Amnesty accuses Egypt of 'indefinitely' detaining dissidents
The rights group said it documented five cases where the Supreme State Security Prosecution (SSSP) "bypassed court orders to release (the dissidents) from arbitrary detention by imprisoning them in new cases based on fabricated charges".
An Egyptian security source said fresh arrests were in line with judicial and court decisions, while provisional detention was ordered in cases of "judicial necessity".
Najia Bounaim, Amnesty's North Africa campaigns director, called the practice "an alarming trend". It renders prisoners "already detained on spurious grounds trapped in the 'revolving doors' of Egypt's arbitrary detention system", she said.
Among the cases profiled was that of the daughter of well-known Qatar-based Egyptian Islamist preacher Youssef al-Qardawi.
Ola al-Qardawi has been imprisoned since 2017 for "membership of a terrorist group", according to Amnesty. Despite a court ruling ordering her release on July 3, the SSSP "ordered her detention in another unfounded case a day later".
Amnesty said Ola was targeted over her father's connections to the outlawed Muslim Brotherhood group.
The prosecution ordered his release on 21 May, but a week later the SSSP slapped him with another set of charges and re-ordered his detention.
Rights groups regularly accuse the authoritarian regime of President Abdul Fattah al-Sisi, who took power after leading the 2013 army ouster of Islamist Mohammed Morsi, of muzzling both secular and Islamist opposition. (AFP)