A young Egyptian man who had been imprisoned after making the video for a very critical song by President Abdel Fattah al-Sissi died on Saturday May 2 in a prison in Cairo, said his lawyer.

Chadi Habache, 24, died in Tora prison, Ahmed al-Khawaga, who was unable to give reasons for the death, told AFP.

"He had been deteriorating for a few days (...) He was hospitalized and then returned to prison last night where he died overnight," he said, without giving further details. .

Chadi Habache was detained in March 2018, accused of "spreading false news" and "belonging to an illegal organization", according to the Prosecutor's Office.

He was arrested after making the clip for the song "Balaha" performed by rock singer Rami Issam. The latter sharply criticizes Mr. "Balaha", a name whose President Sissi is decked out by his detractors in reference to the famous character of an Egyptian film for being a notorious liar.

Rami Issam had notably made himself known during the popular revolt of January-February 2011 against the then president Hosni Mubarak, and has since gone into exile in Sweden. Censored in Egypt, the clip has been viewed more than 5 million times on YouTube.

Egypt regularly criticized for its conditions of detention

In a message on Twitter, Bahey Eldin Hassan, director of the Cairo Institute for Human Rights, ruled that President Sissi had "direct responsibility" in the imprisonment of Chadi Habache "for the simple reason that he participated in a song which criticizes him and because no judge dares to attest the innocence of someone who criticized the President of the Republic ".

# شادي_حبش مسئولية السيسي شخصيا ..
طبيعي أنه مسئول كرئيس للدولة عن سياسات فاشلة أدت لمقتل مئات من العسكريين والمدنيين , ولكن مسئوليته مباشرة عن حبس شادي لمجرد أنه شارك في أغنية تنتقده , ولأنه لا يوجد قاضي يجرؤ علي تبرئة من ينتقد رئيس الجمهورية الذي عدل الدستور ليعين القضاة ويعاقبهم. https://t.co/cmcZmPBrMH

- Bahey eldin Hassan (@BaheyHassan) May 2, 2020

For the Arab Network for Human Rights and Information (ANHRI), Habache died due to "negligence and the absence of justice".

"Prison does not kill, it is loneliness which kills (...) I need your support so as not to succumb (...) I die slowly every day", wrote Chadi Habache in a letter in October 2019, published on Facebook on Saturday by human rights activist and writer Ahdaf Soueif after the announcement of his death.

Conditions of detention in Egypt are regularly reported by human rights organizations. And since the beginning of March, due to the new coronavirus pandemic, the authorities have suspended visits to the visiting room and the work of the courts, further isolating the detainees.

Because of the measures taken against the coronavirus, no one has been able to see "Habache lately, said his lawyer.

Fearing contagion in overcrowded prisons, human rights defenders called for the release of prisoners of conscience as well as detainees awaiting trial.

 Several NGOs estimate that 60,000 - out of a total of some 100,000 detainees - are the number of political prisoners in Egypt, Islamist or liberal opponents, targets of the repression following the dismissal by the army in 2013 of Mohamed Morsi, the first democratically elected civilian president to the presidency of Egypt.

With AFP

The France 24 week summary invites you to come back to the news that marked the week

I subscribe

Take international news everywhere with you! Download the France 24 app

google-play-badge_FR