Egypt Accuses Jazeera Crew of Serving Banned Brotherhood

W460

Egyptian prosecutors accused three detained Al-Jazeera journalists, including an Australian and a Canadian, on Thursday of broadcasting false news in the service of the now terror-blacklisted Muslim Brotherhood.

The three journalists were arrested on December 29 in a Cairo hotel. They include Peter Greste, an acclaimed Australian reporter who formerly worked for the BBC, and Canadian-Egyptian Mohamed Adel Fahmy.

"The accused confessed during interrogation that they belonged to the terrorist group" the Muslim Brotherhood, prosecutors said in a statement.

They said that the journalists, who were not officially accredited, edited footage "to tarnish Egypt's image abroad... to serve the interests of the international terrorist organization."

The journalists' lawyers and Al-Jazeera have dismissed the allegations as false.

"The accusations against our journalists do not stand up to scrutiny," the broadcaster's spokesman Osama Saeed said in a statement.

Fahmy, a well-known journalist in Cairo who previously worked with CNN, has no known ties with the Brotherhood.

Their detention has received widespread coverage in Western media, which the prosecution suggested could also violate Egyptian law.

"The state prosecution points out that Egyptian law forbids publicizing matters aimed at interfering in the work of judges and prosecutors... to sway public opinion," the statement said.

Two other Al-Jazeera reporters remain in custody, including Abdullah Elshamy, arrested on August 14 when police dispersed a sit-in against the army's overthrow of Islamist president Mohammed Morsi, killing hundreds.

Egyptian authorities have been incensed by Al-Jazeera's coverage of their crackdown on the Muslim Brotherhood since the overthrow of the country's first freely elected president last July.

The government declared the Brotherhood a "terrorist organization" in December, after accusing it of a suicide bombing at a police headquarters north of Cairo that killed 15 people.

The blacklisting outlaws promotion of the Brotherhood verbally or in writing and can lead to lengthy prison sentences.

Comments 4
Missing VINCENT 16 January 2014, 23:12

Chapeau.

Missing voiceofreason 17 January 2014, 04:15

Only a fool can't see that the new military regime is even worse than Mubarak. A political party that won the presidency, and now they're a terrorist regime? If they were terrorists why did the army let them run the country for one year? Come on, this is like a horribly directed hollywood movie, eccept real people's lives have been lost. And where are all the protestors wanting freedom? I guess the killing machine regime has finally scared them. Egypt was so promising too.

Missing mohammad_ca 17 January 2014, 11:37

and what destructiveness is that aflatoon?

Missing mohammad_ca 17 January 2014, 11:39

besides this "Fahmy, a well-known journalist in Cairo who previously worked with CNN, has no known ties with the Brotherhood" these are called trumped up charges, they exist all over the arab world in dictatorship regimes...look them up.