Thank you, Mr. Chair.
I also want to welcome the witness. It's a pleasure to have somebody with your experience and expertise before us. I want to take up an issue that arose from some of the answers to the questions.
You referred to the 12,000 prisoners in the post-Mubarak era, actually more prisoners in the post-Mubarak era than in all the years of Mubarak. I don't want to sanitize Mubarak on this issue. One of the first political prisoners was Maikel Nabil, whom Amnesty adopted as a prisoner of conscience. This relates to your other comment about the importance of freedom of expression, because basically his freedom of expression was criminalized. Having said that the army and the people are no longer of one hand after first referring to them being of one hand, he was tried and convicted before the military tribunal of insulting the Egyptian military. Happily, after 120 days of a hunger strike, which he survived, he was released.
It so happens that Maikel Nabil is a Christian Copt. He's not a practising Christian Copt, but I have two questions, the first to which I think I know the answer but I'd rather get it from you. Was the fact that he was a Christian Copt part of the reason why he may have been targeted by the Egyptian authorities? I don't think so, but it's a question I would ask.
The second question is, did the fact that he was a Christian Copt account for the less than what might have been widespread support for his release? I did not sense that within the Egyptian populace there was the kind of support system for his case and cause as there might have been.
Those are my questions on that issue. If there's time, I'll put another question to you.