Their appeals will be heard
at the same time as those of a group of Muslim Brotherhood leaders with whom they were originally tried and
convicted in what was known as the “Rabaa Operations Room”
trial.
The six journalists were convicted of disseminating false news, inciting violence and chaos, and being part of an “operations room” aimed at orchestrating attacks against the government during demonstrations in Cairo’s Rabaa Adawiya Square in support of deposed President Mohamed Morsi.
The journalists worked for different media but all covered the demonstrations and all were critical of the government.
“
The outcome of these journalists’ appeals will be decisive for the future of media freedom in Egypt,” said Alexandra El Khazen, the head of RSF’s Middle East and Maghreb desk.
“
The fact that their appeals are being heard at the same time as those of the members of the Muslim Brotherhood group is extremely disturbing. We urge the Egyptian authorities to quash their convictions and free them because they were arrested just for doing their job as journalists to report the news.”
The six include two journalists with the
Rassd news website – reporter
Abdullah Alfakharany, who is one of the site’s founders, and
Samhi Mostafa, its executive director. They were arrested in August 2013 along with
Mohammed Al-Adly, a presenter on
Amgad TV, a religious TV channel.
Hany Salah Al-Deen, the former news editor of the pro-Muslim Brotherhood TV channel
Misr 25 and former editor of the
Youm7 news website, was arrested in December 2013 at Cairo airport. The authorities closed
Misr 25 after Morsi’s overthrow in July 2013.
Mossab Al Barbary, the head of the pro-Muslim Brotherhood TV channel
Ahrar 25 and former
Misr 25 manager, was arrested at Beirut airport, where he had gone on a business trip, and was deported to Cairo.
Hassan Al Qabbani, an editor with
Rassd and with the newspaper of the Muslim Brotherhood party, Freedom and Justice, was arrested at his home in January 2015.
There are eight other journalists among those whose appeals will begin being heard tomorrow but RSF had not been able to establish any link between their arrests and their work as journalists.
Most of the journalists currently imprisoned in Egypt are directly or indirectly accused of supporting a banned organization, above all the Muslim Brotherhood, inciting violence and disseminating false information. The Muslim Brotherhood was declared a “terrorist organization” in December 2013.
With at least 20 journalists currently detained, Egypt is the world’s fourth biggest prison for media personnel (after China, Eritrea and Iran) and is
ranked 158th out of 180 countries in RSF’s press freedom index.