Egypt Rejects HRW Call for UN Probe into Protest Deaths


Egypt Rejects HRW Call for UN Probe into Protest Deaths

TEHRAN (Tasnim) – Egypt hit back Saturday at a call by Human Rights Watch for an international investigation into the killing of hundreds of protesters in Cairo by security forces two years ago.

The foreign ministry criticized the New York-based watchdog's report on the deaths of supporters of ousted president Mohamed Morsi in Rabaa al-Adawiya Square as "politicized and lacking objectivity".

Egypt's government has brushed aside HRW's appeal for the UN Human Rights Council to set up an international commission of inquiry.

"The call for an international investigation into the dispersal of the Rabaa sit-in is even more ludicrous because it is issued by an organization that has never expressed any interest in the soldiers, police and civilian victims of terrorism in Egypt," AFP cited a foreign ministry statement as saying.

"The organization insists on ignoring the terrorist nature of the movement that it defends," it added, referring to Morsi's blacklisted Muslim Brotherhood.

At least 600 people were killed during the operation in Rabaa al-Adawiya Square on August 14, 2013, according to official figures. HRW says at least 800 died.

No policemen have faced trial over the deaths. About 10 police were killed during the dispersal, after coming under fire from gunmen in the sprawling camp.

Rights groups have accused police of using disproportionate force, killing many unarmed protesters in what HRW said "probably amounted to crimes against humanity".

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