NGOs launch complaint against French military operation in Egypt
PARIS (AA) – Two international non-governmental organizations have filed a legal complaint with the judiciary to investigate the French state’s role in crimes against humanity in a covert military operation in Egypt.
Based on its 2021 investigation into what was dubbed “Operation Sirli” in Egypt, US-based NGOs Egyptians Abroad for Democracy and CodePink have filed a complaint at the National Anti-Terrorist Prosecutor’s Office, the news platform Disclose reported.
They want the French judiciary to investigate French officials complicit in committing crimes against civilians by providing assistance to the Egyptian authorities through information and intelligence.
“Operation Sirli” was a secret intelligence mission launched by France in February 2016 to secure Egypt’s 1,200-kilometre-long (745.6-miles) border with Libya.
According to confidential defense documents obtained by Disclose, the Egyptian forces diverted the original mission of surveillance of terrorist activity and providing aerial intelligence in favor of targeting smugglers.
French soldiers sent to Egypt from 2016 to 2019 alerted their superiors on numerous occasions about the airstrikes against civilians accused of drug smuggling.
The information reached the Elysee Palace, but neither then President Francois Hollande nor incumbent Emmanuel Macron took any action to end the mission. The French Defense Ministry defended the “Sirli mission” and clarified that it was “subject to a clear framework and strict preventive measures,” as per information on the Disclose website.