Al Jazeera three among pardoned
Egypt’s President Abdel Fattah alSisi yesterday pardoned 100 prisoners including three Al Jazeera television journalists, a day before he heads to the annual United Nations world leaders summit.
The Al Jazeera journalists, Canadian Mohamed Fahmy, Egyptian Baher Mohamed and Australian Peter Greste, were sentenced to three years in prison in a retrial last month for operating without a press licence and broadcasting material harmful to Egypt. Greste had already been deported in February.
A spokesperson for the Canadian government said Canada was pleased with the pardon and it would help arrange Fahmy’s departure from Egypt.
‘‘Our families have suffered so much since the beginning of this trial and we’re very happy that President Sisi took this action and released us,’’ Mohamed Fahmy said.
‘‘I will continue fighting for press freedom . . . I know there are other defendants who are still in prison related to this case.’’
The pardons were reported by security sources and Egypt’s state news agency, which said they included prisoners who violated a 2013 law banning protests without a permit, as well as some who were sick.
‘‘This comes in the framework of President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi’s initiative to release a number of youth, which he launched . . . in December,’’ it said.
Human rights groups have accused Egyptian authorities of widespread violations since the army toppled the country’s first democratically elected president, Islamist President Mohamed Morsi, after mass protests against his rule two years ago.
‘‘While these pardons come as a great relief, it is ludicrous that some of these people were even behind bars in the first place,’’ Amnesty International said.