RSF - Reporters Without Borders
Politically-orchestrated trial ends in long jail terms
Monday 23 June
In a sign of the Egyptian regime’s increasingly
totalitarian nature, a Cairo court today passed sentences ranging from
seven to ten years in prison on Al-Jazeera journalists Peter Greste,
Mohamed Adel Fahmy and Baher Mohamed, who have already been held for
more than 160 days.
“Not content with criminalizing all political
opposition, the Egyptian authorities are pursuing a policy of gagging
news media that try to offer a different take on reality from the
government’s,” Reporters Without Borders secretary-general Christophe Deloire said. “We point out that such arrests and arbitrary convictions violate the provisions of the new constitution, especially article 71.”
Mohamed Adel Fahmy, Al-Jazeera’s Cairo bureau chief, who has Canadian and Egyptian dual nationality, and Peter Greste, an Australian reporter, were given seven-year terms on charges of "broadcasting false reports" with the aim of supporting the Islamist movement and harming Egypt’s image.
Baher Mohamed,
who is Egyptian, received the same sentence plus an extra three-year
jail term on additional charges, giving him a combined sentence of ten
years in prison.
Of the six other detained defendants, four were
sentenced to seven years in prison and two were acquitted. Eleven other
defendants who were tried in absentia –including two British journalists
and a Dutch journalist – were given ten-year jail terms.
The 16 Egyptian defendants were accused of membership of a “terrorist organization”
(the Muslim Brotherhood) and of trying to harm Egypt’s image. The four
foreign journalists were accused to trying to support Muslim Brotherhood
by means of false reports.
Background
Journalists continue to be subject to arbitrary arrest in Egypt although the new constitution guarantees freedom of expression and opinion (article 65), media freedom (article 70) and media independence (article 72).
The government established after President Mohammed
Morsi’s removal in July 2013 has systematically persecuted media
regarded as sympathetic to the Muslim Brotherhood. Al-Jazeera has
been one of the leading targets of this anti-Brotherhood witch-hunt,
with the authorities closing its offices and arresting its journalists
arbitrarily.
The campaign was intensified after the government’s
decision on 25 December to add the Muslim Brotherhood to its list of
terrorist organizations. It is now prohibited for journalists to possess
or disseminate Muslim Brotherhood statements or recordings.
The extreme polarization of the Egyptian media (between
those that support and those that oppose Morsi) is reinforcing the
polarization of Egyptian society as a whole. As seen again during the
recent election campaign, many media are overtly supporting the current
government and, as a result, failing to play their watchdog role.
A total of six journalists have been killed by live
rounds since 3 July 2013. Most were killed while covering pro-Morsi
demonstrations. According to the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ), more than 65 journalists were arrested for varying periods of time between 3 July and 30 April.
In a recent open letter,
Reporters Without Borders urged Egypt’s new ruler, President Abdel
Fattah Al-Sisi, to act as a guarantor of freedom of the media and
information and to release all detained journalists.
Egypt is ranked 159th out of 180 countries in the 2014 Reporters Without Borders press freedom index.
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