Showing posts with label English. Show all posts
Showing posts with label English. Show all posts

Saturday, 9 September 2023

NoMilService Is Dissolved

Due to the terrible political conditions, inside and outside Egypt, the leadership of No to Compulsory Military Service Movement (NoMilService) has decided to dissolve the movement and permanently terminate all of its activities. The movement is proud of the work that it has done in the past 14 years, but believes that it’s time for other organizations to continue the mission.


Peace!

Saturday, 12 March 2016

Statement of Conscientious Objectors’ Groups from the Eastern Mediterranean Region



We are conscientious objectors from all around the eastern Mediterranean region. Our region has suffered for so long from oppression, injustice, militarisation, military occupations and wars, as well as poverty, illiteracy, hunger and lack of social infrastructure. In this difficult period, when our region seems to fall even more into the chaos of war, we raise a common voice for peace and against militarisation.

We refuse to allow this cycle of violence, initiated by oppressive states and economic interests, to continue; we refuse to be a part of it; we refuse to be enemies with people who just happen to be of a different nationality or religion; we will not be dragged into their wars and armies leading to death and destruction in the region.

Friday, 4 March 2016

NoMilService: Egypt must recognize Samir Elsharbaty’s right to Conscientious objection


“I believe in peace, and in my right to refuse conscription. The military service contradicts with my principles and pacifist beliefs” - Samir Elsharbaty

No to Compulsory Military Service Movement declares its solidarity and support to the Conscientious Objector Samir Elsharbaty. We demand the Egyptian authorities to accept his request to be exempted from the military service, and to transfer him to a civilian service instead, as per his request.

Samir Elsharbaty has submitted a request to the Egyptian Minister of Defense on March 3rd, 2016, demanding an exemption from the military service based on his Pacifist beliefs. Samir has also submitted similar requests to the Prime Minister, the President of the Parliament, and to the President of the Republic. His requests are based on article 64 of the Egyptian constitution which guarantees freedom of belief to all citizens without limits.

Sunday, 2 August 2015

NoMilService Nominates Rudi Friedrich to FOR Peace Prize


Rudi Friedrich with NoMilService members in Berlin 2013 

NoMilService is happy to announce that it has nominated Rudi Friedrich, the director of Connection e.V., to Pfeffer Peace Prize, which is given by the Fellowship of Reconciliation (FOR). Friedrich has been a very supportive friend to our movement, and we honor his huge efforts for supporting peace activists all over the world.

Thursday, 18 June 2015

Exemption of the Two COs Mark Nabil and Mostafa Ahmed



On the 20th of May 2015, Egypt’s minister of defense, Sedki Sobhi, issued an executive order to exempt the two Egyptian conscientious Objectors, Mark Nabil Sanad and Mostafa Ahmed El-Saied, permanently from the military service. Both conscientious objectors have been living in a legal limbo for over a year, struggling for recognition as conscientious objectors. The decision of the minister of defense didn’t recognize them as conscientious objectors, but decided to exempt them from the service permanently.

Monday, 11 May 2015

NoMilService Is Now A Member In EBCO


NoMilService is happy to announce that last Saturday, the 9th May, the General  Assembly of the European Bureau for Conscientious Objection (EBCO) has voted unanimously to adopt NoMilService as an EBCO member with consultative status. NoMilService representatives will be able to participate in all EBCO’s future meetings.

Sunday, 12 April 2015

NoMilService General Assembly Meets in Cairo


NoMilService’s General Assembly has met in Cairo last Thursday 9th April 2015. The General Assembly meets annually at the anniversary of establishing the movement on the 9th of April each year. Active members in the movement submitted their annual reports detailing their efforts during the last year.

Thursday, 9 April 2015

International Statement: Solidarity with the Egyptian Conscientious Objector Mark Nabil Sanad



We, peace and human rights organizations, declare our support and solidarity with No to Compulsory Military Service Movement and with the Egyptian conscientious objector, Mark Nabil Sanad. We condemn the silence of Egypt’s authorities over conscientious objectors’ suffering. We call on the Egyptian authorities to restore his civil rights and to recognize his right to an exemption from the military service based on his conscientious beliefs.

Friday, 23 January 2015

NoMilService: Egypt must recognize Mark Nabil Sanad’s right to Conscientious objection


No to Compulsory Military Service Movement declares its total support to the Conscientious Objector Mark Nabil Sanad, to be exempted from the Military Service. We demand that the Egyptian authorities end his illegal status and transfer him to a civilian service instead, as per his request.
Mark Nabil had informed the officers at Assiut Conscription Area on the 13th of May, 2014 of his Pacifist beliefs, and

Friday, 28 February 2014

Statement: Free Murat Kanatli Now!




