Mahmoud Abou Zeid [Source: CPJ] |
Saeed Abuhaj [Source: CPJ] |
November 4, 2013: Egyptian videographer Saeed Abuhaj was arrested
on anti-state charges. While filming a Muslim Brotherhood demonstration, he was
found carrying a leaflet in support of the outlawed organization. A trial date has
not been established.
April 9, 2014: Egyptian Freedom
and Justice Gate correspondent Abdel Rahman Shaheen was arrested on charges of inciting and committing violence
during protests. In February 2015, charges of aiding terrorism and broadcasting
false news were added.
January 31, 2015: Egyptian Freedom and Justice Gate editor and cultural affairs correspondent Ahmed
el-Tanobi was arrested for “incitement against the government,” “participating
in illegal protests,” and belonging to an “illegal group.” Tanobi was released
with bail on June 9.
August 16, 2015: Egyptian
President Abdul Fattah al-Sisi signed an “anti-terrorism” bill into law.
In short, a bad situation just became far worse.
Currently, 22 journalists are imprisoned for their reporting
on Egyptian affairs. Sisi’s new law will only serve to expand the state’s
ability to punish freedom of expression.
As the BBC News explained, under
the new law:
- Trials for suspected militants will be fast-tracked through special courts. Anyone found guilty of joining a militant group could face 10 years in prison
- Financing terrorist groups will also carry a penalty of life in prison (25 years)
- Inciting violence or creating websites deemed to spread terrorist messages will carry sentences of five to seven years
- Journalists can be fined between 200,000 and 500,000 ($25,500-$64,000) Egyptian pounds for contradicting official accounts of militant attacks
The Committee to Protect Journalists’ Sherif Mansour
remarked, “As of today, journalists are legally prohibited from investigating,
verifying, and reporting on one of the most important matters of public
interest. The state has effectively made itself the only permissible source of
news on these stories.”
The law, however, will not stop at published journalists.
It broadly defines terrorism as any act designed to harm public order, social
peace or national unity, consequently posing a threat to a long list of
individuals who do not see eye-to-eye with Sisi.
According to BBC columnist Bill Thompson, “They’re trying to control all of the
avenues through which information can get to people because they’re concerned
about the impact it might have. And even if the intentions are good, it will
have a chilling effect because the penalties can be so severe…I just worry that
the flow of information particularly within Egypt about these important things is going to be so limited
that the population won’t have the information they need to make good choices
or to influence the policy of the government. It gets in the way of politics if
you say you can’t say anything except what the government allows. That’s the
danger.”
Sisi’s strict anti-terrorism law is largely an attempt to
maintain order in the face of increasingly routine jihadist attacks and the
assassination of Prosecutor General Hisham Barakat in particular. If the events
immediately following the signing of the law are any indication—peacekeepers
looking to pull out of the Sinai Peninsula, a security building bombed,
and four Palestinians kidnapped—the
law will bring anything but peace.
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