(ANSA) - ROME, AUG 23 - An Egyptian court on Sunday extended
the pre-trial custody of Patrick Zaki, an Egyptian student of
the University of Bologna who has been held in Cairo on sedition
charges since February last year, one of his lawyers, Hoda
Nasrallah, told ANSA.
The court did not say for how long.
Previous extensions have been for 45 days.
The court will says Monday or Tuesday how long it is this time,
the lawyer said.
Amnesty International Italia's spokesman Riccardo Noury called
on Italy to lodge a formal protest with Egypt over the case.
He also urged Italian MPs who have voted to grant Zaki Italian
citizenship to make their voices heard and to "urge the
government to change the failed and failing strategy they have
thus far adopted towards Egypt".
For the first time since his arrest in February last year, Zaki
was questioned on July 13 about his past activities, the 'Free
Patrick' group said on Facebook the day after, July 14, when his
latest 45-day extension was announced.
A week previously the Lower House of the Italian parliament
voted almost unanimously to urge the government to grant Zaki
Italian citizenship in a bid to pressure Egypt to release him.
The Senate had already made a similar call.
The motion, which saw the abstention of the nationalist
opposition Brothers of Italy (FdI) party, commits the
government to "promptly initiate, via the competent
institutions, the necessary assessments in order to confer
Italian citizenship on Patrick George Zaki".
It also urged the government to keep monitoring Zaki's case and
his conditions of detention.
The government subsequently issued a favourable opinion on the
motion.
Zaki marked his 30th birthday in detention in Cairo on June 16,
spurring renewed calls from Italy for his release.
The Egyptian Bologna University postgraduate student has been
held in Egypt since February 7 last year on charges of
"disseminating false news" and "incitement to protest".
Zaki, a 29-year-old Coptic Christian, is pursuing an Erasmus
Mundus Master's Degree in Women and Gender Studies at the
University of Bologna.
He also conducts research and advocacy on gender issues and
human rights for the Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights
(EIPR), a human rights organization based in Cairo.
Petitions for his release have been rejected on countless
occasion.
Zaki was arrested on arriving at Cairo International Airport
when he returned home from Bologna for a short family visit.
The Egyptian National Security Agency reportedly arrested Zaki,
interrogated him about his time in Italy and his human rights
work, and took him to an undisclosed location.
During interrogation, he was allegedly frequently threatened,
beaten on his stomach and back and tortured with electric
shocks.
The European Parliament, Amnesty International and Scholars At
Risk have been among the bodies calling for his release, along
with the Italian government. (ANSA).
Zaki's custody extended again
Italy should formally protest to Egypt says Amnesty Italia