World Editors Forum joins outrage over Egyptian verdicts

Jun 24, 2014 at 12:25 pm by Staff


WAN-Ifra and the World Editors Forum has strongly condemned guilty verdicts three Al Jazeera journalists including Australian Peter Greste.

With Mohamed Fadel Fahmy and Baher Mohamed, Greste has been sentenced to between seven and ten years accusations of spreading false news and of aiding a banned terrorist organisation.



The organisations called on recently-elected Egyptian president Abdel Fattah el-Sisi to take “all necessary steps to immediately revoke the sentences.”



Australian journalist Peter Greste and Cairo bureau chief Mohamed Fadel Fahmy – who has dual Egyptian/Canadian nationality – were both sentenced to seven years in prison. Egyptian producer Baher Mohamed was sentenced to ten years, while three of their Al Jazeera English colleagues were also sentenced in absentia.


The three men were arrested from their Cairo hotel rooms on December 29 last year.

WAN-Ifra secretary general Larry Kilman says the organisation is “disappointed and outraged” at the judgement: “It is an abhorrent abuse of press freedom principles.

“These journalists have been jailed for simply doing their jobs and journalism is not a crime.”



In a letter to President Sisi, WAN-Ifra reminded the Egyptian leader that prosecuting journalists for carrying out their profession “constituted a clear breach of the right to freedom of expression, as guaranteed by the Egyptian constitution and numerous international conventions, including the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.”


For democratic governments to equate journalism with terrorist activities when challenged on transparency, accountability or national security issues is highly irresponsible and sends a deplorable message that human rights are not protected.

“We believe this verdict will severely damage the public perception of the role of the media and the status of professional journalists,” the letter continued.

“The message it sends to the Egyptian public, and to the wider international community, is that Egypt is closed off to debate and criticism and that freedom of expression has no place in the new society.”



Kilman says WAN-Ifra remains deeply concerned by a rising global trend that has seen growing numbers of journalists imprisoned for supposed links to terrorist activities. More than half of the 211 journalists recorded in the 2013 Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) prison census were jailed on anti-state charges. One of those behind bars is WAN-Ifra’s 2014 Golden Pen of Freedom laureate Eskinder Nega, an Ethiopian journalist sentenced to 18 years in prison for supposed terrorism-related activities.



WAN-Ifra’s full letter to the Egyptian President can be read at http://www.wan-ifra.org/node/111545/



Peter Greste, Mohamed Fadel Fahmy and Baher Mohamed were featured as part of the organisation’s ‘30 Days for Freedom’ campaign. Visit their profiles to learn more about their case, and use the hashtag #FreethePress to raise awareness of the plight of the hundreds of jailed journalists worldwide.



For more information on WAN-IFRA’s press freedom activities, visit www.wan-ifra.org/pressfreedom



Visit the press freedom blog at http://blog.wan-ifra.org/blogs/press-freedom



Tweet your support for the journalists using the hashtags #FreeAJStaff and #FreethePress

Sections: Columns & opinion

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