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      Egypt: 
  High Price of Dissent, 
	Journalists, Protesters, Academics Charged over Speech Offenses  
	 By Human Rights Watch, February 24, 2014 
       
       
	Egyptian authorities in recent months have demonstrated almost zero 
	tolerance for any form of dissent, arresting and prosecuting journalists, 
	demonstrators, and academics for peacefully expressing their views, Human 
	Rights Watch said today.
  Prosecutors on January 29, 2014, referred 
	three Al Jazeera English journalists to trial on politicized charges such as 
	disseminating “false information” and belonging to a “terrorist 
	organization,” some of which carry prison sentences ranging from five to 15 
	years. At least 17 other journalists and opposition figures face similar 
	charges in the same case, with the trial scheduled to begin on February 20. 
	On January 19, prosecutors referred 25 people to trial on
	
	charges of “insulting the judiciary,” including Amr Hamzawy, an academic 
	and former member of parliament.
  “Journalists should not have to risk 
	years in an Egyptian prison for doing their job,” said
	
	Joe Stork, deputy Middle East director at Human Rights Watch. “The 
	prosecution of these journalists for speaking with Muslim Brotherhood 
	members, coming after the prosecution of protesters and academics, shows how 
	fast the space for dissent in
	
	Egypt is evaporating.”
  The three detained Al Jazeera journalists 
	– Egyptian nationals Mohamed Fahmy and Baher Mohamed and an Australian, 
	Peter Greste – face charges including editing video footage to “give the 
	appearance that Egypt is in a civil war,” operating broadcast equipment 
	without a license, membership in a terrorist organization, and possession of 
	material that promotes the goals of a terrorist organization.
  The 
	charges against Hamzawy relate to a June 2013 Twitter message saying that 
	the
	
	conviction of 43 employees of pro-democracy organizations demonstrated 
	the “politicization” of the judiciary. Other defendants in this case include 
	Mustafa al-Naggar, also a former parliament member, and Alaa Abdel-Fattah, a 
	well-known activist who had been detained since late November on
	
	false charges of organizing a demonstration without notification. 
	 In early January 2014 authorities charged another prominent academic, 
	the Cairo University political science professor Emad Shahin, along with 
	senior Muslim Brotherhood leaders, with conspiring with foreign 
	organizations to harm Egyptian national security. Both Shahin and Hamzawy 
	had been vocal critics of President Mohamed Morsy’s government, but they had 
	also criticized the bloody repression of the Brotherhood after the military 
	removed Morsy from power. Authorities placed Hamzawy under a travel ban and 
	his case has been referred to trial but no date has been scheduled. Shahin 
	had left Egypt before the charges against him became known later in January. 
	 Police have relied on a repressive November 2013
	
	protest law to violently
	
	disperse and arrest  hundreds of peaceful protesters under the pretext 
	that they assembled without a permit. A court used this law in December to 
	sentence three leading activists – Ahmed Maher, Mohamed Adel, and Ahmed 
	Douma – to three years in prison.
  In late December, the interim 
	government declared the Muslim Brotherhood a “terrorist organization,” 
	citing recent attacks on security installations and officials but providing 
	no evidence linking the Brotherhood to those attacks. Although the 
	designation does not have the force of law unless issued by a court, 
	officials have used it to arrest and prosecute people who have any contact 
	with Brotherhood members, such as the Al Jazeera journalists. Egypt’s new 
	constitution, in article 65, protects freedom of thought and opinion, and in 
	article 71 states that no one shall be imprisoned for “crimes committed by 
	way of publication or the public nature thereof.”
  As a state party to 
	the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) and the 
	African Charter of Human and Peoples’ Rights, Egypt is required to protect 
	freedom of expression. Article 19 of the ICCPR guarantees the “freedom to 
	seek, receive and impart information and ideas of all kinds, regardless of 
	frontiers, either orally, in writing or in print, in the form of art, or 
	through any other media of his choice.” The United Nations Human Rights 
	Committee, the body of experts that reviews countries’ compliance with the 
	ICCPR, has written that the freedom of expression is “essential” to the full 
	enjoyment of the right to participate in public affairs and vote.
  
