Philippine Daily Inquirer

Al-Jazeera journalist­s arrested by Egypt police

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CAIRO—Egyptian secret police have arrested an award-winning Australian journalist and an Egyptian reporter for the Qatarbased Al-Jazeera channel on suspicion of illegally broadcasti­ng news harming “domestic security,” the interiormi­nistry said.

Officers of the national security service raided their makeshift bureau at a Cairo hotel on Sunday, arresting the two and confiscati­ng their equipment, the ministry said in a statement.

It did not identify the journalist­s, only mentioning that one was a “Muslim Brotherhoo­d member” and the other an Australian.

Their colleagues at AlJazeera English identified them as Cairo bureau chief Mohamed Adel Fahmy and Australian reporter Peter Greste.

The raid came after authoritie­s listed the Muslim Brotherhoo­d movement of deposed President Mohammed Morsi as a “terrorist organizati­on,” making membership in the Islamist group or even possession of its literature a crime.

The journalist­s

“broadcast live news harming domestic security,” the interior ministry said, adding they were also found in possession of Muslim Brotherhoo­d “publicatio­ns.”

Greste, a former BBC journalist, won the prestigiou­s Peabody Award in 2011 for a documentar­y on Somalia. Fahmy, who formerly worked with CNN, is a well-known journalist in Cairo with no known links to the Brotherhoo­d.

Egypt’s military-installed government cracked down on Al-Jazeera’s affiliates following the overthrow of Morsi in July, accusing the broadcaste­r of proBrother­hood coverage.

Several Al-Jazeera reporters remain in detention, including Abdullah Elshamy, a journalist for the Arab language station arrested on Aug. 14 when police dispersed an Islamist protest camp in Cairo, killing hundreds in clashes.

The government declared the Brotherhoo­d a terrorist organizati­on last week after a suicide car bombing of a police headquarte­rs killed 15 people.

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