°®Âþµº

Egypt’s prisons are hell. No ‘deep fake’ PR video can hide that

The Egyptian state's release of a promotional video showing an idyllic rehabilitative prison life covers up a deeply sinister reality, and is a crude attempt to erase the lived trauma of thousands of prisoners, writes Joe Stork.
4 min read
22 Dec, 2021
A picture taken during a guided tour organised by Egypt's State Information Service on 11 February 2020, shows an Egyptian police officer at the entrance of the Tora prison on the southern outskirts of the Egyptian capital Cairo. [Getty]

On October 28, Egypt's Interior Ministry a slick, heavily produced video showcasing a new state-of-the-art prison mega-complex. The Wadi El Natrun Correctional and Rehabilitation Center complex is supposed to 12 prisons that currently hold 25 percent of the country's total estimated prison population of – tens of thousands of them political prisoners, held in endless pre-trial detention or following grossly unfair trials.

The video's caricature of an idyllic rehabilitative life in Egypt's prisons covers up a deeply sinister reality of Egypt's abusive prison system, and is a crude attempt to erase the lived trauma of thousands of prisoners and their families.

Egyptian state media sycophantically the video, preposterously titled "The Right to Live,"Ìýwhile Egyptian human rights activists it on social media.

Scenes of beaming inmates in sparkling clean classrooms appear meant to counter the documented reality of an abusive penal system rife with torture, medical neglect, and facilities.

"The video's caricature of an idyllic rehabilitative life in Egypt's prisons covers up a deeply sinister reality of Egypt's abusive prison system, and is a crude attempt to erase the lived trauma of thousands of prisoners and their families"

The video with its English subtitles seems part of the government's broader public relations strategy in response to criticism from civil society and in the UN Human Rights, and comes on the heels of President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi's September announcement of a "National Strategy for Human Rights."ÌýThe video claims that strategy is a "living reality"Ìý– but it is unlike any reality actual prisoners in Egypt experience.

The video shows an array of restorative services, from state-of-the-art health facilities to classrooms offering art lessons and trade workshops, even on how to build solar panels, with perpetually smiling "inmates"Ìýsitting obediently in freshly pressed uniforms. This is in sharp contrast with the harrowing given by Khaled Dawoud of his 19 months of pretrial detention in Cairo's notorious Tora prison. Dawoud, a journalist and former head of Egypt's Constitution Party, wrote in July that all he was given to wear in detention was a single dirty prison suit.

The video depicts family members easily booking prison visits online. Prison authorities in real life some family visits for years, particularly for political prisoners. The new prison's remote location actually makes it more difficult for families or lawyers to visit. The prison is far from any population centres and beyond easy access to public transportation.

The video showcases a fully staffed prison hospital "equipped with the most recent medical technologies,"Ìýa portrait that implicitly acknowledges the systemic medical neglect experienced by many Egyptian prisoners. Former president Mohamed Morsi in 2019 after years of medical neglect in prison.

In July 2021, the family of 69-year-old Abd al-Moniem Abu al-Fotouh, an unjustly detained political leader, that he experiencedÌý heart attack symptoms in solitary confinement in Tora prison. Although he knocked on his cell door for hours, guards ignored him.

The Wadi El Natrun video pictures an array of recreational activities and "a library for developing cultural and intellectual skills."ÌýAll this is farcically incongruous with the prevailing routine denial of prisoners'Ìýsimplest requests, such as for books. The authorities have the detained activist Alaa Abdel Fattah access to reading and educational material for years.

"The video shows that the government cares about criticism but prefers to try and silence it through cosmetic, if costly, interventions rather than genuinely commit to acknowledge and address the pervasive repression in the country"

This is not the Egyptian government's first over-the-top propaganda effort related to its prisons. In 2019, in advance of the UN Human Rights Council's Universal Periodic Review, a select group of Egyptian and foreign journalists were granted a tour of Tora prison. Journalists smelling freshly painted walls and observing suspiciously spontaneous football matches – yet were denied any opportunity to speak directly with prisoners, many of whom should never have been detained in the first place.

The Egyptian government's broader public relations strategy is geared to muting criticism of its appalling human rights record. The video shows that the government cares about criticism but prefers to try and silence it through cosmetic, if costly, interventions rather than genuinely commit to acknowledge and address the pervasive repression in the country. It would be nice to think that prisoners really will get visitors and books, and not be tortured for that matter, but if the past is precedent, Egypt has no intention of treating its opponents any better.

Egypt's allies should change course and take long overdue action to push the authorities much harder, so that Egyptians get meaningful human rights reforms to the dire situation this video tries to cover up.

Joe Stork is deputy Middle East director at Human Rights Watch.ÌýÌý

Have questions or comments? Email us at: editorial-english@alaraby.co.uk

Opinions expressed here are the author's own, and do not necessarily reflect those of °®Âþµº and its editorial board or staff.

Ìý