Egypt’s Government Frees 41 Prisoners Ahead of Eid Holiday

Egypt released more than three dozen prisoners on Sunday, a week before the end of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, which is typically a time of amnesty, a political party and state-run media said.

Political activists and family members confirmed several high-profile detainees were freed.

The Reform and Development Party said those freed had been political prisoners being held in pre-trial detention. The English edition of the state-run newspaper Al-Ahram said 41 prisoners in all were released.

The government’s human rights body said in a statement only that there had been a release of individuals held in pre-trial detention but gave no details.

The move came a week before the Eid holiday marking the end of Ramadan. It is typically a time when prisoners are released on presidential pardons, but the number of those freed was one of the largest in recent years. Thousands of political prisoners, however, are estimated to remain inside Egypt’s jails, many without trial.

Among the released was political activist Waleed Shawky, his wife, Heba Anees, said on social media. She posted a picture of the couple hugging.

Journalist Mohamed Salah was also released, activist Esraa Abdel Fattah said. And Nabeh Elganadi, a human rights lawyer, posted a picture with Radwa Mohamed, who was arrested after making videos posted on social media criticizing President Abdel Fattah el-Sissi.

Under broad counterterrorism laws, Egypt’s state prosecutors have often used vague charges to renew 15-day pretrial detention periods for months or years, often with little evidence.

On Sunday, Sanaa Seif, the sister of one of Egypt’s most high-profile detained activists, Alaa Abdel Fattah, said her brother had faced new ill-treatment in prison and he was on the 22th day of a hunger strike.

Meanwhile, new arrests are still taking place. On Saturday, the human rights lawyer Khaled Ali said several men in the country’s south had been arrested and accused of spreading lies after they sung a song about rising food prices in a video posted online.

The government of el-Sissi — a U.S. ally with deep economic ties to European countries — has been relentlessly silencing dissenters and clamping down on independent organizations for years with arrests, detentions and jail sentences, and other restrictions.

Many of the top activists involved in the 2011 uprising in Egypt are now in prison, most of them arrested under a draconian law passed in 2013 that effectively bans all street protests.

Source: Voice of America

Ambassador Yohannes met with several South Sudanese Ministers

Eritrean Ambassador to the Republic of South Sudan, Mr. Yohannes Teklemicael met and held talks with Minister of Foreign Affairs, Minister of Housing, Land, and Public Utilities, and Minister of Education-Central Equateri State of the Republic of South Sudan.

At a meeting held on 20 April, Ambassador Yohannes Teklemicael and Mr. Mayiik Ayii Deng, Minister of Foreign Affairs of South Sudan, talked on strengthening bilateral ties as well as regional development and integration.

Underlining on the significance of regional integration in the peaceful development and prosperity of our region Ambassador Yohannes called on the countries in the region to play due role to that end.

Mr. Mayiik Ayii Deng, Minister of Foreign Affairs of South Sudan on his part commending commended the support the people and Government of Eritrea are extending to the people and Government of South Sudan expressed his country’s readiness to develop the bilateral brotherly relation toward economic integration and relationship.

In related news, Ambassador Yohannes met with Ms. Flora Gebriel Lora, Minister of Housing, Land, and Public Utilities of South Sudan on 21 April and discussed on issues of mutual interest as well as on the activities of the Eritrean community in South Sudan.

Commending the role of the Eritrean community in the reconstruction and economic development of South Sudan, Ms. Flora expressed conviction to meet the demands of the Eritrean in the country.

Ambassador Yohannes also had similar discussion with Mr. Cristo Zakaria Lado, Minister of Education-Central Equateri State of the Republic of South Sudan.

Source: Ministry of Information Eritrea

Three Malian Army Bases Simultaneously Attacked

Six soldiers are dead and 20 wounded after Malian Army bases in the central cities of Sévaré, Niono, and Bapho were simultaneously attacked this morning by suspected terrorists. An army press release says that the bases in the cities of Sévaré, Niono, and Bapho were attacked by “terrorists” in “kamikaze vehicles packed with explosives,” and that in addition to the casualties, a helicopter was damaged.

Sévaré is a town in Mali’s Mopti Region and the site of the former headquarters of the G5 Sahel, an intergovernmental task force with member states Burkina Faso, Chad, Mali, Mauritania, and Niger.

The headquarters were moved to Bamako in 2018 after an attack which killed several people.

The Bapho military base is less than 20 kilometers from Ségou, Mali, a large regional and cultural capital more than 200 kilometers north of Bamako.

After an Islamist takeover of northern Mali in 2012, French forces intervened and took back control of the north in 2013. In the years since, insecurity has moved south into Mali’s central regions.

In February, France announced that it would withdraw its troops from Mali after increasing tensions between France and Mali’s military government.

Several governments have accused Mali of working with Russian Wagner mercenaries, a claim the Malian government denies. There have been several reports of unidentified white soldiers working with the Malian army in the Ségou and Mopti regions since February.

Source: Voice of America