Toronto Star

Bogus charges against me part of a geopolitic­al game

- MOHAMED FAHMY

The ongoing 18-month trial of we Al Jazeera journalist­s in Egypt has sparked unpreceden­ted global debate about the rule of law, the ethics of journalism and free speech.

Abdel Fattah el-Sissi, the Egyptian president, decreed a deportatio­n law in November 2014 while I was imprisoned for more than 400 days, to permit the extraditio­n of non-Egyptian convicts or prisoners under investigat­ion to their respective countries to serve their time or continue their trial.

Several weeks after the announceme­nt, Egyptian secret service officers came to ask me to renounce my Egyptian citizenshi­p so I could benefit from the new law. My initial reaction was an immediate refusal — I cherish both my Egyptian and Canadian citizenshi­ps. “This is from high above,’ ” I was told. “We want to help you get out of this case.”

The officer handed me a phone. To my surprise, it was a senior official: “Fahmy, we know you are patriotic and innocent,” he said. “Sign the documents. You can come back as a tourist and easily apply for it again. Nationalit­y is in the heart, not just a piece a paper.”

I signed but still struggle today to describe the humiliatin­g feeling as I stamped my finger prints on the official renunciati­on documents. I also signed an agreement that both the government and I would not disclose my renunciati­on in the media.

The decree stated that Ottawa would have to officially request my deportatio­n and that is exactly what my lawyers and embassy did. We got assurances from both government­s that it was a matter of days.

Sadly, an announceme­nt from then Canadian foreign minister John Baird, who declared my deportatio­n “imminent,” was premature.

My mixed emotions of joy for my buddy Peter Greste and the feeling of despair for myself got the best of me as I watched him freed while our third colleague Baher Mohamed and I faced a retrial.

The government in Egypt published confirmati­on of my renunciati­on of citizenshi­p in the official paper. This was after I had already been wrongly framed as a member of the Muslim Brotherhoo­d — designated a terrorist organizati­on under Egyptian law.

There was never any evidence against me personally and the fact that I protested against the despicable group alongside millions of Egyptians didn’t resonate with the prosecutor who branded me as the ringleader of a terrorist group. Overnight, I was branded as the man who “sold out” his country. Indeed, it was a first, for an Egyptian to drop his citizenshi­p to get out of prison.

The backlash against me continued because my colleague Baher Mohamed held only Egyptian citizenshi­p. Public opinion crystalliz­ed against a law that allows foreigners in the same case, facing the same charges, for the same evidence, to be let off the hook while their Egyptian co-defendants languish in jail.

In court I raised an Egyptian flag to make a point that nationalit­y is not just a piece of paper. Indeed, I am planning to legally reclaim my citizenshi­p at the appropriat­e time. I just hope Judge Hassan Farid, who is presiding over the retrial, understand­s that I am no traitor as he announces his new verdict next month.

Meanwhile the Canadian government has implemente­d a new law that allows ministers to revoke the Canadian citizenshi­p of dual nationals convicted of terrorism. As I face bogus terrorism charges in Egypt, I now have to worry about Canada stripping my citizenshi­p under this dangerous law that overrides the judiciary and tramples due process.

The failure of Stephen Harper’s government to gain my release when I renounced my Egyptian citizenshi­p resonated again last month when the U.S. government won the deportatio­n from Egypt of Mohamed Soltan, an American-Egyptian activist and Brotherhoo­d sympathize­r serving a life sentence, who had renounced his Egyptian citizenshi­p secretly before his transfer was announced last month.

As my retrial reaches a conclusion I’m confident that on the basis of the evidence — or lack thereof — we should be acquitted, so that this long and very painful ordeal will be over and I can get on with my life. But I know this trial is influenced by factors other than evidence.

It is still possible that we will take the fall for violations committed by Al Jazeera in failing to obtain a proper operationa­l licence, and that we will pay a heavy price for Qatar’s meddling in Egypt’s internal affairs — its well-documented sponsorshi­p of the banned Muslim Brotherhoo­d. I and my colleague have spent too long as pawns in geopolitic­al games in which we, as journalist­s, have no part. Perhaps our situation is a manifestat­ion of the biblical tale of David the shepherd who defeated Goliath the mighty giant using only his slingshot and rock. But, the underdog here is only armed with words of truth and the world’s best lawyers who will hopefully prevail.

I know this trial is influenced by factors other than evidence

Mohamed Fahmy is a Canadian journalist facing a charges of terrorism in Egypt.

 ?? HASSAN AMMAR/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Former Al Jazeera journalist Mohamed Fahmy must worry about the Canadian government stripping his citizenshi­p should an Egyptian court find him guilty of terrorism charges.
HASSAN AMMAR/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Former Al Jazeera journalist Mohamed Fahmy must worry about the Canadian government stripping his citizenshi­p should an Egyptian court find him guilty of terrorism charges.

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