Exemption of the Two COs Mark Nabil and Mostafa Ahmed
Mostafa Ahmed became, last November, the first Egyptian to receive an official written response on his demand to be recognized as a conscientious objector. After being chosen to serve as an officer in the army, Mostafa sent a letter to the minister of defense asking for exemption based on his beliefs. Two weeks later, Mostafa received a letter back from the ministry of defense rejecting his demand and claiming that refusing conscription is an act which threatens the safety of the country. Mostafa still refused to accept conscription, and remained in a legal limbo until the minister of defense exempted him last month.
It seems that Egypt, while doesn't officially recognize conscientious objection as a right, has developed a de facto status for conscientious objection. Since Maikel Nabil refused conscription in 2010, the military had put all conscientious objectors in a legal limbo for a duration varies between weeks and years, then exempted them from the service. Until now, according to our knowledge, there has been no trial in Egypt for a conscientious objector, nor the military ever tried to force a pacifist to serve in the army. Partial objectors don’t receive the same treatment, though.
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