Egypt

Egypt looks to burnish image with Sisi’s UN visit

Authorities in Egypt are pulling out all the stops to ensure that President Abdel-Fattah al-Sisi’s visit to New York for the U.N. General Assembly is a diplomatic success despite growing criticism of the country’s human rights record under his rule.
 
Sisi flew to New York on Sunday to attend the General Assembly along with some two dozen loyal lawmakers and media figures who will seek to improve the country’s image during the four-day visit.
 
Parliamentarian Nashwa el-Deeb told reporters she and others would be meeting with U.S. officials and congressmen to redress the “wrong perceptions and positions” about Egypt. Another lawmaker, Tareq Radwan, said they would support the president as a “symbol of Egypt.”
 
Some of the president’s previous visits in the West have been marred by protests or assaults on accompanying journalists by supporters of Mohammed Morsi, the Islamist president whose 2013 military ouster was led by Sisi.
 
Egypt’s Orthodox Coptic Church, a staunch ally of Sisi, has dispatched senior clerics to exhort followers there to rally in support of him upon his arrival later Sunday and at the U.N. headquarters when he addresses the General Assembly later this week.
 
“Let us welcome Egypt as represented by its loved president … before every nation, as a manifestation of appreciation, dignity and love,” Pope Tawadros II, the church’s spiritual leader, told Cairo’s Al-Masry Al-Youm daily.
 
Coptic leaders in the United States have distributed leaflets urging their community to rally in support of Sisi. They are lining up buses to ferry people from churches in New Jersey to New York City. Tawadros has dispatched one of his closest aides, Bishop Biemen, to the United States ahead of Sisi, also to persuade Copts there to show their support.
 
Sisi supporters in the Egyptian media have also sought to rally support. “The world listens to Egypt, on Tuesday,” the state-owned Al-Gomhuria declared on its front page Sunday.
 
Western nations and rights groups have strongly criticized Egypt’s human rights record in the three years since Morsi’s overthrow. Authorities have jailed thousands of people, mainly Islamists but also leading secular and liberal activists behind the 2011 uprising that toppled longtime autocrat Hosni Mubarak.
 
On Saturday, a Cairo court upheld a decision to freeze the assets of five prominent human rights campaigners in what critics described as the latest blow to a once-vibrant activist community. The ruling is part of a case against rights groups and campaigners accused of illegally receiving funds and using them to harm national security. If convicted, the five could face up to 25 years in prison.
 
“If they are trying to deter us from working in the future, then they are simply delusionary,” Hossam Bahgat, an investigative journalist and one of the five, wrote on Facebook following the verdict. “For sure, fellow workers in the human rights movement will not, after 30 years of struggle, retire during the worst time for human rights in the nation’s history.”
 
State Department spokesman John Kirby said the United States was “troubled” by the court’s decision.
 
“These human rights organizations are documenting violations and abuses and defending the freedoms enshrined in Egypt’s constitution, and this decision comes against a wider backdrop of closing space for Egyptian civil society,” he said in a statement Sunday.
 
“Such restrictions on the space for civil society activity will produce neither stability nor security,” he added.
 
The Egyptian media, which is largely dominated by Sisi supporters, frequently airs conspiracy theories in which foreign nations plot to weaken Egypt by sowing political unrest. Such media portray Sisi and the military as a bulwark against chaos and human rights activists as traitors or foreign agents.
 
The flagship state-owned newspaper Al-Ahram on Sunday cited “informed sources” as saying unidentified powers were plotting to besiege and isolate Egypt in collusion with the now-banned Muslim Brotherhood, the Islamist group from which Morsi hails.

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