Saturday, June 1, 2024
ADVT 
National

Guarded optimism over possible pardon for Canadian journalist in Cairo

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 23 Jan, 2015 02:22 PM

    Mohamed Fahmy and his family are cautiously optimistic that the imprisoned Egyptian-Canadian journalist could be among prisoners expected to be pardoned by Egypt's president this weekend.

    Sunday marks the anniversary of the Jan. 25, 2011 uprising in Egypt that ousted longtime autocrat Hosni Mubarak. The country's president is expected to issue pardons to a host of prisoners to commemorate the day.

    "We're not very clear how it's going to be done but we're very hopeful that the president might take this as a chance to squeeze my brother in," Fahmy's brother, Adel Fahmy, told The Canadian Press. "We're containing our expectations."

    Mohamed Fahmy and his colleagues — Australian Peter Greste and Egyptian Baher Mohamed — were arrested on Dec. 29, 2013 while working for satellite news broadcaster Al Jazeera English. After a trial on terror-related charges which was denounced as a sham, Fahmy and Greste were sentenced to seven years in prison, while Mohamed was sentenced to 10 years.

    An appeal earlier this month has since led to a retrial being ordered. Egypt's president has also announced a new decree that gives him the power to deport foreigners convicted or accused of crimes — an avenue which would only apply to Fahmy and Greste.

    The prospect of pardon, however, has always been an option which could result in the release of all three journalists.

    Egyptian President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi said in a recent interview that the measure would be "examined" in the case if it was "appropriate for Egyptian national security."

    A pardon would also come on the heels of a visit to Egypt by federal Foreign Affairs Minister John Baird, who raised Fahmy's case with his Egyptian counterpart and said Canada hopes for a resolution on the matter "sooner rather than later.''

    The situation has left Fahmy and his family hopeful, but simultaneously bracing for yet another disappointment.

    "My brother is trying to contain himself because there have been too many ups and downs," Fahmy's brother said.

    "We felt like this during the verdict, during the appeal, we keep getting our hopes high and when it doesn't work our way it's very disappointing. It really has an effect on us, psychologically."

    Buoying their hopes is the fact that the names of Fahmy and his colleagues are on a list of prisoners submitted to the Egyptian government by non-governmental organizations for pardon consideration, Fahmy's brother said.

    But a possible roadblock is the fact that Egypt's interior ministry said the more than 500 prisoners expected to receive a pardon have to have completed half their sentence — a requirement that wouldn't be fulfilled by Fahmy and his colleagues, his family noted.

    "It's very confusing," Fahmy's brother said. "When you want a final answer yes or no, you never get it. You just get diplomatic statements like 'it's going to be any time soon, final stages, it's a matter of days before Mohamed is gone.'"

    The journalists' imprisonment is widely seen as linked to a conflict between Egypt and Qatar, which funds the Doha-based Al Jazeera network and was a strong backer of former Islamist president Mohammed Morsi and his government.

    Egypt has accused Al Jazeera of serving as an Islamist mouthpiece amid a crackdown on Morsi's now banned Muslim Brotherhood group — an allegation the broadcaster denies.

    Recent thawing in relations between Qatar and Egypt, however, has raised expectations of a resolution in the case of Fahmy and his colleagues.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    RCMP charge three people with killing child on Manitoba reserve

    RCMP charge three people with killing child on Manitoba reserve
    WINNIPEG — The mother, father and stepsister have been charged in the violent death of a 21-month-old girl on a reserve north of Winnipeg.

    RCMP charge three people with killing child on Manitoba reserve

    B.C. Man, 26, Sentenced For Killing Brother In Alcohol-Fuelled Stabbing

    B.C. Man, 26, Sentenced For Killing Brother In Alcohol-Fuelled Stabbing
    Kyle Louie was sentenced Thursday after earlier pleading guilty to manslaughter in the death of his 21-year-old brother, Reece Louie, on Feb. 19, 2011.

    B.C. Man, 26, Sentenced For Killing Brother In Alcohol-Fuelled Stabbing

    Premier Christy Clark Tells Truck Loggers Low International Oil Prices Good For B.C.

    Premier Christy Clark Tells Truck Loggers Low International Oil Prices Good For B.C.
    VICTORIA — Premier Christy Clark says the low price of oil is an opportunity for British Columbia to bolster its needed pool of skilled workers.  

    Premier Christy Clark Tells Truck Loggers Low International Oil Prices Good For B.C.

    One Senior Arrested At B.C. Grow-Op Sentenced While Another Awaits Fate

    One Senior Arrested At B.C. Grow-Op Sentenced While Another Awaits Fate
    One of two seniors arrested at a marijuana grow-op north of Kamloops, B.C., has been handed a six-month conditional sentence while another faces the prospect of jail time.

    One Senior Arrested At B.C. Grow-Op Sentenced While Another Awaits Fate

    $200 turkey: Saskatchewan group helps with food costs in North

    $200 turkey: Saskatchewan group helps with food costs in North
    SASKATOON — A Saskatchewan group is looking to help families in Nunavut who are paying $6 for a can of soup and $200 for a turkey.

    $200 turkey: Saskatchewan group helps with food costs in North

    B.C. Man To Be Sentenced Today For Killing Brother In Alcohol-fuelled Stabbing

    B.C. Man To Be Sentenced Today For Killing Brother In Alcohol-fuelled Stabbing
    Kyle Louie earlier pleaded guilty to manslaughter in the alcohol-fuelled stabbing death of his 21-year-old brother, Reece Louie, near Oliver, B.C., on Feb. 19, 2011.

    B.C. Man To Be Sentenced Today For Killing Brother In Alcohol-fuelled Stabbing