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Helen Hunt. Photo: AP

Actress Helen Hunt criticised for appearing at forum organised by Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi

Regime has jailed journalists for doing their jobs and gays for coming out, activists wrote

Egypt

Egyptian activists have sent Hollywood actress Helen Hunt an open letter denouncing her participation in a forum organised by President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, who is accused of human rights violations.

“As you shake hands with Sisi, smile, take a photo, let history note that you chose to support a dictator responsible for thousands of deaths, arbitrary detentions and disappearances,” they wrote in the letter published Monday on change.org.

Among those his regime had jailed were “journalists for doing their jobs” and “gays for coming out,” they wrote, adding that Egyptian authorities had blocked more than 400 websites and media outlets.

Over 100 people signed the letter to protest Hunt’s involvement in the World Youth Forum, including human rights activists Mona Seif, Azza Soliman and Mohamed Zaree.

Around 3,000 people were set to attend the forum, a week-long gathering in the Egyptian resort of Sharm el-Sheikh that ends on Sunday.

Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi. photo: Reuters

Egypt’s government cracked down on supporters of Islamist president Mohammed Mursi after the army ousted him in July, 2013.

Initially, the crackdown mainly targeted Morsi’s Muslim Brotherhood, but later expanded to include other members of the opposition.

Opponents of the regime had taken to social media to criticise Hunt, a two-time Oscar-winner and star of The Sessions, for her participation in the forum, including speaking at the opening ceremony.

The event’s slogan – “We need to talk” – has been hijacked on social media to highlight the human rights situation in Egypt.

“#WeNeedToTalk about Shawkan’s mother who has been waiting for her imprisoned son for 4 years for doing his job as a journalist #FreeShawan,” activist Radwa Medhat tweeted.

Photojournalist Mahmud Abu Zeid, also known as Shawkan, was arrested while covering the bloody break-up of a sit-in in mid-2013 that followed the ouster of Islamist president Mohammed Mursi.

His trial has been repeatedly postponed, including on Tuesday, when it was delayed until November 14.

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