No to Compulsory Military Service Movement was shocked to know that the Turkish Cypriot Conscientious Objector Murat Kanatli was sentenced to 10 Days in prison for objecting to participate in the annual compulsory military exercise in the northern part of Cyprus on the basis of his ideological conscientious objection. Murat Kanatli has been always a friend of our movement, and was present in Cairo during the trial of the founder of our movement, Maikel Nabil Sanad, in October 2011. We call for his immediate release and recognition of his right in conscientious objection to the military service.

Sunday, 10 November 2013

Statement: Solidarity with Egyptian Conscientious Objectors Emad el Dafrawi and Mohamed Fathy



We, peace and human rights organizations, declare our support and solidarity with No to Compulsory Military Service movement and with Egyptian conscientious objectors, Emad el Dafrawi and Mohamed Fathy. We condemn the silence of Egypt’s authorities over conscientious objectors’ suffering. We call on the Egyptian authorities to restore their civil rights and to recognize their right to an exemption from the military service based on their conscientious beliefs.


Friday, 1 November 2013

Regional Status - Nov 2013

African Countries
Half of African countries (27 out of 54) doesn't have a compulsory military service.


 Non EU members in The Union for The Mediterranean
Half of Non EU members in The Union for The Mediterranean (8 out of 16) doesn't have compulsory military service.
*Libya is an observer member, but we included it here.

Members of The Arab League
More than half of Arab League's member (12 out of 22) doesn't have compulsory military service.

Members of the Organization of  Islamic Cooperation
Nearly half of members of Organization of Islamic Cooperation (28 out of 57) doesn't have compulsory military service, including the most populous Muslim countries: Indonesia, Pakistan and Bangladesh.


Special Thanks for Nader Wagdy for designing these maps.

Thursday, 10 October 2013

A Conversation on Twitter between Movements.org, Emad and Fathy on Conscientious Objection


Movements.org: how long has it been since you refused to obey compulsory military service in Egypt?

Emad: I was required to be present at the recruiting area on January 2012. I didn't and declared my refusal on April.

Movements.org: Wow, over 1.5 years since you refused compulsory service. What has the response been from the Egyptian govt and others?

Emad: The Egyptian military and the government don't care, they didn't even bother to respond to my letters I sent them twice.

Fathy: they ignored us and never respond to the letters

Movements.org: Are there restrictions on what you can do now?

Emad: I'm not allowed to make post-graduate studies, to work or to travel abroad. The military can arrest and capture me for 3 years!

Movements.org: What demands do young refusers have of the Egypt govt & military?

Fathy: That is transfer me for the civil service do not follow the military in anything

Movements.org: Is govt under el-Sisi more restrictive to you & other refusers?

Emad: The government under el-Sisi isn't different at all from the governments under Morsi or Tantawi. It's all the same regime.

Movements.org: What's your main reason for saying #NoEgyptMilService?

Emad: Egypt's military service is a perfect example of modern slavery that the world chose to stay silent on.

Fathy: i do not believe in war or using weapons and violence is solution for making peace

Movements.org: Is the #NoEgyptMilService message accepted in Egypt? Obviously government has come down hard on you, but is the message growing?

Emad: #NoEgyptMilService message is growing but slowly and totally accepted by whom it concern most: potential recruits

Movements.org: What resources/actions can human rights groups & others contribute to the cause #NoEgyptMilService? What support do you need?

Emad: Human rights groups can sign a statement @NoMilService made demanding #Egypt to recognize conscientious objection & speak out!

Fathy: in Egypt we need the NGOs to be more legally cooperative

Movements.org: What do you think of the American military assistance to Egypt?

Emad: It's a military assistance, not for helping liberties, however it was a promise from the US to Egypt after Camp David accords.
Egypt has and continues to violate the Camp David accords, yet Israel and the US never bothered to complain.

Fathy: I think its time to assist Egypt in the field of liberties instead

Movements.org: What's next for you personally @EmadPax @Fathy ? Any optimism that your punishment will end for saying #NoEgyptMilService?

