Toronto Star

Government doing ‘all it can’ to free Canadians

John Baird says Ottawa is working on two levels in pair’s detention in Cairo

- THE CANADIAN PRESS

OTTAWA— At the behest of Prime Minister Stephen Harper, the government is doing “absolutely everything it can” to secure the release of two Canadians held without charge in Egypt, says Foreign Affairs Minister John Baird.

More than seven weeks after they were arrested at the height of civil unrest in Cairo, Toronto filmmaker John Greyson and London, Ont., doctor Tarek Loubani were ordered detained for another 45 days on the weekend.

“The government, at the prime minister’s direction, has been engaged in a big way to secure the release of these two Canadians,” Baird told a news conference Tuesday.

“I don’t want to up the rhetoric that would impede their expeditiou­s release. I would just say we’re having strong discussion­s with the Egyptian authoritie­s on this.

“Canadians have got to know that their government at the highest levels is doing absolutely everything it can.”

In a statement Saturday, the two men said they were observing an anti-government demonstrat­ion Aug. 16 when Loubani heeded a call for a doctor and began treating wounded demonstrat­ors, while Greyson recorded the unrest on video.

The men were later arrested by police while heading back to their hotel. Their statement said they were beaten and dumped in a squalid, cockroach-infested jail cell crammed with others picked up that day.

The government is taking a “twotrack approach,” judicial and political, said Baird, citing recent meetings between Canada’s ambassador in Cairo and the Egyptian attorney general, as well as discussion­s between ambassador­s in both countries and his own talks with Egypt’s foreign minister.

“I stated in no uncertain terms that this was a significan­t problem in our bilateral relations,” Baird said. “It’s simply unacceptab­le that Canadians can be held for this long with no specific charges, no specific evidence.”

Some reports have suggested that the pair could soon be facing murder charges, but Baird said those charges appear to be directed at the larger group of protesters rather than at Greyson and Loubani themselves.

Egyptian prosecutor­s have accused Loubani and Greyson of “participat­ing with members of the Muslim Brotherhoo­d” in an attack on a police station, but have not brought forward specific charges.

The men’s statement said they witnessed more than 50 people die in the unrest.

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