This article is from the source 'guardian' and was first published or seen on . It last changed over 40 days ago and won't be checked again for changes.
You can find the current article at its original source at https://www.theguardian.com/world/2017/dec/03/giulio-regeni-murder-egypt-maha-abdelrahman
The article has changed 5 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.
Version 3 | Version 4 |
---|---|
Giulio Regeni’s supervisor must not be blamed for his murder | Giulio Regeni’s supervisor must not be blamed for his murder |
(11 days later) | |
We reject the malicious and unfounded allegations made against Dr Maha Abdelrahman in Italy’s La Repubblica newspaper on 2 November 2017. Dr Abdelrahman is an internationally renowned scholar at Cambridge University. She supervised Giulio Regeni, an Italian PhD student researching Egyptian independent trade unions, who was abducted, brutally tortured and murdered in Cairo in early 2016 (Letters, 9 February 2016). | We reject the malicious and unfounded allegations made against Dr Maha Abdelrahman in Italy’s La Repubblica newspaper on 2 November 2017. Dr Abdelrahman is an internationally renowned scholar at Cambridge University. She supervised Giulio Regeni, an Italian PhD student researching Egyptian independent trade unions, who was abducted, brutally tortured and murdered in Cairo in early 2016 (Letters, 9 February 2016). |
Despite strong evidence implicating Egypt’s security forces in Giulio’s murder, La Repubblica’s article suggests Dr Abdelrahman is responsible, alleging she commissioned Giulio to research a topic she knew was dangerous and that he was reluctant to pursue. | Despite strong evidence implicating Egypt’s security forces in Giulio’s murder, La Repubblica’s article suggests Dr Abdelrahman is responsible, alleging she commissioned Giulio to research a topic she knew was dangerous and that he was reluctant to pursue. |
These allegations are absurd. Not only is this not how supervision works, but Giulio had been interested in independent trade unions for years, and had experience working in Egypt before he approached Dr Abdelrahman for supervision. Nor was there any indication at the time that this research posed a threat to life. | These allegations are absurd. Not only is this not how supervision works, but Giulio had been interested in independent trade unions for years, and had experience working in Egypt before he approached Dr Abdelrahman for supervision. Nor was there any indication at the time that this research posed a threat to life. |
Repubblica also claims Dr Abdelrahman refused to talk to Italian authorities, which is false. Following interviews at Giulio’s funeral in February 2016 and written responses to questions on 15 June 2016, Dr Abdelrahman indicated she would answer any further questions in writing. Italian authorities sent no further communication until the recent request, to which Repubblica refers, and to which Dr Abdelrahman willingly agreed. | Repubblica also claims Dr Abdelrahman refused to talk to Italian authorities, which is false. Following interviews at Giulio’s funeral in February 2016 and written responses to questions on 15 June 2016, Dr Abdelrahman indicated she would answer any further questions in writing. Italian authorities sent no further communication until the recent request, to which Repubblica refers, and to which Dr Abdelrahman willingly agreed. |
Neither Giulio nor Dr Abdelrahman were responsible for his death in any way. Those responsible for Giulio’s abduction, torture and murder are in Egypt, and responsibility to determine the truth falls squarely on the Egyptian regime, and it alone.Prof Khaled Fahmy University of Cambridge, Prof Gilbert Achcar SOAS, University of London, Dr Andrea Teti University of Aberdeen, Dr Ruba Salih SOAS, University of London, Dr Anne Alexander University of Cambridge, Prof Lila Abu-Lughod Columbia University, Prof Sheila Carapico University of Richmond, Virginia, Prof Asef Bayat University of Illinois, Prof Ha-Joon Chang University of Cambridge, Prof John Keane Sydney Democracy Network, University of Sydney, Prof Laleh Khalili SOAS, University of London, Dr Paola Caridi Università di Palermo, Prof Ray Bush University of Leeds, Dr Duncan Bell University of Cambridge, Prof John Esposito Georgetown University, Prof Sandro Mezzadra Università di Bologna, Prof Armando Salvatore McGill University, Prof Glenda Sluga University of Sydney, Prof Neve Gordon Ben-Gurion University, Prof Sami Zemni University of Ghent. View full text and full list of 344 signatories at bit.ly/2AneYtG | Neither Giulio nor Dr Abdelrahman were responsible for his death in any way. Those responsible for Giulio’s abduction, torture and murder are in Egypt, and responsibility to determine the truth falls squarely on the Egyptian regime, and it alone.Prof Khaled Fahmy University of Cambridge, Prof Gilbert Achcar SOAS, University of London, Dr Andrea Teti University of Aberdeen, Dr Ruba Salih SOAS, University of London, Dr Anne Alexander University of Cambridge, Prof Lila Abu-Lughod Columbia University, Prof Sheila Carapico University of Richmond, Virginia, Prof Asef Bayat University of Illinois, Prof Ha-Joon Chang University of Cambridge, Prof John Keane Sydney Democracy Network, University of Sydney, Prof Laleh Khalili SOAS, University of London, Dr Paola Caridi Università di Palermo, Prof Ray Bush University of Leeds, Dr Duncan Bell University of Cambridge, Prof John Esposito Georgetown University, Prof Sandro Mezzadra Università di Bologna, Prof Armando Salvatore McGill University, Prof Glenda Sluga University of Sydney, Prof Neve Gordon Ben-Gurion University, Prof Sami Zemni University of Ghent. View full text and full list of 344 signatories at bit.ly/2AneYtG |
• Join the debate – email guardian.letters@theguardian.com | • Join the debate – email guardian.letters@theguardian.com |
• Read more Guardian letters – click here to visit gu.com/letters | • Read more Guardian letters – click here to visit gu.com/letters |
Italy | Italy |
Egypt | Egypt |
University of Cambridge | University of Cambridge |
Higher education | Higher education |
Europe | Europe |
Newspapers & magazines | Newspapers & magazines |
letters | letters |
Share on Facebook | Share on Facebook |
Share on Twitter | Share on Twitter |
Share via Email | Share via Email |
Share on LinkedIn | Share on LinkedIn |
Share on Pinterest | Share on Pinterest |
Share on Google+ | Share on Google+ |
Share on WhatsApp | Share on WhatsApp |
Share on Messenger | Share on Messenger |
Reuse this content | Reuse this content |