	More than 50 foreign correspondents issued a
	
	statement on January 13 calling for an end to the imprisonment of the 
	three Al Jazeera journalists, saying that their arrest had “cast a cloud 
	over press and media freedom in Egypt.”
  The Committee to Protect 
	Journalists
	
	named Egypt among the top three deadliest countries for journalists in 
	2013.
  “Egyptian and international human rights organizations have for 
	years called on Egyptian authorities to amend the country’s penal code, 
	whose overly broad provisions were the government’s main legal tool to lock 
	up dissenters.” Stork said. “Today, prosecutors have at their disposal an 
	even greater arsenal of repressive laws that criminalize legitimate 
	expression, assembly, and association.”
  For more Human Rights Watch 
	reporting on Egypt, please visit:  
	
	http://www.hrw.org/middle-eastn-africa/egypt
  For more 
	information, please contact: In Washington, DC, Joe Stork (English): 
	+1-202-612-4327; or +1-202-299-4925 (mobile); or
	storkj@hrw.org In New York, Nadim 
	Houry (Arabic, French, English): +1-917-385-0532 (US mobile); or 
	+961-3-639-244 (mobile); or houryn@hrw.org. 
	Follow on Twitter @nadimhoury
  Arrest and Detention of Al Jazeera 
	Journalists On December 29, 2013, police raided two rooms at the Marriott 
	hotel, where Greste, an Al Jazeera English correspondent, and Fahmy, the 
	Cairo bureau chief, were staying, as well as the home of Mohamed, an Al 
	Jazeera English producer. Media supportive of the government have since 
	referred to the arrested journalists as the “Marriott cell,” and Tahrir TV 
	on February 2, 2014, aired a lengthy
	
	video of the raid on the hotel rooms.
  Police
	
	arrested Fahmy, who holds joint Egyptian and Canadian citizenship, as 
	well as Greste, Mohamed, and a cameraman, Mohamed Fawzy, an Egyptian. Police 
	released Fawzy on December 31, 2013, but prosecutors ordered the detention 
	of the other three for two successive 15-day periods, pending interrogation 
	on allegations of links to a “terrorist organization” and “spreading false 
	news” that harms national security. Authorities accused the journalists of 
	using their Marriot suite as a meeting point and broadcast center for the 
	Muslim Brotherhood.
  Authorities have detained the three in Tora 
	Prison, in southern Cairo, since their arrest. In a
	
	letter from prison, Greste described routinely being kept in his cell 
	for 24 hours a day and allowed out only for questioning. Until recently, 
	authorities held Fahmy and Mohamed in the maximum-security Scorpion unit of 
	the prison, where people alleged to be responsible for terrorist attacks are 
	held.
  On January 29, 2014, a court rejected Greste’s appeal of his 
	pretrial detention.
  That same day, the State Security Prosecution 
	Office referred the three journalists for trial, along with the 17 others, 
	three of them non-Egyptians and 12 of them in absentia. Prosecutors charged 
	the Egyptian journalists with membership in a terrorist organization and the 
	foreign journalists with colluding with the Egyptian defendants. The charges 
	also include possession of printed and recorded material that promote the 
	goals of a terrorist group, disseminating false information with the purpose 
	of harming public order, and the possession of broadcasting and filming 
	equipment without official authorization.
  A Dutch journalist, Rena 
	Netjes of Holland's Parool newspaper and BNR radio, went into hiding and 
	fled Egypt after discovering she was one of the 20 journalists on the 
	government’s list of people facing charges of disseminating false 
	information and promoting the goals of a terrorist group. Netjes had met 
	with Al Jazeera’s Fahmy the week before his arrest. Reuters
	
	reported on February 9 that a Cairo prosecutor had ordered the detention 
	of another man, Hassan al-Banna, accusing him of editing a photo he sent to 
	Al Jazeera and of being a member of a terrorist organization.
  The 
	State Security Prosecution Office press release on January 29 said that the 
	journalists had “used broadcasting equipment and computers to gather footage 
	and manipulate it to produce a false image to give the outside world the 
	impression that what is happening in the country is a civil war … and the 
	broadcasting of these images via the Qatari Al Jazeera to assist the 
	terrorist group to fulfill its goals in influencing public opinion abroad.” 
	 The prosecutor’s statement said that experts had confirmed that “footage 
	had been changed and edited using software and high-tech editing equipment” 
	and that these included “false images that harm national security.”
  
