Egypt court orders retrial in Al-Jazeera case

0

CAIRO — An Egyptian appeals court on Thursday ordered the retrial of three Al-Jazeera English journalists
held for over a year on terror-related charges, a ruling that their lawyers hoped was a step toward
resolving a case that brought a storm of international criticism on Egypt’s government.
The three will remain behind bars at least until the retrial begins. But their lawyers expressed cautious
optimism that a quick retrial will lead to their eventual exoneration. Thursday’s ruling by the Court of
Cassation, rights advocates said, exposed the highly politicized nature of their initial conviction and
heavy sentences of up to 10 years in prison in a trial that they dismissed as a sham with no evidence.

The journalists, Canadian-Egyptian Mohammed Fahmy, Australian Peter Greste and Egyptian Baher Mohammed,
have argued they were targeted because of the Egyptian government’s political fight with Qatar, the Gulf
nation that finances the Al-Jazeera news network. The two countries have been at odds over Qatar’s
support of the Muslim Brotherhood, which Egyptian authorities have cracked down on ferociously since the
July 2013 military ouster of Islamist President Mohammed Morsi.
Hopes have been raised that Egypt’s government now intends to free the men because of a recent public
reconciliation between Egypt and Qatar.
A retrial would give a way out of the case for Egypt’s President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi, who in the past
has largely turned aside calls for him to pardon the three by insisting he will not interfere in the
judiciary. A retrial would also allow Cairo to continue to use the case as a bargaining chip with Qatar.

Nothing, however, is certain, with the defendants and their families largely left reading the tea leaves
from political shifts and vague statements by authorities.
A date for the retrial was not immediately set, but rights advocates said its opening session would
likely give the strongest indication of the government’s intentions. If the new judge orders the three
released on bail, for example, it could point to a plan to wrap up the case with the defendants’
freedom.
"The way the second trial is managed will mirror the potential political will," said leading
rights advocate Bahy Eddin Hassan who is also the head of Cairo Institute for Human Rights Studies.
"This is in the context of overwhelming politicization of judicial system in Egypt."
A spokesman for Al-Jazeera, Osama Saeed, called on el-Sissi to pardon the three or, failing that, urged
that the retrial be swift.
"Now make that retrial expedited, swift and fast with the right judgment in the end that the guys
are released," Saeed said, speaking to The Associated Press in Doha.
Fahmy and Greste were arrested in a December 2013 raid, two on the hotel room they were using as an
office, while covering the wave of protests by Morsi’s Islamist supporters, while Mohammed was taken
from his home. After their arrest, the government declared the Brotherhood a terrorist organization. The
three were charged with helping terrorists by acting as the Brotherhood’s mouthpiece and falsifying news
to destabilize Egypt.
In their initial trial, prosecutors presented no concrete evidence, only samples of the team’s news
reports on protests, with no proof of falsification or of a connection to the Brotherhood. The
prosecution also presented as evidence footage found on the journalists’ computers that even the judge
dismissed as irrelevant, including Greste’s past news reports from Somalia and other countries for other
news channels.
Fahmy and Greste were sentenced to seven years in prison, while Mohammed got 10 years — three more
because he was found with a spent bullet casing, which brought him an added possession of ammunition
charge. The defendants argued they were arrested for just doing their jobs.
Since Morsi’s fall, Egyptian vilified the Al-Jazeera network as doing Qatar’s bidding in supporting the
Brotherhood and fueling Islamist protests. The station denies the accusations.
But past weeks have brought a patching up of ties between Egypt and Qatar, on the heels of a
reconciliation deal reached between Qatar and Gulf countries, led by Saudi Arabia and United Arab
Emirates, el-Sissi’s main backers.
El-Sissi recently met with a Qatari envoy, saying afterward that Egypt hoped the meeting was the start of
a "new era" between them. Days later, Al-Jazeera closed its Egyptian affiliate, Al-Jazeera
Mubasher Misr, which had long angered Egyptian authorities with its near constant coverage of Islamists.

"These journalists should not be caught in the middle of this remote conflict between two
nations," Adel Fahmy, Mohammed Fahmy’s brother, said after Thursday’s ruling.
The three journalists did not attend hearing at the Court of Cassation, which lasted less than 30
minutes. Their families afterward expressed dismay that the court did not immediately order their
release on bail, but legal experts said the Cassation Court does not have the authority to do so, only
the judge in the retrial.
The verdict was "not as good as we hoped," said Lois Greste, Peter Greste’s mother.
Still, Greste’s lawyer, Amr el-Dib, hailed the ruling.
"This is a very good and optimistic decision. It will give them a second round of litigation,"
el-Dib said. "Hopefully when we go to the retrial, we can defend the defendants and present
adequate support to try to set them free."
Fahmy’s lawyer, Negad al-Borai, said the defense lawyers based their argument on the fact that the first
court has been set up as a "special court" for the specific case, which is against the law.
Among other grounds of his appeal, he said the initial court based its verdict on the assumption that as
long as the journalists work for Al-Jazeera, they are members of the Muslim Brotherhood group, in
absence of evidence that shows the connection.
Egyptian authorities offered no immediate comment on the ruling.
Australian Foreign Minister Julie Bishop told Fairfax Media: "We are currently working through the
implications and options with our diplomatic representatives in Cairo." She did not immediately
respond to AP’s request for comment on Thursday.
Bishop told Nine Network television on Friday "there is some cause for optimism" in the
decision. She said she hoped to speak to the Egyptian Foreign Minister Sameh Shoukry on Friday.
She said Greste could apply to another court to be released on bail on Friday.
"He’s now spent a year in jail and from our perspective that’s far too long and that should be
reason why he should be given bail," Bishop said.
The Australian government had "some optimism" that Greste could be transferred to Australia now
that his convictions had been overturned, Bishop said.
Under a recently passed law, el-Sissi also has the power to deport the foreigners during their trial.
That would allow Greste to go home and would allow Fahmy to go to Canada if he drops his Egyptian
nationality. Baher Mohammed’s case would remain more uncertain as he holds only Egyptian citizenship.

Fahmy’s family said that they already submitted a request.
"It is another side option but we don’t know if it’s going to materialize or not. It’s an option on
the table," Fahmy’s brother said. "It all depends on what the government wants to do with the
foreigners."
El-Dib said that Greste also asked the prosecutor-general for deportation but "it is hard to
predict" given the fact that "there is no precedent."
____
AP journalists Abdullah Rebhy in Doha, Qatar, and Rod McGuirk in Canberra, Australia, contributed to this
report.
Copyright 2015 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast,
rewritten or redistributed.

No posts to display