What reasons drive Egyptian inmates to attempt suicide in their recently assigned jail facilities?

In what rights organizations and lawyers describe as a protest once morest human rights violations and torture, dozens of prisoners in Egypt’s newly established “Badr 3” prison have attempted suicide in the past few weeks. Despite being denied visits, families have learned of the situation through letters leaked by colleagues. Asmaa, a wife of one of the prisoners, states that this is not her husband’s first attempted suicide and fears that future attempts may be successful. Badr 3 is one of many correction and rehabilitation centers that the authorities opened in the past two years as a replacement for the old prisons which have been criticized for their deteriorated conditions. President Abdel-Fattah El-Sisi praised the new centers’ human rights, but human rights advocates have expressed concern over widespread violations in Badr 3. Prisoners have complained regarding the 24-hour camera surveillance and the almost continuous lighting. Families told BBC News Arabic that prisoners were denied visits for no apparent reasons, and some were even beaten. While the Egyptian authorities deny these accusations, some prisoners’ lives are at risk as they are denied visits and, in some cases, urgent medical care.

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Some families complain that their relatives were beaten in Badr 3 prison, as punishment for covering the surveillance cameras

“This is not his first attempt at suicide. It will not pass peacefully every time, because at one time the attempt may fail, and we will wake up to the news of his death,” says Asmaa, a pseudonym, the wife of a prisoner in Egypt.

Her husband is one of dozens of prisoners who human rights organizations and lawyers said have attempted suicide in the past weeks, protesting their exposure to “torture and a number of violations” in a newly established prison, known as “Badr 3” prison, while the Egyptian authorities deny these charges.

Asma learned of the news through letters leaked by his colleagues regarding three weeks ago, and says that she has not been allowed to visit him since then, despite obtaining permission from the Public Prosecution.

Over the past two years, the Egyptian authorities have opened a number of what they called “correction and rehabilitation centers” to replace the old prisons, which have long been criticized as dilapidated and whose cells are unfit for living.



The situation in Badr 3 prison raises serious concerns regarding the human rights of prisoners in Egypt. Dozens of prisoners have attempted suicide in protest once morest alleged torture and violations, yet the authorities deny these charges. Families of prisoners are desperate to visit their loved ones, who are serving time in the newly established “correction and rehabilitation center.” However, some have been denied visits for no apparent reason, creating harsh pressures on the prisoners. The situation is alarming, and human rights organizations are calling on the authorities to investigate and take action to ensure the safety and well-being of prisoners in Badr 3 and other prisons in Egypt.

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