Three Al Jazeera English journalists were convicted Monday of aiding the Muslim Brotherhood in a ruling that immediately outraged journalists and activists around the world.
The journalists, Peter
Greste, Mohamed Fahmy and Baher Mohamed, have been imprisoned in Cairo
since December on charges that include conspiring with the Brotherhood,
spreading false news and endangering national security.
The three men have steadfastly denied the charges, as has Al Jazeera.
In a tense courtroom on
Monday, a judge sentenced Greste and Fahmy to seven years in prison
while Mohamed was handed down 10 years -- seven for one charge, three
for a second.
Several other Al Jazeera journalists who were tried in absentia received 10-year sentences as well.
In an interview on Al
Jazeera shortly after the verdicts were read, Amnesty International
director Steve Crawshaw deplored what he called an "outrageous ruling"
and called it an "absolute affront to justice."
Mostefa Souag, the acting director general of Al Jazeera, called the verdict "shocking" in a televised interview.
"I don't think it has
anything to do with justice," he said, calling it another step in
Egypt's "campaign of terrorizing people and terrorizing the media."
Al Jazeera English
managing director Al Anstey said in a statement that the sentencing
"defies logic, sense, and any semblance of justice."
CNN correspondent Ian
Lee, stationed outside the court in Cairo, said that through an appeals
process, "there's a high likelihood that a judge could either reduce the
sentence or acquit them later on."
(Because Al Jazeera has
no staff operating in Egypt, CNN and other international broadcasters
have been contributing reporting to its television coverage.)
Pawns in a geopolitical dispute
The prosecution, which
has argued channels like Al Jazeera brought down Iraq and were planning
to do the same in Egypt, has been widely condemned by international
correspondents, press organizations and foreign governments.
Amnesty International has
asserted that Greste, Fahmy and Mohamed are pawns in a geopolitical
dispute between Egypt and Qatar, the tiny Middle Eastern country that
finances Al Jazeera. Qatar has long been perceived as a supporter of the
Muslim Brotherhood, a religious and political group banned in Egypt and
labeled a terrorist organization after President Mohamed Morsy's ouster
last year.
That declaration came
just days before the Al Jazeera journalists were arrested at the Cairo
hotel where they were working. Egyptian state-run media said they were
charged with "broadcasting false information" to harm the country's
national security and being members of an illegal organization, the
Muslim Brotherhood.
A number of other defendants, with no affiliation to Al Jazeera, were also convicted Monday of similar charges.
Throughout the trial,
the prosecutors were criticized for presenting evidence that was
"fabricated," as Greste has asserted, or irrelevant to the case, like
videos of Greste's old news reports from other countries.
'Doing their job'
Greste, Fahmy and
Mohamed were working for Al Jazeera's English-language news channel when
they were detained. Greste, a correspondent, previously worked for CNN,
Reuters and the BBC, while Fahmy, the channel's bureau chief in Cairo,
has also worked for CNN.
"Mohammed, Baher, and
Peter are first class journalists," Al Jazeera English managing director
Al Anstey said in a statement after they'd been detained for three
months. "They were just doing their job covering and challenging all
sides of the story in Egypt."
In an interview for
CNN's "Reliable Sources," Greste's parents, Juris and Lois, said they
could not understand why Peter was still behind bars.
Peter had no reason, no motive for doing anything like the allegations against him.
Lois Greste
Lois Greste
"Peter had no reason, no
motive for doing anything like the allegations against him," Lois
Greste said. "He would have reported the same story, be it for CNN, BBC,
Reuters or anybody else."
Juris Greste said it was not unreasonable to characterize his son as a "political prisoner."
"It looks like a
kidnapping by the state, as it were," he said, even as he emphasized
that he and his wife "bear no ill will against Egypt or its people."
On Sunday U.S. Secretary
of State John Kerry said he spoke "specifically about Al Jazeera
journalists" during a meeting with the new Egyptian president, Abdel
Fattah el-Sisi.
While Kerry did not
elaborate on the outcome, he said generally that they "discussed the
essential role of a vibrant civil society, a free press, and rule of
law, and due process in a democracy."
SOURCE: www.cnn.com
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