even of leading Italian investigators towards false leads.

Source: lefigaro

All news articles on 2024-02-20

You may like

Trends 24h

Latest

© Communities 2019 - Privacy

The information on this site is from external sources that are not under our control.
The inclusion of any links does not necessarily imply a recommendation or endorse the views expressed within them.