Cairo (AFP)
- Egypt's president said Tuesday the authorities will not interfere in the
judiciary, as protests were staged worldwide in solidarity with Al-Jazeera
journalists, including an Australian, whose jailing has sparked outrage.
The United
States is leading calls for President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi to pardon the
journalists convicted of aiding the blacklisted Muslim Brotherhood movement and
"spreading false news".
A Cairo
court sentenced award-winning Australian journalist Peter Greste and
Egyptian-Canadian Mohamed Fadel Fahmy to seven years in jail on Monday, while
producer Baher Mohamed was handed 10 years.
Eleven of
20 defendants who stood trial were given 10-year sentences in absentia,
including one Dutch journalist and two British journalists. Those sentenced can
appeal.
Since the
army ousted Islamist president Mohamed Morsi in July 2013, the Egyptian
authorities have been incensed by Al-Jazeera's coverage of their deadly
crackdown on his supporters.
They
consider the pan-Arab satellite network as the voice of Qatar, and accuse Doha
of backing Morsi's Brotherhood, while the emirate openly denounces the
repression of the Islamist supporters.
Sisi, the
ex-army chief who led Morsi's ouster before being elected president in May,
said the authorities "will not interfere in judicial matters".
"We
have to respect judiciary rulings, and not comment them even if others don't
understand them," he said in a televised speech.
Sisi's
comments came a day after the White House urged the Egyptian authorities to
pardon the journalists.
But a
presidency official told AFP Sisi cannot legally do so until a final court
ruling after any appeals.
'Journalism not a crime'
Monday's
ruling sparked an international outcry, with US Secretary of State John Kerry
denouncing "a chilling and draconian sentence".
Greste's
shattered parents vowed to keep fighting for press freedom as Australia joined
the call for Sisi to issue a pardon.
"This
is a very dark time not only for our family, but for journalism
generally," his father Juris said in Brisbane. "The campaign for
media freedom and free speech must never end. Journalism is not a crime."
Al-Jazeera,
whose journalists had been working in Cairo without official accreditation,
condemned the verdict as "unjust".
Journalists
around the world demonstrated Tuesday in solidarity with those jailed,
including staff at the London headquarters of the BBC, Greste's former
employer, and reporters at the Foreign Correspondents' Club in Hong Kong.
"The
verdict is unjust, the case is unfounded," BBC news director James Harding
told the gathering, before a one-minute silent protest was observed exactly 24
hours after the sentencing.
Scores of
journalists posted pictures of themselves on Twitter with their mouths covered
in duct-tape, posting under the protest hashtag #FreeAJStaff.
France on
Tuesday joined Britain and the Netherlands in summoning the Egyptian
ambassadors.
But
reactions were limited to verbal objections, as the West cannot afford to harm
ties with Egypt, the first Arab country to have signed a peace treaty with Israel
and a strategic US ally in the Middle East.
A day
before the ruling, US officials announced that $572 million (420 million euros)
in aid, frozen since October, had been released to Egypt.
The
Al-Jazeera ruling is the latest issue in Egypt to concern rights groups since a
2011 uprising toppled long-time autocrat Hosni Mubarak.
And since
Morsi's ouster, political unrest has reached unprecedented levels in Egypt,
with more than 1,400 people killed and at least 15,000 jailed in a government
crackdown.
'McCarthyist climate'
Hundreds
have also been sentenced to death in speedy mass trials and dozens of youth
activists who spearheaded the 2011 uprising have been handed jail terms, with
the authorities being accused of using the judiciary as a blunt tool of
repression.
"Many
judges believe the state was threatened" during Morsi's single year of
rule, said Hassan Nafaa, a political professor at Cairo University. "They
are taking their revenge today with harsh and unjustified verdicts."
Middle East
expert Karim Bittar told AFP the "rulings confirm that Egypt is living in
a purely McCarthyist climate".
In the
latest case of mass trials, state media said 494 alleged Morsi supporters would
go on trial on July 16 over clashes that killed 44 people in August 2013.
The
Al-Jazeera ruling drew limited criticism in Cairo, with newspapers speaking of
verdicts against "terrorists" accused of "tarnishing Egypt's
image abroad".
The few
voices denouncing the court's decision were to be found on social media
networks.
"Seven-10
years in jail for journalists. Mubarak got 3 years for 30 years of
corruption," a prominent blogger known as The Big Pharaoh tweeted.
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