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Egypt court sentences 3 Al Jazeera journalists for 7 years

Al Jazeera has always rejected the charges against its journalists
Cairo: The guilty verdicts were delivered by a judge on Monday against Peter Greste, Mohamed Fahmy and Baher Mohamed in an Egypt court.
Greste and Fahmy was sentenced to seven years in jail, while Mohamed was sentenced to an additional three years for possession of ammunition.
Al Jazeera has always rejected the charges against its journalists and maintains their innocence.
The journalists were arrested in December in Cairo as they covered the aftermath of the army's removal of Mohamed Morsi from the presidency in July.
Since the army ousted Islamist president Mohamed Morsi in July 2013, the authorities have been incensed by the Qatari network's coverage of their deadly crackdown on his supporters.
They consider Al-Jazeera to be the voice of Qatar, and accuse Doha of backing Morsi's Brotherhood, while the emirate openly denounces the repression of the Islamist movement's supporters which has killed more than 1,400 people.
Australian Peter Greste, Egyptian-Canadian Mohamed Fadel Fahmy and producer Baher Mohamed, who work for Al-Jazeera English, have been tried with 17 others on charges of "spreading false news" and having Brotherhood links.
Al-Jazeera English producer Baher Mohamed, center left, Canadian-
Egyptian acting Cairo bureau chief Mohammed Fahmy, center, and
correspondent Peter Greste, second right, appear in court along
with several other defendants during their trial on terror charges,
in Cairo, Egypt. (Photo: AP)
The three have been detained for nearly six months, along with six others.
Al-Jazeera says only nine of the 20 defendants are on its staff, including two foreign reporters who are abroad. A Dutch journalist not with the channel is also among the defendants.
Sixteen are Egyptians accused of belonging to the Brotherhood, which the authorities designated a "terrorist organisation" in December.
The four foreigners are also alleged to have collaborated with and assisted their Egyptian co-defendants by providing media material, as well as editing and broadcasting it.
The authorities also say the accused journalists were operating in Egypt without valid accreditation.
"On June 23, the entire world will be watching Egypt to see whether they uphold the values of press freedom," Al-Jazeera said.
On Sunday, US Secretary of State John Kerry also called for freedom of the press to be upheld in Egypt as he made a surprise visit to Cairo.
- 'Reporting, not supporting' -
Watch Video: Al Jazeera staff verdict expected in Egypt
Kerry said he discussed with Egyptian officials "the essential role of a vibrant civil society, free press, rule of law and due process in a democracy".
Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott said on Monday he told Egypt's President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi it would be a public relations coup if Greste avoids a severe sentence.
"I assured him, as a former journalist myself, that Peter Greste would have been reporting the Muslim Brotherhood, not supporting the Muslim Brotherhood," Abbott, who spoke to Sisi over the weekend, told the Seven Network.
Sisi, who was sworn in as president on June 8, has said he intends to return Egypt to stability rather than encourage democratic reforms.
Prosecutors have demanded the maximum penalty for all defendants. The 16 Egyptians could be jailed for 25 years, while the foreigners could get 15 years, their lawyers say.
Since the trial began on February 20, rights groups have expressed concerns over media restrictions in Egypt.
"What the Egyptian authorities are doing is vindictive persecution of journalists for merely doing their jobs," said Amnesty International.
During the hearings the defendants have denounced the trial as "unfair and political", charging that evidence had been "fabricated".
Prosecutors showed video from a tourism report not even produced by Al-Jazeera, as well as images and audio recordings in which the defendants are alleged to have falsely portrayed a "civil war".
Relatives hope the court will acquit the defendants after last week's release of Abdullah Elshamy, another Jazeera journalist who works for the network's main Arabic channel.
"There are signals that make us cautiously optimistic, like the release of Abdullah Elshamy and the new government's intention to show that journalists are not being oppressed," Adel Fadel Fahmy, brother of Mohamed Fadel Fahmy, told AFP.
Greste and Fahmy were arrested in a hotel room in Cairo on December 29 after the channel's office was raided by police.
Greste formerly worked with the BBC and won the 2011 Peabody Award for a documentary on Somalia.
Fahmy, the Cairo bureau chief of Al-Jazeera English who previously worked with CNN, has no known Brotherhood ties.
Al-Jazeera Arabic service journalist Abdullah Elshamy, center, who
had been on hunger strike for more than four months to protest his
prolonged detention without charges, speaks to the media after his
release from detention in Cairo, Egypt, Tuesday, June 17, 2014. (Photo: AP)
( Source : dc/ afp )
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