Egypt’s interior minister yesterday rejected charges of security forces involvement in the case of Italian Giulio Regeni, who was found dead bearing signs of torture after disappearing in Cairo last month.
“This did not happen,” Magdy Abdel Ghaffar said at a press conference when a reporter asked if Regeni, a Cambridge University PhD student, had been arrested by the police.
“It is completely unacceptable that such accusations be directed” at the interior ministry, he said.
“This is not Egyptian security policy - Egyptian security has never been accused of such a matter.”
The interior ministry has been accused by critics in Egypt of using excessive force, and several policemen are being tried for torture-related deaths.
The ministry says these are isolated cases.
Regeni disappeared on January 25 and was found dead on February 3 in a ditch in a Cairo suburb.
An Italian autopsy after his remains were repatriated at the weekend concluded that he was killed by a violent blow to the base of the skull having already suffered multiple fractures all over his body.
Rights activists and several opposition groups say Regeni, who was doing research on Egyptian trade union movements, had been arrested by the police and tortured.
The diplomatic community and the Italian media have also raised the possibility of torture.
Abdel Ghaffar said Regeni had not been arrested, and his death was “certainly a criminal act”.
He said no suspects have yet been arrested.
“We are still in the phase of information gathering. This matter needs some time,” he said.
Meanwhile, Italy demanded that Egypt help ensure the killers of the student are brought to justice.
Rome said it would not allow the fate of Regeni to be brushed under the carpet as anger mounted over the student’s killing.
Foreign Minister Paolo Gentiloni said that Egypt appeared to be cooperating with a team of Italian detective and forensic investigators dispatched to Cairo.
But he warned: “We will not settle for alleged truths.”
Gentiloni, in an interview with daily La Repubblica, added: “We want those really responsible identified and punished on the basis of law.”
Global rights groups have regularly denounced mysterious disappearances of activists, torture and beating of detainees in Egyptian detention centres.
President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi has himself urged security forces to restrain themselves after several cases of custodial deaths emerged in recent months.
Regeni went missing in central Cairo while on the way to meet a friend on January 25, the fifth anniversary of the start of the uprising against longtime autocrat Hosni Mubarak.
On the anniversary Cairo was quiet, with police deployed across the capital to prevent any demonstrations.