ROME (AFP) -
Italy
has cast doubt on Egypt's explanation for the murder of Italian student
Giulio Regeni, after Egyptian police said they had killed four gang
members and found the victim's passport at one of their apartments.
"Italy
insists: we want the truth," said Italian Foreign Minister Paolo
Gentiloni on his Twitter feed late Friday, while prosecutors in Rome
rejected the latest conclusions of the Egyptian probe.
Italian
media and western diplomatic sources in Cairo have voiced suspicions
that Egyptian security services kidnapped and tortured to death the
Cambridge University graduate whose mutilated body was found in Cairo in
January.
On Thursday, Egyptian police said they had identified
people linked to Regeni's murder, after killing four members of a
criminal gang and finding the victim's passport at one of their
apartments.
Regeni disappeared on January 25 in central Cairo. His
body was found nine days later on the side of a motorway, badly
mutilated and showing signs of torture.
Rome prosecutor Giuseppe
Pignatone said in a statement that "details communicated so far are not
satisfactory to shed light on the death of Giulio Regeni. Investigations
must therefore continue."
According to Italian government
sources, premier Matteo Renzi has promised the parents of the young
student that Rome will continue to put pressure on Egypt to establish
the full truth behind his death.
"Italy will never content itself
with anything less than the truth, the whole truth, without shadows or
mystery," a source within the prime minister's office said.
Quoted
by Italian press, Regeni's parents said they were "injured and bitter"
at Egyptian authorities' latest attempt to explain their son's death.
Regeni,
28, had been researching labour movements in Egypt, a sensitive topic,
and had written articles critical of the government under a pen name.
The
incident threatened relations between Egypt and Italy, a strong
supporter of President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi whose security services have
been accused of abusing dissidents.
© 2016 AFP
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