	In a January 25
	
	letter smuggled out of Tora Prison, Greste wrote: The state has 
	presented no evidence to support the allegations, and we have not been 
	formally charged with any crime. But the prosecutor general has just 
	extended our initial 15-day detention by another 15 days to give 
	investigators more time to find something. He can do this indefinitely – one 
	of my prison mates has been behind bars for 6 months without a single charge 
	… The state will not tolerate hearing from the Muslim Brotherhood or any 
	other critical voices.Authorities earlier detained two other journalists 
	from Al Jazeera sister channels, Al Jazeera Arabic and Al Jazeera Mubasher 
	Misr. Authorities detained Mohamed Badr on July 15, 2013, on charges of 
	rioting. A court acquitted him, and he was released earlier in February 
	2014. Police arrested Abdullah al-Shami during the dispersal of the Muslim 
	Brotherhood sit-in at Raba’a Square on August 14, 2013. He remains in 
	detention, without a trial date, on accusations of inciting violence, 
	disturbing the peace, and destroying public property.
  Arrests of 
	Other Journalists and Media Activists In the aftermath of the military’s 
	ouster of President Morsi on July 3, security forces closed down TV stations 
	affiliated with the Muslim Brotherhood and other Islamist currents. 
	Authorities have detained 18 contributors to the citizen news network, Rassd, 
	since July 3, including two who are facing military trials, Asma al-Khatib, 
	a journalist with the network, told Human Rights Watch.
  On January 
	22, 2014, police arrested an Egyptian filmmaker, Hossam al-Meneai, and an 
	American translator, Jeremy Hodge, at their Cairo apartment. Police released 
	Hodge four days later without charge, but held al-Meneai for 18 days. Al-Meneai 
	still faces charges of spreading “false names and endangering the stability 
	of the nation.” Hodge
	
	told journalists that al-Meneai was tortured, which al-Meneai 
	subsequently
	
	confirmed.
  On February 1, police arrested a Yemeni blogger and 
	activist, Feras Shamsan, following interviews he conducted at the annual 
	Cairo Book Fair. He faces charges of spreading false news about the Egyptian 
	authorities, receiving money from foreign agencies, taking photographs 
	without permission, and disturbing the public peace.
  On February 2, 
	police
	
	raided the facilities of Yqeen and Hasry, Cairo-based media outlets, 
	arresting 13 staff members on allegations of inciting violence and airing 
	false news. Police later released the journalists on bail, though they still 
	face criminal charges.
  Other Expression-Related Arrests  The 
	recent arrests of journalists are only one element of the Egyptian 
	government’s expanding crackdown on freedom of expression. Arrests have also 
	targeted a wide range of voices of dissent.
  Prosecutors accused 
	Hamzawy, the professor at the American University in Cairo and former member 
	of parliament, of insulting the judiciary for a Twitter comment in June 
	criticizing the conviction of 43 workers at nongovernmental groups and 
	imposed a travel ban to prevent him from leaving the country.
  Earlier 
	in January, prosecutors charged Shahin, the Cairo University political 
	science professor, with espionage and conspiring to undermine Egypt’s 
	national security, charging him along with senior Brotherhood leaders. Both 
	Hamzawy and Shahin had criticized the government of President Morsy and also 
	the repressive policies of security services under the military-backed 
	government that replaced Morsy.
  In late December 2013, the Cairo 
	University president, Gaber Nassar, referred a law professor, Yasser al-Serafy, 
	to the authorities for allegedly belonging to the Muslim Brotherhood and 
	raising political issues during his lectures that led to heated arguments 
	between himself and his students. At 1 a.m. on February 3, 2014, authorities 
	raided al-Serafy’s home, arresting him and taking him to the Central 
	Security Forces camp on the Cairo-Alexandria Road, his son Shadi told Human 
	Rights Watch.
  In the days before the constitutional referendum on 
	January 14 and15, police
	
	arrested at least seven peaceful activists from the Strong Egypt party 
	for distributing posters calling for a “no” vote and for protesting military 
	trials of civilians, corruption, and rights abuses by the Interior Ministry. 
	The activists have been released but face various charges, including, “propagat[ing] 
	… the call for changing the basic principles of the constitution … when the 
	use of force or terrorism, or any other illegal method, is noted during the 
	act,” alleged involvement in terrorism, and attempting to overthrow the 
	government.
  On January 23, authorities seized the facilities of a 
	publishing house that was in the process of printing a report by United 
	Group, a group of legal researchers and human rights lawyers. The 
	authorities confiscated copies of the report, which documents torture and 
	other cruel punishment in Egypt during the period of September 2012 to 
	September 2013, and arrested two employees of the publishing company. 
	 The Interior Ministry
	
	announced on January 30 that it would begin arresting those who engage 
	in what it termed incitement against the police and other citizens on social 
	media websites. At least 11 Brotherhood members have been detained on the 
	basis of social media statements, the Associated Press
	
	reported, including a government employee and his son who posted a page 
	with the title “Revolutionaries of Bani Suef.” On February 15, the Interior 
	Ministry
	
	announced the arrest of the administrator of the page for the “Tanta 
	Anti-Coup Movement,” another protest group. 
       
       
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