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Witness says heard Regeni while they were torturing him

Witness says heard Regeni while they were torturing him

'After arrest he asked for a lawyer and to speak with embassy'

ROME, 03 December 2024, 13:03

ANSA English Desk

ANSACheck
- ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

- ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

A witness in a Rome trial in absentia of four Egyptian security officers accused of having kidnapped, tortured and killed Italian student Giulio Regeni in January-February 2016 on Tuesday told the court he had heard the Cambridge University researcher into Cairo street unions complaining about his treatment in Arabic.
    "I heard when Giulio Regeni was being tortured, he complained and spoke in Arabic," said witness "Delta", heard in 'protected mode' in the trial of National Security General Tariq Sabir and his subordinates, Colonels Athar Kamel Mohamed Ibrahim and Helmi, and Major Magdi Ibrahim Abdelal Sharif, who are not attending after Egypt refused to notify them of the proceedings.
    "I remember seeing him for the first time in the Dokki police station, we were both arrested on January 25, 2016. He asked to be able to speak with a lawyer and with the embassy".
    A Palestinian former prisoner in the same Cairo secret police facility as Regeni said in an Al Jazeera video last month that he had "seen Giulio blindfolded and exhausted by the torture.
    "I saw him again as he was leaving the interrogation, exhausted by torture. He was between two jailers who were carrying him on their shoulders. They were taking him back to the cells", he said.
    Regeni, 28, was allegedly tortured to death between January 25 and February 3 2016 after the Egyptian security officers decided he was a spy, after he was fingered by a the leader of a street union, a politically sensitive area of the north African country.
    Regeni was tortured so badly that his mother Paola Deffendi said she could only recognise him "from the tip of his nose".
    Deffendi said "all the evil in the world" was visited on her son's body.
    The Palestinian witness added in the documentary: "He wasn't naked, he was wearing clothes, dark pants and a white T-shirt. I saw another prisoner with signs of torture on his back.
    "The jailers insisted a lot with the question 'Giulio, where did you learn to overcome the techniques to face the interrogation'.
    "They were nervous, they used electric shocks and tortured him with electricity." In addition to the jailers, the witness also said in court, "there were investigators, officers I had not seen before and a colonel, a doctor specialized in psychology.
    "There was no contact with the outside world: the feeling was that of being in a tomb. I was kidnapped, detained and then released without a reason." Amnesty International has said that Regeni is one of countless political prisoners that are allegedly 'disappeared' in Egypt every year.
    Regeni's body, according to an Italian autopsy, showed major signs of extreme torture: contusions and abrasions all over from a severe beating; extensive bruising from kicks, punches, and assault with a stick; more than two dozen bone fractures, among them seven broken ribs, all fingers and toes, as well as legs, arms, and shoulder blades; multiple stab wounds on the body including the soles of the feet, possibly from an ice pick or awl-like instrument; numerous cuts over the entire body made with a sharp instrument suspected to be a razor; extensive cigarette burns; a larger burn mark between the shoulder blades made with a hard and hot object; a brain haemorrhage; and a broken cervical vertebra, which ultimately caused death.
    Egypt has cleared the four officers accused in the case.
    Regeni's half-naked body was found in a ditch on the Cairo-Alexandria highway on February 3, 2016, a week after he disappeared on the Cairo metro.
    At various times Egypt has advanced differing explanations for his death including a car accident, a gay lovers' tiff, and abduction and murder by an alleged kidnapping gang that was wiped out after Regeni's documents were planted in their lair.
    Lack of cooperation on the case by Egypt led to Rome's temporarily withdrawing its ambassador from Cairo.
    Successive Italian governments have drawn condemnation from Regeni's parents by continuing to cooperate with Cairo on deals ranging from migration to oil finds and arms sales including two Italian-made frigates.
    Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi has repeatedly promised to help Italy get to the truth about the murder.
    Italian journalist Corrado Augias returned his Legion d'Honneur to France after Paris gave Sisi the same honour for services to relations between the countries.
   

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