🔗 Access denied: Institutional barriers to justice for victims of torture in Egyp
This research explores the question - how do practices in key justice institutions affect the incidence and success of prosecutions of torture perpetrators in Egypt? The research question is grounded in the theory that torture prosecutions are crucial to ending the practice of torture, and based on the judgment that the number of prosecutions of torture perpetrators in Egypt is very small compared to the widespread practice of torture. This research observes practices in three main justice institutions: the Department of Public Prosecutions, the Department of Forensic Medicine and the criminal courts. Based on international and local literature, but also on interviews conducted with lawyers, forensic doctors and human rights activists, the research observes the practices most common to the three institutions, while analyzing their impact on the incidence and success of prosecutions. The research finds that different practices, backed by Egyptian legislation, and endorsed by poor institutional capabilities, violate the international standards for investigations, and affect the incidence and outcome of prosecutions
Khalil, H. M. (2013). Access denied: institutional barriers to justice for victims of torture in Egypt. Torture: Quarterly Journal on Rehabilitation of Torture Victims and Prevention of Torture, 23(1), 28-46.
@article{khalil2013access,
title={Access denied: institutional barriers to justice for victims of torture in Egypt.},
author={Khalil, Hebatullah Mahmoud},
journal={Torture: Quarterly Journal on Rehabilitation of Torture Victims and Prevention of Torture},
volume={23},
number={1},
pages={28--46},
year={2013}
}