Emad: Everything is possible. I believe that things change when people start to think deeply and with compassion, to choose to change

Fathy: When people realize that violence and wars are a closed circle not producing real peace or tolerance, and when people ask for a civilian service

Movements.org: Really great thoughts on dissent & military service in Egypt from @mo3bdo & @EmadPax. Follow @NoMilService & on FB: http://ow.ly/pHcvZ




Wednesday, 2 October 2013

No to Compulsory Military Service Becomes Member of War Resisters' International


The council of War Resisters' International agreed to accept No to Compulsory Military Service movement as a full member of the organization, during the annual meeting for its council, last week. By that, No to Compulsory Military Service movement becomes the first Egyptian movement to obtain a membership for the organization.

War Resisters' International is considered the largest gathering worldwide for the pacifist and the anti-militarist organizations. It was established in 1921 after the end of the first world war, as a humanitarian reaction to the bloodshed in the war. The organization includes in its membership more than 80 local organizations in more than 40 countries around the world. It aims at abolishing wars, militarism and compulsory military recruitment.

The movement started its relation with War Resisters' International in 2010 when Maikel Nabil Sanad, the founder, declared his conscientious objection, the organization backed his right to conscientious objection to military service. Also, the organization currently backs the right of the conscientious objectors, Emad el Dafrawi and Mohamed Fathy, and is contributing in the international campaign demanding the Egyptian government to recognize the right to conscientious objection in Egypt.

Related:

Thursday, 25 April 2013

Joint Statement: Freedom to Conscientious Objectors in the Middle East

Freedom to Conscientious Objectors in the Middle East
Joint Statement

Together, we in No to Compulsory Military Service (Egypt) and New Profile (Israel) confirm our support of peace and of conscientious objectors in both countries, re-affirming the human right to freedom of conscience, faith and self-determination. We condemn the way both our governments treat conscientious objectors: Natan Blanc, Emad El Dafrawi, and Mohammed Fathy.

Natan Blanc, 19-year old Israeli conscript who first refused to serve in the Israeli army on November 19, 2012 and since has been in and out of military prison for the last 5 months, and still counting, declared at an alternative beacon lighting ceremony on April 14th 2013: “I refuse because I will not serve in an army that violates human rights regularly. I refuse because I will not serve as a tool to preserve the occupation... I refuse because it is the moral thing to do. I would like to dedicate this beacon to all the Palestinian detainees that are currently held in Administrative Detention… I remember always that while I am here in the spotlight, they are languishing in jail without being convicted of any offence”.

In Egypt: Emad el Dafrawi, declared his conscientious objection to military service on April 12, 2012, and Mohamed Fathy Abdo Soliman, 23-years old, declared his conscientious objection to military service on July 20, 2012. Both declared that military service contradicts their belief in peace, and refuse all forms of violence and bearing arms. Both sent letters to the Minister of Defense and other Egyptian officials, asking for exemption from military service and serving a civilian service instead. For nearly a year now they have been living without most of their civil rights. They are not allowed to work, study or travel. They are not even allowed to hold a travel document. The Egyptian state still ignores their suffering.

Since the right to conscientious objection is one of the basic human rights, as the right to freedom of expression and life, and is recognized in international charters on human rights such as The Universal Declaration of Human Rights and The International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (both signed and ratified by both Egypt and Israel). Therefore, the movements No to Compulsory Military Service and New Profile call on both governments to respect international laws and meet their obligations to which they committed themselves in view of the international community, and to recognize the right of Natan Blanc, Emad el Dafrawi and Mohamed Fathy to conscientious objection to military service.

Cairo – Jerusalem
April 25, 2013

Thursday, 11 April 2013

Free Natan Blanc from Cairo

Activists of our movement, during our protest in 9 April 2013, showing solidarity with the Israeli Conscientious Objector Natan Blanc, who is imprisoned in Israel for refusing the military service. we believe that his detention is a violation to his right to belief, and we demade his immediate release.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Thursday, 7 February 2013

Youth of No to Compulsory Military Service Attended a Workshop on Peace in Berlin

Leaders and members of No to Compulsory Military Service movement attended a workshop which was made at the House of Democracy in the German capital, Berlin, titled:  "War, Peace and the German experience after the second world war",  which cared for studying the German experience in the two world wars and the cold war, and how the German peace activists were able to transform Germany into a peaceful state, without a compulsory military recruitment. Discussions were about the history of conscientious objection and the varied methods which are pursued by the peace activists and the conscientious objectors. Lectures included as well the ways and methods of the non-violent resistance.

