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Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights

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Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights
TypeNon-profit
NGO[1]
Location
FieldsHuman rights, Advocacy
Websitewww.eipr.org/en

The Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights or EIPR (Template:Lang-ar) is an independent Egyptian human rights organization, established in 2002. It is a Cairo-based think tank.[2]

Vision and mandate

The EIPR was established to complement the work of other Egyptian human rights groups by adopting as its mandate and focus of concern, a group of rights and freedoms closest to the human being: his or her body, privacy and home. These rights often are ignored or overlooked. The EIPR believes that the crucial importance of public freedoms and political rights must be grounded in an understanding of the indispensability of full protection for personal rights. The EIPR also believes that the individual is not reducible to a mere component of the community or the State. Therefore, responsibilities and duties that result from the individual's belonging to his/her community and State should affirm, not destroy, the individual's capacity to make choices and maintain independence as a free entity. Each member of society deserves respect for her or his personal dignity and integrity. The EIPR's work has explored the line between private and public in the lives of individual members of community and society, while realizing the interrelation and interdependence of these two spheres. The organization also promotes debate about the State's legitimate powers and the areas it should not invade while undertaking its legitimate responsibilities to protect people from abuse.

Programs

The EIPR works in four main areas:

Right to Health

The EIPR considers the enjoyment of the right to health a prerequisite for the enjoyment of other bodily rights. This program promotes and defends people's right to access to health services, treatment and essential medicines, and freedom from discrimination based on health status. Other subjects of concern include HIV/AIDS and human rights, the interrelation between health and violence, and reproductive health issues in Egypt.

Freedom of Religion and Belief

The EIPR works to promote and defend the right to freedom of religion and belief in Egypt through research and monitoring, strategic legal interventions and advocacy campaigns. The program is currently addressing three interrelated issues: laws, policies and practices that directly or indirectly discriminate on the ground of religion or belief; violations by security agencies and prosecutions based on religion or belief; and the response of state and society to incidents of sectarian tension and violence in Egypt. The program's flagship Quarterly Reports document and update developments related to freedom of religion and belief in Egypt every three months.

Right to Privacy

This program covers rights related to the private lives of individuals, including their rights to secrecy of communications and correspondence, to freedom of religion and belief, to protection of reputation, and to adequate housing, as well the sexual and reproductive rights of women and men.

Violence and Bodily Integrity

This program focuses on the protection of the individual's body from all forms of assault. The program pays special attention to fighting physical and sexual violence in the family, especially against women and children, as well as the eradication of widespread corporal punishment of school children. The program attempts to develop a rights-based approach that outlines the responsibility of the State towards eradicating sexual violence by non-State actors.

The North African Litigation Initiative

EIPR established its North African Litigation Initiative (NALI) in 2010 to encourage NGOs and human rights defenders from North Africa to play a more active role within the African Human Rights System. Such activity ensures that North African governments are promoting and protecting the rights in the African Charter.

NALI provides technical and financial assistance to North African NGOs and human rights defenders who wish to litigate using the African human rights system, especially the African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights.

See also

References

  1. ^ Kenneth Changpertitum (October 27, 2014). "Human rights organisations launch civil society awareness campaign". Daily News Egypt. Retrieved February 18, 2015.
  2. ^ Max Siegelbaum (February 10, 2015). "In Egypt, Police Are the Real Hooligans". Foreign Policy (blog). Retrieved February 18, 2015.

Further reading