CAIRO (AP) - An Egyptian court Saturday rejected the appeal of an activist and vocal critic of President Abdel Fattah el-Sissi for release from detention, his lawyer said.
Police detained Patrick George Zaki, 28, an Egyptian student at the University of Bologna in Italy, after he arrived in Cairo last week on what was supposed to be a brief visit home. Zaki’s detention has generated tremendous interest in Italy because of a 2016 case involving an Italian graduate student who was found dead in Cairo.
Prosecutors ordered Zaki to remain in detention pending an investigation into allegations of disseminating false news and calling for unauthorized protests.
Egypt outlawed all unauthorized protests in 2013 months after el-Sissi, then defense minister, led the military’s removal of the country’s first democratically elected president, Mohammed Morsi. The removal came after Morsi’s one-year rule proved divisive and sparked nationwide protests.
Zaki’s arrest and detention has worried rights activists who warn of Egyptian prosecutors’ tendency to renew the 15-day investigation period repeatedly.
Zaki appealed the detention ruling Saturday, but the appeals court in his home city of Mansoura in the Nile Delta upheld the prosecutors’ decision, defense attorney Huda Nasrallah said.
She said Zaki attended the court session and no one was allowed to meet with him after the court decision.
Nasrallah said Zaki told the court that he was detained at Cairo International Airport and questioned for at least six hours before being moved to a security facility in the city.
“He told the court that he was beaten and tortured with electric shocks,” she said.
There was no immediate response from Egypt’s Interior Ministry, which oversees the police, about the allegations.
The lawyer said Zaki must wait for 30 days to be able to again appeal his detention under Egyptian law.
The Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights, or EIPR, said representatives from the European Union and the Italian Embassy also attended the court session.
EIPR once employed Zaki as a gender rights researcher and now represents him. Zaki hasbeen on leave from the EIPR since last August while pursuing a master’s degree in gender studies at the University of Bologna.
Zaki’s detention has deeply rattled Italy, where he is pursuing a master’s degree in Gender and Women’s Studies. The case has dredged up painful memories of the 2016 disappearance in Egypt of 28-year-old Italian researcher Giulio Regeni.
Regeni’s battered body was found on a roadside on the outskirts of Cairo. Italy’s public prosecutor has opened an investigation into several Egyptian police and secret service members in connection with Regeni’s torture and killing.
Regeni’s death remains a source of simmering tension between the countries.
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