Worse Than The Dictators: Egypt’s Leaders Bring Pillars Of Freedom Crashing Down
Egypt is enacting authoritarian laws at a rate unmatched by any regime for 60 years, legal specialists from four institutions have told the Guardian.
Since the overthrow of Mohamed Morsi in July 2013, Morsis successors in the presidency, Adly Mansour and Abdel Fatah al-Sisi, have used the absence of an elected parliament to almost unilaterally issue a series of draconian decrees that severely restrict freedom of expression, association and assembly.
The speed at which the decrees have been issued outpaces legislative frenzies under the dictators Anwar Sadat and Hosni Mubarak, and is matched only by the period that followed the toppling of the Egyptian monarchy in 1952, according to Amr Shalakany, associate law professor at the American University in Cairo; Amr Abdulrahman, director of civil liberties at the Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights; Mohamed Elhelw, head of legal research at the Egyptian Commission for Rights and Freedoms; and Ahmed Ezzat, a human rights lawyer, and previously a legal researcher at another prominent rights group.
This is not normal, said Shalakany. Historically, its completely out of pattern with any normal legislation that weve had experience of in this country. The only precedent, Shalakany said, was set by the Revolutionary Command Council of the early 1950s. The rate is faster than even the last year of Sadats [tenure, 1981]; the scope is also wider.
Legislation enacted by Mansour, an interim president installed by Sisi after Morsis removal, and Sisi himself, a former army chief elected to succeed Mansour, include laws that ban protest, expand the jurisdiction of military courts, remove several limits on pre-trial detention, and restrict media coverage of the armed forces without prior approval.
more...
http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/dec/26/sp-egypt-pillars-of-freedom-crashing-down