Human Rights Watch (HRW) argued in a recent report that Egyptian security forces intentionally killed at least 817 protesters during what they dubbed the "Rabaa massacre" last August. In fact, they described the attack as equal to as or worse than China's Tiananmen Square killings in 1989. The 195-page investigation based on interviews with 122 survivors and witnesses has found Egypt's police and army "systematically and deliberately killed largely unarmed protesters on political grounds" in actions that "likely amounted to crimes against humanity." The report recommends that several senior individuals within Egypt's security apparatus be investigated and, where appropriate, held to account for their role in planning the incident.
This HRW report is defective on several levels.
First, it relied primarily on a pool of biased witnesses. Those who were protesting in Rabaa were more than likely supporters of the Islamists, and thus predisposed to provide false—or at least jaundiced—information that would hurt the Egyptian military. HRW should have given equal voice to the opponents of former Egyptian President Mohamed Morsi, particularly those who live near Raaba. As it happens, there were witnesses who were against both the Islamists and the military—in other words, who were unbiased. And some of them actually videotaped the heinous crimes committed by the Islamists in Rabaa prior to the intervention of the military.
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