Trial of Egyptian officials accused of murder of Italian researcher Regeni resumes in Rome

Trial of Egyptian officials accused of murder of Italian researcher Regeni resumes in Rome

High-profile, controversial case resumes after delays caused by doubts over its legality

By Giovanni Legorano

ROME (AA) – The trial of four Egyptian agents accused of kidnapping and murdering Italian researcher Giulio Regeni resumed Tuesday in Rome, a high-profile, controversial case which caused years of friction between Italy and Egypt.

Regeni, who was murdered in Egypt in 2016, was a postgraduate student at Britain’s Cambridge University and was carrying out research in Cairo about local trade unions and workers’ conditions.

The body of the 28-year-old was found on the side of a highway on the edge of Cairo bearing cigarette burns, broken teeth, and fractured bones. He had been missing for several days.

In October 2021, an Italian court halted a trial of the four Egyptian security officials, ruling that prosecutors had to redouble efforts to locate the defendants – who were set to be tried in absentia – and notify them of the charges against them before the trial could continue.

Italy's top court dismissed that ruling last year, saying Egypt's failure to cooperate in locating the suspects should not prevent a trial on very serious accusations such as torture.

“It’s an important day,” Regeni’s parents told reporters while entering the courthouse.

The trial represents the first time Egyptian officials have been prosecuted abroad for alleged crimes that human rights groups say have been committed on a large scale in the North African country in recent years.​​​​​​​

People familiar with the proceedings have consistently said Egyptian authorities have refused to help Italian prosecutors locate the four agents.

Egypt rebuffed the claims, saying its authorities cooperated with Italian official and that its own investigations concluded that Regeni’s killers are unknown. Egyptian officials also said that the Italian investigation was not based on consistent evidence, denying any responsibility on the part of the country’s security apparatus.

Earlier, Egyptian police claimed that Regeni was killed by gangsters specializg in impersonating police, kidnapping foreigners, and stealing their money. The country’s police also said the alleged gangsters were killed in an exchange of gunfire with police.

Egyptian judges then ruled that the men were not Regeni’s killers.

Italy’s government is a civil plaintiff in the trial. The list of witnesses that prosecutors will call to testify include former Italian prime ministers and a raft of other Italian and Egyptian officials.​​​​​​​

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