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Egyptian Court Sentences Journalists To Lengthy Prison Terms

Al-Jazeera news channel's Australian journalist Peter Greste, left, and his colleagues, Egyptian-Canadian Mohamed Fadel Fahmy, center, and Egyptian Baher Mohamed listen to the verdict inside the defendants' cage during their trial for allegedly supporting the Muslim Brotherhood.
Khaled Desouki AFP/Getty Images
Al-Jazeera news channel's Australian journalist Peter Greste, left, and his colleagues, Egyptian-Canadian Mohamed Fadel Fahmy, center, and Egyptian Baher Mohamed listen to the verdict inside the defendants' cage during their trial for allegedly supporting the Muslim Brotherhood.

Egyptian Court Sentences Journalists To Lengthy Prison Terms

Three journalists who work for the Al Jazeera news network have been sentenced to prison terms – two lasting seven years and a third lasting 10 – by an Egyptian court. The three were accused of aiding terrorists – a term that in this case applies to the banned Muslim Brotherhood.

From Egypt's Ahram Online:

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"The three defendants are Australian Peter Greste, Egyptian-Canadian Mohamed Fahmy and producer Baher Mohamed. They have been on trial along with 17 others on charges of 'spreading false news,' falsely portraying Egypt as being in a state of 'civil war,' as well as aiding or joining the banned Muslim Brotherhood."

The punishment prompted shock and anger, in a case that has drawn objections from many news organizations, including NPR.

"It was a devastating scene in the courtroom today," NPR's Leila Fadel reports from Cairo, "the families of the journalists letting out a collective gasp, bursting into tears – shocked that their children, that their brothers, that their loved ones will now spend much of their life ... in jail, for basically doing the job of what we all do as journalists."

The verdicts defy "logic, sense, and any semblance of justice," says Al Jazeera English managing director Al Anstey.

Before the sentences were announced, the defendants had been hopeful they might be released, Fadel says; after the terms were read out, the journalists were yelling and banging on the bars of the cages that traditionally house defendants in Egyptian courts.

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Six others from the network were sentenced to 10 year prison terms after being tried in absentia.

The three Al Jazeera employees have been held since December. Their arrest came after a crackdown on protests staged by the Muslim Brotherhood, the group that left power when President Mohammed Morsi was ousted by a military coup last July.

The prison sentences were announced one day after Secretary of State John Kerry visited Cairo, where he met with President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi. They discussed U.S. military aid to Egypt that was frozen after the democratically elected Morsi was thrown out of office; on Sunday, Kerry said he was confident the aid would be restored.

"The United States has recently closed ranks with Egypt's authorities," The Washington Post reports, "moving to restore suspended military aid despite lingering congressional objections about human rights abuses. All but about $78 million of an initial pledge of more than $600 million has been released."

The journalists' families say the court's sentence will be appealed. Fadel tells NPR's Steve Inskeep on today's Morning Edition that the journalists are now hoping Sissi might give them a pardon – "as evidence that freedom of speech is actually valued in the new Egypt."

Fadel and others who monitored the court sessions say the punishment was rendered despite a lack of hard evidence against the journalists. From the AP:

"The prosecution provided little evidence in the case, showing video footage found in their possession — most of which had nothing to do with the case, including a report on a veterinary hospital in Cairo, Christian life and old footage of Greste from previous assignments elsewhere in Africa."

Over the weekend, an Egyptian judge confirmed the death penalty for "more than 180 people, including the outlawed Muslim Brotherhood's spiritual leader," as the Two-Way reported.

Copyright 2014 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/