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Counterterrorism strategy and human rights in Egypt after the Arab uprising: a critical appraisal

Counterterrorism strategy and human rights in Egypt after the Arab uprising: a critical appraisal
Counterterrorism strategy and human rights in Egypt after the Arab uprising: a critical appraisal
Since 2013, the Egyptian regime proclaims that it is involving in ruthless fight against terrorism; its strategy suffers from multiple flaws. It violates basic human rights, restricting freedoms and prohibits opposition against the government by labelling it with terrorist offences. This study investigates the way human rights and counterterrorism is portrait in Egypt's counterterrorism law no. 94 of 2015 in order to illustrate the correlation between counterterrorism discourse and human rights abuse in the post-revolutionary Egypt.

By using the Critical Terrorism Studies (CTS) approach and Critical Discourse Analysis (CDA) method to analyse the counterterrorism discourse in Egypt since the outbreak of the Arab Uprising of 2011, the study argues that the real purpose of counterterrorism discourse of the Egyptian regime after 2013 is to (1) construct an atmosphere where the state's violations of human rights are not only normalised or legitimise but also justifiable, uncritically and unaccountable; (2) establish a new legal and political legitimacy for the post 30 of June 2013 regime; (3) silencing all critics and corrective attempts that pursue to constrain authoritarianism and terrorism temptations to risk vulnerable individuals; (4) prevent the efforts of find a solution to terrorism away from military and coercive intervention.

The study finds that the more Egyptian authorities violate human rights and rely on excessive use of force under the name of fighting terrorism, the faster terrorism grows. The counterterrorism law of 2015 adopted a broad, ambiguous and politicalised definition of terrorism in order to prevents any claims of reform or democratization. By associated political opposition with terrorists activities, Egypt demonises requests for political reform and de-legitimatise ‘peaceful’ opposition against the rules of the country, their families, public servants, and any public institutions.
1359-1789
Abozaid, Ahmed M.
87b3318c-1d62-4352-b0d3-e0c893a1f9fe
Abozaid, Ahmed M.
87b3318c-1d62-4352-b0d3-e0c893a1f9fe

Abozaid, Ahmed M. (2020) Counterterrorism strategy and human rights in Egypt after the Arab uprising: a critical appraisal. Aggression and Violent Behavior, 51 (1), [101385]. (doi:10.1016/j.avb.2020.101385).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Since 2013, the Egyptian regime proclaims that it is involving in ruthless fight against terrorism; its strategy suffers from multiple flaws. It violates basic human rights, restricting freedoms and prohibits opposition against the government by labelling it with terrorist offences. This study investigates the way human rights and counterterrorism is portrait in Egypt's counterterrorism law no. 94 of 2015 in order to illustrate the correlation between counterterrorism discourse and human rights abuse in the post-revolutionary Egypt.

By using the Critical Terrorism Studies (CTS) approach and Critical Discourse Analysis (CDA) method to analyse the counterterrorism discourse in Egypt since the outbreak of the Arab Uprising of 2011, the study argues that the real purpose of counterterrorism discourse of the Egyptian regime after 2013 is to (1) construct an atmosphere where the state's violations of human rights are not only normalised or legitimise but also justifiable, uncritically and unaccountable; (2) establish a new legal and political legitimacy for the post 30 of June 2013 regime; (3) silencing all critics and corrective attempts that pursue to constrain authoritarianism and terrorism temptations to risk vulnerable individuals; (4) prevent the efforts of find a solution to terrorism away from military and coercive intervention.

The study finds that the more Egyptian authorities violate human rights and rely on excessive use of force under the name of fighting terrorism, the faster terrorism grows. The counterterrorism law of 2015 adopted a broad, ambiguous and politicalised definition of terrorism in order to prevents any claims of reform or democratization. By associated political opposition with terrorists activities, Egypt demonises requests for political reform and de-legitimatise ‘peaceful’ opposition against the rules of the country, their families, public servants, and any public institutions.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 18 February 2020
e-pub ahead of print date: 29 February 2020
Published date: 6 March 2020

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 488555
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/488555
ISSN: 1359-1789
PURE UUID: 00f37059-7971-4268-8257-42c406d08fb3

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Date deposited: 27 Mar 2024 17:31
Last modified: 09 Apr 2024 10:52

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Author: Ahmed M. Abozaid

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