EGYPT COURT SENTENCES THREE AL-JAZEERA REPORTERS TO SEVEN YEARS EACH IN PRISON
:In this file photo, from left, Mohammed Fahmy, Canadian-Egyptian
acting bureau chief of Al-Jazeera, Australian correspondent Peter
Greste, and Egyptian producer Baher Mohamed appear in a defendant's cage
along with several other defendants during their trial on terror
charges at a courtroom in Cairo. (AP)
Egypt said its
ambassadors abroad will explain the verdicts of an Egyptian court, which
convicted three Al-Jazeera journalists and sentenced them to seven
years in prison each on terrorism-related charges Monday, raising
international outrage.
Egypt's Foreign Ministry said it would
stress to international officials Egypt's "full rejection" of
interference in its internal affairs or the independence of its
judiciary.
Britain's Foreign Secretary, William Hague, said he was "appalled" by
the verdict. The Foreign Office summoned Egypt's ambassador in London to
express its concerns.
The verdicts stunned the journalists'
families, with a chorus of voices denouncing the ruling as a blow to
freedom of expression.
The verdicts against Australian Peter
Greste, Canadian-Egyptian Mohamed Fahmy and Egyptian Baher Mohammed came
after a 5-month trial that Amnesty International described as a "sham."
The group called Monday's rulings "a dark day for media freedom in
Egypt."
The three, who have been detained since December,
contend they are being targeted simply for doing their jobs as
journalists, covering Islamist protests against the ouster last year of
President Mohammed Morsi. The trial has been widely seen as political,
part of a fight between the government and the Qatar-based Al-Jazeera
network, which authorities accuse of bias toward the Muslim Brotherhood
and Morsi. The network denies any bias.
In an unprecedented
trial of journalists on terrorism charges, prosecutors charged them with
supporting the Muslim Brotherhood, which has been declared a terrorist
group, and with fabricating footage to damage Egypt's security. But
observers of the trial said the prosecution presented no evidence to
support the charges. Three other foreign journalists — two Britons who
worked for Al-Jazeera and a Dutch freelance reporter who had no
connection to Al-Jazeera but once met Fahmy for tea in his makeshift
office at a luxury hotel in Cairo — were sentenced to 10 years in
absentia.
The verdicts came a day after Secretary of State John
Kerry met with Egypt's newly elected President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi,
the former army chief who ousted Morsi. Kerry said he discussed the
Al-Jazeera case with him and expressed optimism, saying el-Sissi gave "a
very strong sense of his commitment" to review the judicial process as
well as laws that have been sharply criticized by rights groups.
International pressure mounted on el-Sissi to intervene and pardon the
three. He has the power to do so, but only after appeals are finished, a
process that could take months.
The convictions and sentences stunned the defendants and their families and supporters in the Cairo courtroom.
"They will pay for this, I promise," Fahmy, who was Al-Jazeera
English's acting Cairo bureau chief, shouted angrily. Guards pulled him
from the defendants' cage, dragging him by the arms — despite a shoulder
injury that worsened into a permanent disability during his months in
detention.
Greste, an award-winning correspondent, silently raised a clinched fist in the air.
Fahmy's mother and fiancee broke down in tears. "Did anybody see any
evidence against him?" his mother, Wafaa Bassiouni cried out. "Who did
he kill?"
"This is a screwed up system. This whole government
is incompetent," his brother Adel said. He said the family would appeal
the verdict but added, "There is no hope in the judicial system."
Greste's brother Andrew said he was "gutted" and also vowed to appeal.
"From my point of view, we have seen no incriminating evidence in
court," he said. "It is extremely difficult to understand."
The
three received sentences of seven years each in a maximum security
prison. Mohammed, the team's producer, received an extra three years
because of additional charges of possession of ammunition — a reference
to a spent shell he had picked up from protests as a souvenir.
There were 17 co-defendants in the case — seven journalists and the rest
students arrested separately and accused of giving footage to the
journalists. Four were sentenced to seven years each, two were
acquitted, and the rest — tried in absentia — received 10-year
sentences.
"We are shocked, utterly shocked by this verdict,"
Australian Foreign Minister Julia Bishop told journalists in Canberra.
"This verdict is hardly sending the message to the international
community that Egypt is fulfilling (the) transition to democracy."
She said Australia would contact el-Sissi and ask him to intervene.
Before the verdicts, Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott said Monday
he spoke with el-Sissi, telling him that Greste was innocent and urged
him to help.
If they appeal, the three journalists would remain
in prison unless they win a separate "suspension of verdict" ruling. An
appeal can grant them a retrial, but only if flaws in the court
proceedings are found.
The trial has been seen as political,
linked to the July 3 ouster of Morsi and the subsequent crackdown on the
Muslim Brotherhood. Security forces have killed hundreds and arrested
thousands more, trying to crush protests by Morsi supporters.
Qatar, which owns Al-Jazeera, was a top ally of Morsi, and the
military-backed government has treated it as a bitter opponent. During
the trial, Fahmy shouted in court that their prosecution was an
extension of the fight between Egypt's government and Qatar.
In
August, a journalist for Al-Jazeera's Arabic channel, Abdullah Elshamy,
was arrested while covering protests. He was held without charge and
went on a hunger strike for more than four months until he was released
last week.
The managing director of Qatar-based Al-Jazeera
English, Al Anstey, said Egyptian authorities should be "held to account
by the global community,"
"To have detained them for 177 days
is an outrage. To have sentenced them defies logic, sense, and any
semblance of justice," he said.
Egypt's courts have already
come under heavy international criticism over trials connected to the
anti-Islamist crackdown. Courts have sentenced to death hundreds after
cursory mass trials on charges of involvement in deadly violence,
usually with little evidence and little chance for the defense to
present its case.
Greste, Fahmy and Mohammed were arrested in
December when police raided the Cairo hotel room they were using as an
office. Police confiscated their equipment, computers and other items.
During the trial, prosecutors contended they would present fabricated
footage aired by the defendants as evidence they aimed to undermine
Egypt's security.
Instead, they presented some footage showing
clashes between pro-Morsi protesters and police, but without any
indication it was falsified. They also cited as evidence leaflets that
the three had picked up at the protests. Mostly, they presented random
video clips also found on the three that had nothing to do with the case
— including a report on a veterinary hospital in Cairo, another on
Christian life in Egypt and old footage of Greste from previous
assignments elsewhere in Africa, including video of animals.
The defense also complained repeatedly that it did not have access to the prosecution evidence.
Amnesty International's observer at the trial, Philip Luther, said the
prosecution "failed to produce a single shred of solid evidence" backing
the charges. In a statement by the group, he called the sentences "a
travesty of justice."
He said the Egyptian courts have proved
"unwilling or incapable of conducting an impartial and fair trial when
it comes to those perceived to support the former president."
Shaimaa Aboul-kheir, of the Committee to Protect Journalists, said the
verdict shows "that Egypt is one of the dangerous and more risky
countries for international journalists to work and it's also a very
risky country for local journalists." The group said at least 14
journalists are behind bars in Egypt.
.....................................
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
7/04/2014
EGYPT COURT SENTENCES THREE AL-JAZEERA REPORTERS TO SEVEN YEARS EACH IN PRISON
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