Jueves, 21 de septiembre, 2023

Responding to the detention of investigative journalist Ariane Lavrilleux who reported on leaked documents alleging that French intelligence was used to target civilians in Egypt, Amnesty International’s Secretary General Agnès Callamard, said:

“It is deeply chilling that, almost two years after the revelations that France was allegedly complicit in the extrajudicial executions of hundreds of people in Egypt, it is the journalist who exposed these atrocities that is being targeted, rather than those responsible.

“This is not just a case of muzzling an individual journalist and threatening the confidentiality of her sources, but these actions are part of a wider attack on public interest journalists who attempt to expose the opaque actions of the French intelligence services.

“The bodies on Egypt’s border with Libya have exposed skeletons in France’s closet and point toward a grisly and secretive pattern of French complicity in serious human rights abuses conducted by abusive regimes across the region.”

Background


Journalist Ariane Lavrilleux authored a report that said that French intelligence had been misused by Egypt to target smugglers on the Libyan border and kill civilians. It found that at least 19 bombings against civilians took place between 2016 to 2018 linked to French intelligence given to Cairo.

The raid on Ariane Lavrilleux’s home and her detention is linked to 5 cases: Operation Sirli in Egypt, the sale of 30 Rafale aircraft to Egypt, arms delivered to Russia until 2020, the sale of 150,000 shells to Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates (UAE), and illicit arms transfers from UAE to Libya.

The Secretary General of AI was interviewed by the Disclose team for the purpose of presenting Egypt’ human rights records and discussing the international legal standards allegedly violated by France.

The right to freedom of expression protects journalists from being targeted for disclosing material that is in the public interest, such as the revelations made by Ariane Lavrilleux.

See report by Disclose and their video on Operation Sirli