Egyptian Prisoners Riot Following Inmate’s Death

By Laura Zuber
Impunity Watch Senior Desk Officer, Middle East


ASSIUT, Egypt
– On September 8, prisoners in prison in the city of Assiut rioted following reports about an inmate’s death.  Egyptian officials released a statement reporting that prisoners rioted, holding some guards hostage, and seized guns.  The statement reported that the guards used tear gas and rubber-coated bullets to regain control of two wings of the prison.

The Interior Ministry said in a statement the incident began with a brawl between four prisoners armed with table cutlery. Police intervened to separate them and decided to punish them with 48 hours in solitary confinement.

“The first prisoner (Abdel Salam) died while undergoing this punishment. A rumor then spread among the prisoners that he died because an officer assaulted him,” it said.  However, a conflicting report names the inmate as Hani Ghandour, who was serving a seven-year sentence for assault.

There are also conflicting reports of how the inmate died.  One report states that the inmate died while in solitary confinement; possibly from abuse, torture, or ill-treatment by the guards.  A second report states that inmate was killed during armed clashes after a group of 15 gunmen had stormed the building in an attempt to free prisoners.

There is no explanation for the discrepancies in the dead man’s name or the reason which lay behind the violence.

Four guards and at least 20 prisoners were said to have been injured in the clashes.

Conditions as Egyptian prisons are often dire and overcrowded. A lawyer said in June that prison guards near the Mediterranean city of Alexandria had beaten up 17 inmates to force them to end a hunger strike.

For more information, please see:

BBC – Upper Egypt Prison Shaken by Riot – 8 September 2008

Middle East Times – Egyptian Prisoners Riot After Inmate’s Death – 8 September 2008

Reuters – Twenty Five Injured in Egyptian Prison Riot – 8 September 2008

Author: Impunity Watch Archive