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Egypt grants Italian access to video in Regeni murder probe

Regeni had reportedly been arrested outside a Cairo metro station on 25 January 2016 and was taken to a Homeland Security compound
An Egyptian activist holds a poster calling for justice to be done in the case of the murdered Italian student Giulio Regeni in Cairo (Reuters)

Egypt's public prosecutor agreed on Sunday to allow experts from Italy and a German company that specialises in salvaging CCTV footage to examine cameras in Cairo as part of the investigation into last year's murder of Italian student Giulio Regeni.

A statement from the prosecutor said that the experts would examine recordings made by the closed-circuit television camera at the metro station in the Cairo district of Dokki, where Regeni lived, to find "the facts of the incident and its perpetrators".

Regeni, who was working on postgraduate research into Egyptian trade unions, was last seen by friends on 25 January last year. His body, showing signs of extensive torture, was found in a ditch on the outskirts of Cairo on 3 February.

Egypt has rejected suggestions from human rights groups that Egyptian security services appeared responsible for the 28-year-old's death. Italy has constantly complained about the slow progress in the investigation and in April withdrew its ambassador in Cairo in protest.

In the latest of several meetings, Egyptian public prosecutor Nabil Sadek met for two days of talks with Italian prosecutors in December and handed over documents requested by Italy in September.

Among documents was the transcript of testimony given by the head of the Cairo street vendors' union, who had raised concerns with police over Regeni. Egypt has said that police carried out checks on Regeni's activities after being contacted by the union official but found nothing of interest.

Security and intelligence sources told Reuters in April that Regeni had been arrested outside a Cairo metro station on 25 January and was taken to a Homeland Security compound.

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