Tag: Mohamed Fahmy

  • Egypt’s president pardons 100 prisoners

    Egypt’s president pardons 100 prisoners

    Egypt’s President Abdel Fatta al-Sisi pardoned 100 prisoners, including Canadian Al Jazeera TV journalist Mohamed Fahmy, on Wednesday, security sources said.

    The reported pardons came a day before Sisi plans to head to New York for the 70th session of the United Nations General Assembly, Reuters reported.

    Fahmy, along with three other Al Jazeera journalists, was sentenced to three years in prison in a retrial last month on charges of operating without a press license and broadcasting material harmful to Egypt.

  • Egypt: Al Jazeera journalists get three-year jail sentence

    Three Al-Jazeera journalists convicted in Egypt of “spreading false news” have been sentenced to three years in prison at their retrial in Cairo.

    Canadian-Egyptian Mohamed Fahmy and Egyptian Baher Mohamed were led away from court after the verdict, the BBC reports.

    Australian Peter Greste was deported back to Australia earlier this year and was on trial again in absentia.

    The three are accused of aiding the banned Muslim Brotherhood group but they strenuously deny the allegations.

    The three journalists were originally sentenced in July 2014, with Mr. Greste and Mr. Fahmy receiving seven years and Mr. Mohamed getting 10 years.

    But their convictions were overturned in January this year and they were freed in February to await retrial.

    Giving the verdict on Saturday, judge Hassan Farid said the three men were not registered journalists and had been operating from a Cairo hotel without a licence.

    He handed three-year sentences to Mr. Greste and Mr. Fahmy but gave Mr. Mohamed an additional six months.

    It is unclear how long Mr. Fahmy and Mr. Mohamed will now serve. They were in prison for about a year before being freed.

    Lawyers for the three journalists are expected to appeal the decision.

  • Egypt frees Al Jazeera journalist Greste, two others still held

    Al Jazeera journalist Peter Greste was released from a Cairo jail on Sunday and left Egypt after 400 days in prison on charges that included aiding a terrorist group, security officials said.

    There was no official word on the fate of his two Al Jazeera colleagues – Canadian-Egyptian Mohamed Fahmy and Egyptian national Baher Mohamed – who were also jailed in the case that provoked an international outcry, Reuters says.

    The three were sentenced to seven to 10 years on charges including spreading lies to help a terrorist organisation – a reference to the outlawed Muslim Brotherhood. One month ago, however, a court ordered their retrial.

    A security official said Fahmy was expected to be released from Cairo’s Tora prison within days. His fiancée said she hoped he would be free soon and deported to Canada. “His deportation is in its final stages. We are hopeful,” Marwa Omara told Reuters.

    Canada’s foreign ministry welcomed what it called positive developments. “We remain very hopeful that Mr. Fahmy’s case will be resolved shortly,” it said in a statement.

    Many Egyptians see Qatar-based Al Jazeera as a force set on destabilising the country, a view that has been encouraged in the local media which labelled the journalists “The Marriott Cell,” because they worked from a hotel of the United States-based chain.

    Egyptian authorities accuse Al Jazeera of being a mouthpiece of the Muslim Brotherhood, the Qatar-backed movement which President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi toppled in 2013 when he was Egypt’s army chief.

    The timing of Greste’s release came as a surprise, just days after Egypt suffered one of the bloodiest militant attacks in years. More than 30 members of the security forces were killed on Thursday night in Sinai, and ensuing comments from Sisi suggested he was in no mood for compromise.

  • Egypt’s President Sisi ‘regrets’ al-Jazeera trial

    Egypt’s President Sisi ‘regrets’ al-Jazeera trial

    Egypt’s President Abdul Fattah al-Sisi has said he wishes the three al-Jazeera journalists imprisoned last month had never been put on trial, reports say.

    Peter Greste, Mohamed Fahmy and Baher Mohamed were sentenced to between seven and 10 years in jail after being found guilty of aiding a “terrorist group”.

    Mr Sisi was quoted by the al-Masry al-Youm newspaper late on Sunday as saying the trial had “very negative effects”.

    His remarks received a mixed response from the journalists’ families.

    Foreign governments, media organisations and human rights groups accused the Egyptian authorities of restricting freedom of speech.

    Al-Jazeera said it defied “logic, sense and any semblance of justice”.

    At a meeting with local journalists on Sunday, President Sisi sought to counter claims that the case had been politically motivated.

    “The verdict issued against a number of journalists had very negative effects; and we had nothing to do with it,” he said, according to al-Masry al-Youm. “I wished they were deported immediately after they were arrested instead of being put on trial.”

    President Abdul Fattah al-Sisi initially refused to interfere in the case

    Mohammed Abdul Hadi Allam, the editor of the state-run al-Ahram newspaper, and Imad Hussein, the editor of the private daily al-Shurouq, confirmed to the BBC that the quotes were accurate.

    The president’s initial reaction was to distance himself from the case and insist he would not interfere with the judiciary. His latest remarks will therefore raise hopes that he might issue pardons to set the journalists free, reports the BBC’s Sally Nabil in Cairo.

    However, under Egyptian law this can only happen after the appeals process has ended, which could take months, our correspondent adds.

    Greste, an Australian former BBC correspondent, Fahmy, a Canadian-Egyptian who was al-Jazeera English’s Cairo bureau chief, and Mohamed, an Egyptian producer, were arrested in December.

    They were accused of aiding the Muslim Brotherhood following the military’s overthrow of President Mohammed Morsi by providing it with a media platform and equipment. The Egyptians were also accused of belonging to the outlawed Islamist movement.

    The journalists dismissed the trial as a “sham”, complaining that they were “hostages” in a political battle between Egypt and Qatar, which owns al-Jazeera and supports the Brotherhood.

    However, they were found guilty on 23 June. Greste and Fahmy were sentenced to seven years in prison, while Mohamed received an additional three years for a separate weapons possession charge.

    Four media students were also handed seven-year prison terms, and three other foreign journalists were sentenced to 10 years in absentia.

    •Defendants included al-Jazeera’s Cairo bureau chief, Mohamed Fahmy, who is Canadian-Egyptian, Egyptian producer Baher Mohamed and Australian correspondent Peter Greste

    •They denied charges of spreading false news and supporting the Muslim Brotherhood

    •The three men were seized in a raid at a Cairo hotel on 29 December and have been held at Cairo’s Tora prison

    •The court tried 20 people, including nine al-Jazeera employees

    Greste’s brother, Andrew, said he was heartened by President Sisi’s comments.

    “I’m sure images of Peter in the cage in the court are not images Egypt really wants distributed around the world,” he told reporters in Brisbane.

    “I’d like to think that there’s things happening at all levels… and everyone can talk about it and seek an amicable solution,” he added.

    Fahmy’s brother, Adel, was also optimistic.

    “This could be a positive indication that something might be worked out,” he told the BBC over the phone from Kuwait.

    “We hope the president’s generosity could lead him to find a solution to this unique case.”

    But Mohamed’s father, Hazem Ghurab, told the BBC that Mr Sisi’s remarks were “a farce”, adding: “What would you expect from the man who killed many people and felt no remorse?”

    Mr Sisi was declared president after an election last month that was boycotted by the Brotherhood and many secular activists.