Kuwait Times

Egypt deports jailed Australian reporter

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CAIRO: Al Jazeera journalist Peter Greste was released from a Cairo jail yesterday and left Egypt for his native Australia 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. The three were sentenced to seven to 10 years on charges including spreading lies to help a terrorist organizati­on - 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 fiancÈe 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 has labelled the journalist­s “The Marriott Cell”, because they worked from a hotel of the USbased 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. The Interior Ministry said on its Facebook page that Sisi released Greste under a decree issued in November authorizin­g the president to approve the deportatio­n of foreign prisoners. However, there is no prospect of Greste or Fahmy facing trials at home, and Sisi’s decree appears to have been formulated in a way that allows Egypt’s authoritie­s to save face.

The journalist­s say they were doing their jobs when detained. Their imprisonme­nt reinforced the view of human rights groups that the government was rolling back freedoms gained after the 2011 uprising that toppled autocrat Hosni Mubarak. Since the army’s overthrow of president Mohamed Morsi of the Brotherhoo­d after mass protests against him, security forces killed hundreds of Islamists, imprisoned thousands of others and then rounded up liberal activists charged with protesting without police permission.

Al Jazeera said its campaign to free its journalist­s from Egypt would not end until all three were released. “We’re pleased for Peter and his family that they are to be reunited. It has been an incredible and unjustifia­ble ordeal for them, and they have coped with incredible dignity,” it said. “We will not rest until Baher and Mohamed also regain their freedom.”

The case has contribute­d to tensions between Egypt and Qatar, though speculatio­n had been rising that Saudi mediation had improved ties, raising the possibilit­y that Sisi would deport or pardon the journalist­s. They were detained in Dec 2013 and charged with helping “a terrorist group” by broadcasti­ng lies that harmed national security. Egypt’s mainstream press whipped up public sentiment against Al Jazeera. Egyptians sometimes chased Western journalist­s in the streets and accused them of working for the channel.

But some Egyptians disagreed with the official line. “They get out opinions the government wants to keep a secret from the public,’ said a man who asked not to be named. Baher Mohamed was given an extra three years for possessing a single bullet. If the authoritie­s decide to free him, resolving his case could be more complex because he does not possess a foreign passport. “This is what we expected would happen,” his brother Assem told Reuters. “Those who rule the country, this is not the first time they’ve done this, there have been foreigners who they have let leave the country when they were in trouble and their Egyptian colleagues are the ones who paid the price.”

Amnesty Internatio­nal said Greste’s release should not overshadow the ongoing imprisonme­nt of Fahmy and Mohamed. The two “must not be forgotten as their colleague Peter Greste is deported from Egypt,” the rights group said in a statement. “All three men are facing trumped up charges and were forced to endure a farcical trial marred by irregulari­ties,” Amnesty’s Hassiba Hadj Sahraoui was quoted as saying. “Continuing to detain Baher Mohamed and Mohamed Fahmy is completely unjust and unwarrante­d.”

Media watchdog the Committee to Protect Journalist­s welcomed Greste’s release and called on Sisi to pardon and free Fahmy and Mohamed “and the other journalist­s still behind bars for doing their work”. Greste, who turned 49 in jail, worked for several news organisati­ons including Reuters and the BBC before joining Al-Jazeera English. He was the BBC’s Kabul correspond­ent in 1995, where he watched the Taleban emerge, and returned there after the US-led invasion in 2001. From 2009, he was based in Nairobi from where he covered the Horn of Africa, winning the broadcasti­ng industry’s prestigiou­s Peabody Award in 2011. — Agencies

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Peter Greste

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