Said Abdel Hafed, a member of the Coordination Committee of the Coalition for Monitoring the Elections, formed within the framework of the joint international mission’s invitation, said that the human rights organizations and coalitions ’refusal to participate in the mission’s meeting on September 12th from sending their proposals to the committee confirms some organizations’ insistence on individual work and giving priority to the spirit of competition over human rights work. It is characterized by collective and coordination because it is assumed that the organizations aim to improve the condition of the Egyptian citizen and not compete with them.
Abdel-Hafez added to “The Seventh Day”: “After the human rights organizations turned into anarchist, liberal and leftist alliances, we tried to get out of the political conflict, and we found that these organizations, unfortunately, do not want to take steps towards unifying the human rights movement and purifying it from personal disputes, and my talk here is directed at organizations that She refused the invitation, who attended the meeting and did not pay attention to the matter, the organizations that did not accept the invitation, and the organizations that work underground.
The head of the Dialogue Forum for Development and Human Rights stated that the idea of unifying human rights organizations to launch a unified report has failed, saying, “But we are ready, open and determined to complete our role in unifying alliances that will monitor elections, complete dialogue and open up to organizations concerned with election monitoring for a new formulation. "We are determined to know the reasons for the reluctance of these organizations to present their proposals, especially if they have reservations or views if they are to send them to the committee for discussion about it."
Short link: https://pfort.org/en/?p=308