Dead Italian student in Egypt was 'tortured'

  • 05/02/2016
Policemen guard in front of a morgue where the body of an Italian Giulio Regeni is kept in Egypt (Reuters)
Policemen guard in front of a morgue where the body of an Italian Giulio Regeni is kept in Egypt (Reuters)

The body of an Italian student who went missing in Cairo was found half naked by the roadside with cigarette burns and other signs of torture, a senior Egyptian prosecutor said.

In Rome, Italy's Foreign Ministry summoned the Egyptian ambassador to express concern over the death of Giulio Regeni, who disappeared on January 25, the fifth anniversary of the uprising that ended Hosni Mubarak's 30-year rule.

The body of the 28-year-old Cambridge University doctoral student has been taken to a Cairo morgue, a morgue worker and Egyptian security officials said.

The officials said an investigation had begun.

"What we are certainly doing is urging the Egyptian government to allow Italian authorities a joint investigation, to return the boy's body to his family as soon as possible, to collaborate. We want the truth about what happened," Italy's foreign minister, Paolo Gentiloni, told RAI state TV.

Italy's Prime Minister Matteo Renzi later repeated the request for Regeni's body to be returned as soon as possible and a source from his office said an Italian police team had been sent to Cairo to join the investigation.

Regeni had disappeared after leaving home in a smart district of Cairo to meet a friend, according to another friend.

His body was found at the start of the main road between Cairo and Alexandria, security officials said.

Last year, Islamic State militants kidnapped a Croatian man from the outskirts of Cairo and later beheaded him, but such incidents are rare and there was a heavy police presence in downtown Cairo when Regeni went missing.

Rights groups say Egyptians are often detained by police on little evidence and beaten or coerced. Scores have disappeared since 2013. Egypt denies allegations of police brutality.

Although the cause of death is still unclear, Regeni's case could hurt Egypt's efforts to project an image of stability and attract more tourism and foreign investment after years of political turmoil and Islamist militant violence.

Reuters