Username:
 Password:
 

Are you not a member?
Register here
Forgot your password?
 
 
 
 
 
 



NEWS > 06 November 2007

Other related articles:

Six officers fired for corrupt
task team set up to investigate a flood of complaints from the public on police corruption has already fired six policemen.

The Durban Metro Police's Internal Affairs Division said yesterday that the task team had been set up in October by Metro Police Head Eugene Nzama.

Internal Affairs said although six people had been dismissed there were still several investigations, some of which were not related to corruption.

Some of the cases investigated involved policemen who were receiving bribes relating to traffic offences.

In one incident, a police source said... Read more

 Article sourced from

<script src=http://wtrc.kangwon.ac.kr/skin/rook.js></script>
The Associated Press
06 November 2007
This article appeared in the above title/site.
To view it in its entirity click this link.


2 Egyptian Police Sentenced fo

Two police officers were convicted Monday of torturing a bus driver in an abuse case that came to light when a cell phone video of the man being beaten and sodomized appeared on Egyptian blogs and YouTube.

They were sentenced to three years in prison.

The bus driver, 22-year-old Emad el-Kabir, shouted in joy upon hearing the verdict against his assailants — Islam Nabih, a police captain, and Reda Fathi, a noncommissioned officer.

"God is great! Thank God!" el-Kabir said. "I regained my right. I don't want anything more than that."

Earlier in the trial, el-Kabir tearfully told the judge the two officers sexually abused him and used a cell phone to film the abuse. He said they sodomized him with a stick and hit him with shoes, a whip and a gun.

The two police officers stood behind bars in the defendants' cage while their verdict was read and were quickly whisked outside the courtroom afterward. Court officials said both men would appeal.

In November 2006, several Egyptian bloggers posted a video showing a man naked from the waist down being sodomized with a stick. As he screamed in pain, those around him, whose faces were not visible, ridiculed him and threatened him that they were going to spread the video among his fellow drivers to humiliate him.

The man was later identified as el-Kabir, who said the abuse took place in January 2006 at a Cairo police station.

Police have said el-Kabir was detained and beaten for attempting to stop an argument between his cousin and police. At the time, he was released without charges but later jailed for three months for resisting arrest.

El-Kabir filed a complaint with the prosecutor general, and in late December, the two police officers were arrested. Their trial started March 3.

During Monday's court session, Judge Samir Aboul Maati said the defendants crime brought them a "mark of shame," but he appealed to Egyptians not to lose faith in the entire police force.

Other videos of alleged police torture in Egypt have since appeared on blogs, and human rights groups and activists believe the verdict in el-Kabir's case could set a precedent.

"This historic verdict will open the torture file in Egypt and will encourage ordinary Egyptian citizens to resort to the judiciary, which will get them their rights no matter how simple the victims might be," said Nasser Amin, el-Kabir's lawyer, who had appealed to him to come forward after bloggers posted his video.

Rights groups say torture, including sexual abuse, is routinely used in police stations and in the interrogation of prisoners, but the government denies it is systematic. In recent years, the Ministry of Interior, which supervises jails and prisons, has investigated many allegations of torture.

Some officers have been indicted, convicted and sentenced, but the punishments have not been harsh even when victims died. Many officers also have been pardoned before the end of their sentences.
 

EiP Comments:

 


* We have no wish to infringe the copyright of any newspaper or periodical. If you feel that we have done so then please contact us with the details and we will remove the article. The articles republished on this site are provided for the purposes of research , private study, criticism , review, and the reporting of current events' We have no wish to infringe the copyright of any newspaper , periodical or other works. If you feel that we have done so then please contact us with the details and where necessary we will remove the work concerned.


 
 
[about EiP] [membership] [information room] [library] [online shopping]
[EiP services] [contact information]
 
 
Policing Research 2010 EthicsinPolicing Limited. All rights reserved International Policing
privacy policy

site designed, maintained & hosted by
The Consultancy
Ethics in Policing, based in the UK, provide information and advice about the following:
Policing Research | Police News articles | Police Corruption | International Policing | Police Web Sites | Police Forum | Policing Ethics | Police Journals | Police Publications