Top Egypt businessman Sawiris testifies at Al-Jazeera retrial

Updated 22 April 2015
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Top Egypt businessman Sawiris testifies at Al-Jazeera retrial

CAIRO: One of Egypt’s wealthiest businessmen, Naguib Sawiris, testified for the defense on Wednesday at the retrial of two Al-Jazeera television journalists, possibly boosting their standing in a case criticized from abroad.
Mohamed Fahmy and Baher Mohamed were sentenced last year to between 7 and 10 years in prison for aiding a “terrorist organization,” a reference to the Muslim Brotherhood which was ousted from power by the army in mid-2013.
Their colleague Peter Greste, an Australian who was sentenced with them, was freed and deported earlier this year. All three denied the charges. In January, a court ordered a retrial, citing procedural flaws.
Fahmy, a naturalized Canadian who gave up his Egyptian citizenship, said outside the court on Wednesday that he and Sawiris, a member of Egypt’s minority Coptic Christian community, had known each other “for a long time.”
Fahmy, Greste and Mohamed covered Egyptian politics, including the rise to power of the Brotherhood after the Arab Spring uprising which left Egypt polarized. In court, Sawiris, an outspoken critic of the Brotherhood, personally vouched for Fahmy, who spent over a year in prison before being freed in February.
“Mohamed Fahmy has no relation to the Muslim Brotherhood organization and he is not a Muslim Brother,” Sawiris said.
The 60-year-old businessman recently told Reuters that Egypt should pay closer attention to improving human rights once the economy picks up, an unusual statement for someone in Egypt’s top elite to make in public.
Sawiris told the court that a distinction should be made between journalists and the network that employ them.
“The correspondents will go out and record the news and then send it to someone else who is responsible for putting that together into the news that is broadcast,” he said.
“The organization, not the correspondent, is responsible for what is broadcast.”


Israel accuses Hamas of violating Gaza truce, says it will respond

Updated 9 sec ago
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Israel accuses Hamas of violating Gaza truce, says it will respond

  • Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu made the claim after a military ​officer was wounded by an explosive device in Rafah
  • Gaza’s health ministry says Israel has killed more than 400 people in the territory since the ceasefire went into effect
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu accused Hamas on Wednesday of violating the Gaza ceasefire agreement after a military ​officer was wounded by an explosive device in Rafah and Israel vowed retaliation.
His office said in a statement that Hamas must fully uphold the October agreement, noting that it envisaged the militant group being removed from power in Gaza ‌as well as demilitarization ‌and deradicalization of ‌the ⁠territory.
“Israel ​will ‌respond accordingly,” the statement added.
The Israeli military earlier said that an explosive device had detonated against a military vehicle in the southern Rafah area of Gaza and that one officer had been lightly injured.
Violence has subsided but ⁠not stopped since the Gaza truce took effect on ‌October 10, and the ‍sides have regularly accused ‍each other of violating the ceasefire. ‍Gaza’s health ministry says Israel has killed more than 400 people in the territory since the ceasefire went into effect.
A 20-point plan issued by ​US President
Donald Trump
in September calls for an initial truce followed by steps toward ⁠a wider peace. It ultimately calls for Hamas to disarm and have no governing role in Gaza and for Israel to pull out of the territory, which remains in ruins after two years of war.
The sides have not fully agreed to everything in it. Hamas has said it will only hand over its arms if ‌a Palestinian state is established.