"I went to the
airport this morning at 6 a.m. Cairo time and went through passport
control. They made a phone call then told me I was on a travel ban list
at the orders of an investigative magistrate," Zaree told Reuters.
He
said the reason was his involvement in the NGO foreign funding case,
which dates back to 2011. The case was revived in recent months with
many rights defenders being summoned for questioning, banned from travel
or having their assets frozen.
Egyptian rights
activists say they are facing the worst assault in their history amid a
wider campaign to erase the freedoms won in the 2011 uprising that ended
Hosni Mubarak's 30-year rule.
An investigative
magistrate had in March banned Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights
(EIPR) founder Hossam Bahgat and Arab Network for Human Rights
Information (ANHRI) founder Gamal Eid from travel and froze their
assets, a decision that could extend to their respective NGOs if upheld.
Four
NGO workers from three other organisations were added to the asset
freeze order in April. At least six - the latest of whom is Zaree - have
been banned from travel and 10 have been called in questioning,
including Radwa Ahmed from ANHRI who was summoned on Thursday.
There was no comment from prosecutors, who banned reporting on the legal details of the case.
U.S.
Secretary of State John Kerry said in March he was deeply concerned by
the deterioration in the human rights situation in Egypt, including
Egypt's decision to reopen the NGO case.
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