Authorities harass Al-Jazeera reporter

Reporters Without Borders calls on the Egyptian authorities to stop harassing reporter Howayda Taha of the pan-Arab satellite TV station Al-Jazeera, who was arrested yesterday together with her cameraman while doing a report on farm workers in Nikla, a village near Giza (20 km southwest of Cairo). “Taha's investigative reporting on mistreatment of detainees and social problems upsets the Egyptian authorities,” the press freedom organisation said. “She is already subject to a prison sentence for which she is currently awaiting the outcome of an appeal. We call on the authorities to put an end to all forms of harassment and intimidation of this journalist.” Taha is currently doing a series of reports on those who are “forgotten and excluded” for an Al-Jazeera documentary. Her lawyer, Ahmed Helmi, told Reporters Without Borders she had the impression she was being followed by intelligence operatives. “She was arrested yesterday morning after conducting several interviews about the problems of corruption and unemployment experienced by the inhabitants of the village of Nikla... subjects that do not help the government's image,” he said. Taha and her cameraman, Ahmed Salah Eddin, who had a permit to film issued by the ministry of culture, were questioned for four hours before being released. The police refused to return the interviews they had recorded. They were not charged. Taha was sentenced by a state security court on 2 May 2007 to six months in prison and a fine of 20,000 Egyptian pounds (3,500 euros) for “attacking national interest” by preparing a report on the torture of detainees in Egyptian prisons. Her appeal is due to be heard on 11 February. On the same subject: 3.05.2007 - Al-Jazeera producer sentenced in absentia to six months in prison
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Updated on 20.01.2016