The members of the movement visited the headquarter of Germany's Foreign Office to meet Mr. Markus Löning, the German Federal Commissioner for Human Rights Policy and Humanitarian Aid. They also headed to visit the headquarter of the parliament, Bundestag, to meet a number of the parliament members. The discussions were with the German officials about many axes, including the current situation of the violated human rights in Egypt under the rule of the Muslim Brotherhood, and about the unrecognized right to conscientious objection by the Egyptian government, and about the bad situations that the conscientious objectors, Emad Dafrawi and Mohamed Fathi are subjected to for their refusal to do the compulsory military service. The discussion included the developments taking place in the Middle East, about the lack of development in the peace process between Israel and Palestine, and about the German role and the international community in providing the proper climate to develop the peace process.
The names of Emad and Fathi on the chairs
The members of the movement also visited many places which demonstrate the vast amount of repression which the German people were subjected to under the Nazi rule, where they visited the headquarters of Gestapo and Stasi, the former repression apparatuses in Germany. They also visited the Holocaust museum, making them the first group to make a tour inside the museum in Arabic language since its opening in 2005.
Peace activists from Germany, Philippines, Pakistan and China, participated in the workshop, in addition to an activist from New Profile movement from Israel, where both parties exchanged the experiences in facing the military establishments, and both parties announced their solidarity with conscientious objectors in both countries, Emad Dafrawi, Mohamed Fathi and Natan Blanc. A joint coordination was agreed so that the compulsory military service be abolished in Egypt, Israel and all the countries of the region.

Saturday, 8 September 2012

UNESCO: Seville Statement on Violence


Seville Statement on Violence, Spain, 1986

Believing that it is our responsibility to address from our particular disciplines the most dangerous and destructive activities of our species, violence and war; recognizing that science is a human cultural product which cannot be definitive or all-encompassing; and gratefully acknowledging the support of the authorities of Seville and representatives of the Spanish UNESCO;

we, the undersigned scholars from around the world and from relevant sciences, have met and arrived at the following Statement on Violence. In it, we challenge a number of alleged biological findings that have been used, even by some in our disciplines, to justify violence and war. Because the alleged findings have contributed to an atmosphere of pessimism in our time, we submit that open, considered rejection of these mis-statements can contribute significantly to the International Year of Peace.

Misuse of scientific theories and data to justify violence and war is not new but has been made since the advent of modern science. For example, the theory of evolution has been used to justify not only war, but also genocide, colonialism, and suppression of the weak.

We state our position in the form of five propositions. We are aware that there are many other issues about violence and war that could be fruitfully addressed from the standpoint of our disciplines, but we restrict ourselves here to what we consider a most important first step.

IT IS SCIENTIFICALLY INCORRECT to say that we have inherited a tendency to make war from our animal ancestors. Although fighting occurs widely throughout animal species, only a few cases of destructive intra-species fighting between organized groups have ever been reported among naturally living species, and none of these involve the use of tools designed to be weapons. Normal predatory feeding upon other species cannot be equated with intra-species violence. Warfare is a peculiarly human phenomenon and does not occur in other animals.

The fact that warfare has changed so radically overtime indicates that it is a product of culture. Its biological connection is primarily through language which makes possible the co-ordination of groups, the transmission of technology, and the use of tools. War is biologically possible, but it is not inevitable, as evidenced by its variation in occurrence and nature over time and space. There are cultures which have not engaged in war for centuries, and there are cultures which have engaged in war frequently at some times and not at others.

IT IS SCIENTIFICALLY INCORRECT to say that war or any other violent behavior is genetically programmed into our human nature. While genes are involved at all levels of nervous system function, they provide a developmental potential that can be actualized only in conjunction with the ecological and social environment. While individuals vary in their predispositions to be affected by their experience, it is the interaction between their genetic endowment and conditions of nurturance that determines their personalities. Except for rare pathologies, the genes do not produce individuals necessarily predisposed to violence. Neither do they determine the opposite. While genes are co-involved in establishing our behavioral capacities, they do not by themselves specify the outcome.

IT IS SCIENTIFICALLY INCORRECT to say that in the course of human evolution there has been a selection for aggressive behavior more than for other kinds of behavior. In all well-studied species, status within the group is achieved by the ability to co-operate and to fulfill social functions relevant to the structure of that group. 'Dominance' involves social bindings and affiliations; it is not simply a matter of the possession and use of superior physical power, although it does involve aggressive behaviors. Where genetic selection for aggressive behavior has been artificially instituted in animals, it has rapidly succeeded in producing hyper-aggressive individuals; this indicates that aggression was not maximally selected under natural conditions. When such experimentally-created hyper-aggressive animals are present in a social group, they either disrupt its social structure or are driven out. Violence is neither in our evolutionary legacy nor in our genes.

