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Egypt Freed Al-Jazeera Journalists

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Two Al-Jazeera journalists were released from prison on Wednesday following a pardon from Egyptian President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi, in a case that drew worldwide condemnation.

Canadian-Egyptian Al-Jazeera journalist Mohammed Fahmy and the Qatari network’s Egyptian producer Baher Mohammed were among 100 prisoners – including pro-democracy activists – who were pardoned, according to a presidential statement.

“Fahmy is now at home. His colleague Baher Mohammed has also left the prison accompanied by his family,” Fahmy’s wife, Marwa Omara.  The pardons, marking the Islamic holiday of Eid al-Adha, are the first to include prominent figures caught up in Egypt’s crackdown on dissent since el-Sissi, then head of the armed forces, ousted Islamist president Mohammed Morsi two years ago.

They were issued ahead of el-Sissi’s visit to New York to attend the U.N. General Assembly meetings. Fahmy, Mohammed and Australian journalist Peter Greste were arrested in late 2013 and charged with publishing false news and collaborating with Morsi’s Muslim Brotherhood, which has been banned as a terrorist organisation.

They were sentenced to seven years imprisonment on those charges in an initial trial last year. Observers at the trial said that no concrete evidence in support of the allegations had been heard in court sessions open to the press. The convictions were overturned on appeal and the journalists were jailed for three years after a retrial that concluded last month.

Greste was released and deported on el-Sissi’s orders in February before the retrial started. Fahmy gave up his Egyptian citizenship in order to qualify for deportation like Greste, saying a senior security official had urged him to do so to save the country embarrassment, but was not released.

Human rights organisations and press freedom groups had called for the release of the journalists. The case clearly embarrassed Egyptian authorities, with el-Sissi publicly saying that it would have been better if the journalists had been deported instead of being put on trial.

Interior Ministry spokesman Abu Bakr Abdul Kareem said the other prisoners, including 16 women, will be released “within hours.” The presidency said the pardons came “in the framework of the president’s initiative to release groups of young people, which he launched in December last year.” Thousands of people, mainly suspected Islamists but also including young democracy activists, have been jailed since Morsi’s toppling in the wake of mass protests against his increasingly unpopular rule.

Most have been accused of illegal demonstrations, membership of illegal organisations, or participation in riots and deadly attacks on security forces. According to data compiled by activists from the Egyptian Center for Economic and Social Rights, some 41,000 people were detained or prosecuted between the fall of Morsi and May 2014.

Among those to be freed are two prominent young female activists, Sanaa Seif and Yara Salam, who were jailed last year under a law that effectively bans protests without prior police approval. The pardons also come less than a month before the start of Egypt’s parliamentary elections, which the government says mark the final stage in a process of restoring democracy after alleged abuses under Morsi’s one-year rule.

It is far from clear that they herald an end to the government’s stern measures against dissidents. On Tuesday evening, the April 6 Youth Movement, which played a key role in the 2011 revolution against long-time dictator Hosni Mubarak, said its coordinator Amr Ali had been arrested.

Sanaa Seif’s sister Mona, writing on her Facebook page, condemned the government despite the releases. “For 100 or 200 people to go free while the jails are full of thousands of victims of injustice, some of them children … this is not justice,” she wrote.

A third sibling, prominent pro-democracy activist and blogger Alaa Abdel-Fattah, is currently serving a five-year sentence for another protest. Their father, veteran human rights lawyer Ahmed Seif al-Islam, died last year while both Alaa and Sanaa were in jail.

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About Author

Akin Akingbala is an international journalist based in Lagos, Nigeria. Aside being happily married, he has interests in music, sports and loves traveling.

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