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Tarek Hussein

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Tarek Hussein
طارق حسين
Born
Tarek Mohamed Ahmed Hussein

(1993-08-15) 15 August 1993 (age 31)
Cairo, Egypt
EducationFaculty of Law
Occupation(s)lawyer, Human Rights Activist
WebsiteTarek Hussein [1]

Tarek Hussein is an Egyptian lawyer and a sexual predator. He was born in 1993. He worked as a lawyer and a founding member of the Constitution Party and one of the party's young leaders.

In July 2020, a Tunisian activist filed a legal complaint with the Tunisian judiciary, stating that Hussein had raped and assaulted her in Tunis, where Hussein resided for two years. Hussein also faced allegations of sexual harassment assault in Cairo, and Washington, D.C.

Early life

Hussein was born in 1993 in one of the villages in Qalyubia. He graduated from the Faculty of Law at the University of Banha in 2016. He joined the Egyptian Center for Economic and Social Rights as a human rights lawyer.

Political activism

Hussein participated in the establishment of the Constitution Party (Egypt) in 2012 and was one of its founding members and held several positions within the party within his province in Qalyubiya until he assumed the position of Assistant Secretary of the Committee on Rights and Freedoms Party from 2015 until now and participated in the establishment of the popular campaign to support Khaled Ali President of Egypt 2014 until withdrawal Khalid Ali because of the political situation and the suppression of freedoms participated in the popular campaign to support Khalid Ali President of Egypt in 2018 until the withdrawal of Khaled Ali because of the closure of the public sphere and the arrest of presidential candidates

Photo of Tarek Hussein taken by a Guardian newspaper photographer during an interview

The period of Mohamed Morsi

Participated in most of the peaceful demonstrations that were calling for the objectives of the January revolution until he was arrested in one of the demonstrations of the revolutionary forces in front of the Guidance Office in 2013 and a charge of demonstrations and rallies and an attempt to overthrow the regime and was evacuated after four days in custody pending investigations and was acquitted and appealed to the prosecution on the ruling The Court of Cassation revoked a three-year appeal court in absentia until it appealed against the verdict and again acquitted it in 2016[1]

Period of Transitional President Adly Mansour

Was arrested renewed in demonstrations of the revolutionary forces in Maadi in 2014 to demand the achievement of the objectives of the January revolution and condemn the violations and the dismantling of sit-ins in a brutal manner and the issuance of the law of protest and that time faced charges of demonstration and gathering and belonging to the Muslim Brotherhood and became Tarek in that period directed The Maadi Misdemeanor Court sentenced him to two years' imprisonment and two years until he was acquitted of a second-degree court after three years in prison for more than three months.

Allegations of rape and sexual violation

In July 2020, a Tunisian activist filed a legal complaint with the Tunisian judiciary, stating that Hussein had raped and assaulted her in Tunis, where Hussein resided for two years. Hussein also faced allegations of sexual harassment assault in Cairo, and Washington, D.C.

Release

On 27 July, after more than 42 days of arbitrary detention, the Ministry of the Interior released him from the Khanka police station and Amnesty International[2] and the International Federation for Human Rights issued a statement welcoming his release. To interview him about the violations committed in Egyptian prisons, including the Guardian, where he conducted a dialogue with him torture in Egyptian prisons." and translated by BBC[3]


References

  1. ^ "Egyptian activist Tarek 'Tito' acquitted in Muslim Brotherhood guidance bureau case". Retrieved 25 May 2018.
  2. ^ "Egypt: Human rights defender Tarek Hussein freed from prison!". Amnesty International NZ. Retrieved 25 May 2018.
  3. ^ Shenker, Jack (18 September 2017). "Egypt guilty of kidnap, torture and abuse, says former detainee". the Guardian. Retrieved 25 May 2018.