IT IS SCIENTIFICALLY INCORRECT to say that humans have a 'violent brain'. While we do have the neural apparatus to act violently, it is not automatically activated by internal or external stimuli. Like higher primates and unlike other animals, our higher neural processes filter such stimuli before they can be acted upon. How we act is shaped by how we have been conditioned and socialized. There is nothing in our neurophysiology that compels us to react violently.

IT IS SCIENTIFICALLY INCORRECT to say that war is caused by 'instinct' or any single motivation. The emergence of modern warfare has been a journey from the primacy of emotional and motivational factors, sometimes called 'instincts', to the primacy of cognitive factors. Modern war involves institutional use of personal characteristics such as obedience, suggestibility, and idealism, social skills such as language, and rational considerations such as cost-calculation, planning, and information processing. The technology of modern war has exaggerated traits associated with violence both in the training of actual combatants and in the preparation of support for war in the general population. As a result of this exaggeration, such traits are often mistaken to be the causes rather than the consequences of the process.

We conclude that biology does not condemn humanity to war, and that humanity can be freed from the bondage of biological pessimism and empowered with confidence to undertake the transformative tasks needed in this International Year of Peace and in the years to come. Although these tasks are mainly institutional and collective, they also rest upon the consciousness of individual participants for whom pessimism and optimism are crucial factors. Just as 'wars begin in the minds of men', peace also begins in our minds. The same species who invented war is capable of inventing peace. The responsibility lies with each of us.

Seville, 16 May 1986

-     David Adams, Psychology, Wesleyan University, Middletown, CT., U.S.A.
-     S.A. Barnett, Ethology, The Australian National University, Canberra, Australia
-     N.P. Bechtereva, Neurophysiology, Institute for Experimental Medicine of Academy of Medical Sciences of the U.S.S.R., Leningrad, U.S.S.R.
-     Bonnie Frank Carter, Psychology, Albert Einstein Medical Center, Philadelphia (PA), U.S.A.
-     José M. Rodriguez Delgado, Neurophysiology, Centro de Estudios Neurobiologicos, Madrid, Spain
-     José Luis Diaz, Ethology, Instituto Mexicano de Psiquiatria, Mexico D.F., Mexico
-     Andrzej Eliasz, Individual Differences Psychology, Polish Academy of Sciences, Warsaw, Poland
-     Santiago Genovés, Biological Anthropology, Instituto de Estudios Antropologicos, Mexico D.F., Mexico
-     Benson E. Ginsburg, Behavior Genetics, University of Connecticut, Storrs, CT., U.S.A.
-     Jo Groebel, Social Psychology, Erziehungswissenschaftliche Hochschule, Landau, Federal Republic of Germany
-     Samir-Kumar Ghosh, Sociology, Indian Institute of Human Sciences, Calcutta, India
-     Robert Hinde, Animal Behaviour, Cambridge University, Cambridge, U.K.
-     Richard E. Leakey, Physical Anthropology, National Museums of Kenya, Nairobi, Kenya
-     Taha H. Malasi, Psychiatry, Kuwait University, Kuwait
-     J. Martin Ramirez, Psychobiology, Universidad de Sevilla, Spain
-     Federico Mayor Zaragoza, Biochemistry, Universidad Autonoma, Madrid, Spain
-     Diana L. Mendoza, Ethology, Universidad de Sevilla, Spain
-     Ashis Nandy, Political Psychology, Centre for the Study of Developing Societies, Delhi, India
-     John Paul Scott, Animal Behavior, Bowling Green State University, Bowling Green, OH., U.S.A.
-     Riitta Wahlstrom, Psychology, University of Jyväskylä, Finland

Source Reference               (subsequently adopted by UNESCO at the twenty-fifth session of the General Conference on 16 November 1989)

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The original source

Friday, 31 August 2012

Death of the Former Chief of EBCO

The movement of No for Compulsory Military Service received with deep sadness the news of the death of Gerd Greune, the former chief of the European Bureau for Conscientious Objection (EBCO). He was an active member for long years in the German Peace Society (DFG-VK). He also founded the Institute for International Assistance and Solidarity (IFIAS).

