Egypt

30 September 2009

Swedish blogger detained at Cairo airport, due to be expelled

Per Bjorklund, a Cairo-based Swedish freelance journalist and blogger who covered a recent wave of factory strikes in Egypt, was denied entry on returning to the country Tuesday and his passport was confiscated, apparently because his name appeared on a blacklist, Reporters sans Frontières (RSF) has reported. As he arrived in Cairo on a flight from Prague, he is reportedly to be expelled on the...

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30 July 2009

Three bloggers held in Egypt without charge

Three bloggers have been detained with charge in Egypt since last week, according to the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ). Islamist blogger Abdel Rahman Ayyash, who writes for Al-Ghareeb (The Stranger), was arrested at the Cairo airport on Tuesday on his return from Turkey where he attended a youth conference, according to multiple news reports. Muslim Brotherhood member Magdi Saad, who used...

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29 June 2009

Editor sentenced to six months in prison in Egypt

The Arabic Network for Human Rights Information (ANHRI) expresses deep dissatisfaction over the increasing frequency of convictions for press misdemeanours in Egypt. The latest occurrence involved the criminal court sentencing of Yasser Barakat, editor-in-chief of the Al-Mogaz newspaper, to six months in prison and a fine of LE 20000 (approx. US$3500) in an insult and libel case filed by MP...

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28 February 2009
Egyptian journalists fined by court over ban on Suzanne Tamim murder case coverage

Egyptian journalists fined by court over ban on Suzanne Tamim murder case coverage

The Egyptian judiciary has imposed a fine on five journalists for violating a ban on media coverage of a murder trial involving an influential businessman who is a member of President Hosni Mubarak's ruling party, the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) has reported. In a hearing attended by CPJ Thursday, the Sayyida Zainab Misdemeanors Court sentenced Magdi al-Galad, Yusri al-Badri, and Faruq...

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7 February 2009

Egypt appeals court strikes down jail time, upholds fines against four leading editors

A Cairo appeals court has struck down a one-year jail term against four editors. On January 31, appellate court judge Mohamed Samir struck down a one-year jail-term given in September 2007 to four editors for "publishing false information likely to disturb public order." However, the court upheld a 20,000 Egyptian pound (US$3,540) fine against Ibrahim Eissa of the daily Al-Dustour, Adel Hamouda of...

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8 January 2009

Egyptian newspaper forced to remove article critical of President Mubarak

The Arabic Network for Human Rights Information (ANHRI) has condemned officials from Al-Ahram Press for their refusal to print the latest edition of the opposition weekly Sout al-Ummah, until its editor, Abdel Halim Kandil, had removed his article criticising Egypt President Hosni Mubarak and the country's stance on the crisis in Gaza. Sout al-Ummmah was finally published on January 5 after the...

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30 November 2008
Egyptian journalists face prosecution over ban on Suzanne Tamim murder case coverage

Egyptian journalists face prosecution over ban on Suzanne Tamim murder case coverage

Editors of Egyptian newspaeprs Al- Masry Al-Youm and Al-Wafd and three other journalists have been summoned to appear in court in connection with a ban that has been placed on the publication of any material concerning the Susan Tamim murder case, the Arabic Network for Human Rights Information (ANHRI) has reported. On November 22, the prosecution investigated Magdy el-Gallad, the editor of the...

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17 November 2008
Egyptian orders media blackout of high-profile murder trial of Lebanese singer Tamim

Egyptian orders media blackout of high-profile murder trial of Lebanese singer Tamim

A judge has banned media coverage of the trial of Egyptian tycoon Hisham Talaat Moustafa who is accused of ordering the killing of Lebanese pop star Suzanne Tamim who jilted him, according to news reports. Egyptian media said Tamim, a close friend of Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak's son, Gamal, and part of a powerful group long seen as above the law in Egypt's hierarchical class-based society...

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7 November 2008
Egyptian blogger Kareem Amer completes two years in prison, still awaits justice

Egyptian blogger Kareem Amer completes two years in prison, still awaits justice

Press freedom groups have condemned the continued imprisonment of Egyptian blogger Abdel Karim Suleiman, a.k.a. Kareem Amer, who completed two years in prison on Friday. His lawyers from the Arabic Network for Human Rights Information (ANHRI) and Hisham Mubarak Law Centre are still waiting the result of an appeal brought before Egypt’s Prosecutor-General. Amer’s lawyers hope to see justice done...

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6 October 2008
Hosni Mubarak pardons Egyptian editor Ibrahim Eissa for reports on President's health

Hosni Mubarak pardons Egyptian editor Ibrahim Eissa for reports on President's health

Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak has pardoned outspoken editor Ibrahim Eissa from the two-month jail sentence the latter received for “publishing false information of a nature to disturb public order or security,” state-TV announced late Monday. An Egyptian appeals court on September 28 upheld a guilty verdict against Eissa who wrote stories questioning President Mubarak's health. Eissa, editor of...

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