Ex-Egyptian MP Dies in Prison After Five Years of Ban on Family Visits
CAIRO (Middle East Eye) –
Former Egyptian member of parliament Hamdi Hassan has died at the age of 65 in the notorious Al-Aqrab (Scorpion) Prison, after eight years in detention, his son announced.
Hassan was among tens of thousands of political prisoners held in Egypt’s jails since President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi ousted his predecessor Mohamed Morsi in a military coup in 2013.
A former MP, elected three times between 2000 and 2012, Hassan was detained in August 2013 during a crackdown on Morsi supporters who had rallied to reject the coup and call for his reinstatement as president.
Hassan’s son, Baraa, said the family had been barred from visiting him for the past five years.
“They informed us about his death inside his cell in Scorpion prison,” Baraa said. “They banned a funeral service for him, and only allowed six people to attend his burial.”
Hassan’s family did not announce the cause of his death, but Scorpion prison is notorious for causing “slow deaths” among its inmates, most of whom are classified as political prisoners, according to local and international rights groups.
The maximum security Scorpion prison is part of the Tora Prison complex, south of Cairo. A senior Egyptian police general and former Scorpion warden said the prison “was designed so that those who go in don’t come out again unless dead... It was designed for political prisoners.”
In a report last year, Human Rights Watch said: “Because of the absence of sufficient natural light to work or read, the lack of humane sleeping and sanitation arrangements, and climate consideration, as well as inadequate floor space, artificial lighting and proper ventilation, the Scorpion Prison inherently violates the basic rights of prisoners as codified in the United Nations Standard Minimum Rules for the Treatment of Prisoners (Nelson Mandela Rules).
“Additionally, prison authorities routinely deprive inmates of access to education, adequate healthcare, and visits by families and lawyers.”
Many activists mourned Hassan on social media, condemning his detention as unjust.
Since becoming president in 2014, Sisi has fiercely suppressed dissent.
An estimated 60,000 people have been arrested under his rule, many of them critics, writers, journalists, human rights defenders and peaceful protesters. Thousands have been jailed without trial under Egypt’s abusive pre-trial detention system.