The movement mentions the effort Gerd Greune exerted to support the right of conscientious objection in Egypt and his efforts in supporting the conscientious objection for Maikel Nabil Sanad, the first conscientious objector in Egypt and the chief of the movement, till Maikel received a medical exemption for the military service. Also, Gerd's visit to Egypt after the beginning of the Egyptian revolution, as there was an issued joint-statement with the movement in solidarity with the revolutions of the Arab Spring and the right of the peoples of the region in democracy and peace. Also the efforts he exerted in support of Maikel Nabil's case when he was imprisoned in 2011 because of his writings against the military rule in Egypt.
Gerd spent many years in the West Bank, supporting the non-violent Palestinian activists, as a contribution by him to solve the Israeli-Palestinian conflict through the non-violent means. Gerd was in continued contact with us till the last weeks, to support the new conscientious objectors, Emad Dafrawi and Mohamed Fathy.
The movement expresses its sadness for losing a dear friend and we wish that his struggle becomes a model for Egyptian peace activists, so that we become able to spread the principles of peace, pacifism and individual rights, like Gerd and his colleagues from the European peace activists did in Europe.

Statement: Administrative Judiciary Session on Preventing University Students from Traveling

September 6, 2012, the first session for Mark Nabil in the administrative judiciary regarding preventing university students from traveling.
The court of the administrative judiciary decided to set a session in the 6th of September, 2012, being the first session in the case of the minister of defense preventing university students from traveling, which was sued by the activist Mark Nabil Sanad, who is a leading member in the movement of No for Compulsory Military Service, against the minister of defense.
The case begins on Monday, 23 of April, 2012, when the passport authorities in Cairo airport prevented the activist Mark Nabil from traveling, under the pretext of the absence of a permit from the military establishment. A day earlier, both of the authorities of traveling permits in the department of recruitment and mobilization, and the board for regulation and administration, refused to give the activist a traveling permit on the pretext that they don't give such permits to university students except in the two vacations of the academic year, in the middle and the end of the academic year.

Since this travel prevention represents a violation to all the customs and the international laws which stated the right to mobility and the right to travel, Mark decided to resort to the judicature. In 31 May, 2012, the lawyer, Mahmoud Sayyed Abdelwahab, as an agent on behalf of the activist Mark Nabil, made a lawsuit against each of the minister of defense on his own, the minister of interior on his own and the adviser minister of justice on his own, demanding them to abolish decisions issued by the minister of defense and the minister of interior, which restrict the right of university students to travel, without a legal basis.

It's worth mentioning that the constitutional declaration states in the eighth article on “the personal freedom is safeguarded, untouched, unless in a case of flagrante delicto, no person may be arrested, inspected, incarcerated, have his freedom restricted by any restrictions or prevented from mobility except by a command necessitated by investigations and preservation of public security, this command is issued by the competent judge or the public prosecution”, which assures that the right to travel is a constitutionally safeguarded right, and that the only apparatuses which are authorized to prevent traveling, are the judicature and the public prosecution. The constitutional statement does not give the ministry of defense the right to prevent civilians from traveling.
Also, Egypt signed the Universal Declaration of Human Rights which confirms in the thirteenth article, “Everyone has the right to leave any country, including his own, and to return to his country”. Egypt also signed the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, which states in the twelfth article, “Everyone shall be free to leave any country, including his own”.

Accordingly, those applicable decisions by the ministry of defense are unconstitutional decisions, as well as they are decisions representing a deviation from the international legitimacy, and a violation to the right to travel and mobility which is stated in the international human rights laws. They also represent a punishment to a group of citizens without committing any crimes, because human rights shall not be forfeited unless for a crime, and this should be done through the judicial authority, not the executive authority.

For sure, Mark Nabil's case isn't the only one who is prevented from traveling, but all male who reached the age of 18 are prevented from traveling during all the academic years as a means of restricting their freedom and fearing their evasion of doing the compulsory military service by traveling abroad, with no legal basis, the thing which results in forfeiting the right to travel for 4 million university students, yearly.

Based on the role of the movement of No for Compulsory Military Service as an anti-militarizing movement to the state, aiming at abolishing all the types of the domination of the military establishment over civilians, it invites the Egyptian people, all the free minded people, all human rights activists and all anti-militarists in Egypt, to be in solidarity with us, by attending the session on Thursday, the 6th of September, 2012 in the state council court in Dokki, to protect the personal freedoms, to prevent the recurrence of such violations and to force the military establishment to comply with the international laws and conventions which Egypt signed, and to deliver a message that we won't allow any authority to militarists over our civilian lives anymore.
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Links for the event and the photos of the stand-in. (2012-9-6)