Egypt: We Record Human Rights Documents on behalf of 22 Women Killed in Rabaa



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On the occasion of the sixth anniversary of the slaughter of supporters of the late Egyptian President Mohamed Morsi in Rabaa El Adawiya Square, we posted a video showing the names of 22 women killed today by security forces.

The digital rights platform also showed the image of two snipers involved in the money crime.

According to the podium, the names of the murdered women were as follows: "Hind Hisham Kamal, Habiba Ahmed Abdel Aziz, Asmaa Hisham Saqr, Maryam Mohamed Ali Abdel Aal, Asmaa El Beltagy, Wahba Mohamed Fikr Ibrahim, Engy Tag El Din Mohamed, Warda Mostafa Mohamed Bayoumi and Razan Mohamed Ali ", Sara Al-Sayyar, Suad Hbadan Ramzi, Siham Abdullah Metwally, Sawsan Saad Hbadan Ali, Nadia Salem Ali Al-Raziq, Noah Ahmed Abdel Moaty, Hoda Ahmed Said, Hoda Farag Said, Hayam Abdo Ibrahim, Mervat Sayed Ali, Ali Ali Ali, Ali Mahmoud Husseini and Sana Hamdi Abdul Aziz. "

Among them was Asma al Beltagi, the daughter of the Muslim Brotherhood leader, Dr. Mohammed al Beltagi, who was 17 years old when a sniper killed her on the fourth day of the mbadacre.

Habiba Abdel Aziz, a 26-year-old journalist, was killed in Rabaa. She lived abroad, then went back on vacation to Egypt with her father when he declared a coup against elected President Mohamed Morsi and decided to leave Rabaa Square, arrival a few days before the break. She wrote on her Facebook page about a year before these events: "I wish God two wishes: return to Egypt permanently, martyrdom for him".

Jamal's gift, "Umm Ramadan", is the one who called his son in a video with bloody hearts "Wake up, Mom, may God be with you." She was in her forties when she was killed in the square. A video of her pale face and first aid sprouted up to death, while her youngest shouted, "Wake up, Mom!

It should be noted that the estimates of human rights organizations and governmental organizations, particularly Egyptian and international, differed in the number of victims of the mbadacre. Estimates begin at 333 deaths, including 247 known cases, 52 unknown cases and 7 police cases, according to Egyptian government estimates published by the Ministry of Health and the Department of Forensic Medicine, and in some estimates, out of 2,200 cases according to the latest censuses published by Rabaa Adawiya Hospital, while the number increases slightly up to 2600 deaths, according to the Muslim Brotherhood.

In its report of 12 August 2014, Human Rights Watch estimated the number of victims at 1,150 before the number dropped to 817 in the same organization's report of 14 August 2015.

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