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Hossam el-Hamalawy

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Hossam el-Hamalawy

Tag: censorship

Tamim press ban case adjourned till January as journalists protest

Posted on 05/12/200804/01/2021 By 3arabawy

From the Daily News Egypt:

Five journalists being tried for violating the press ban on the Suzanne Tamim murder case were present at the South Cairo Misdemeanor Court Dec. 4 to see their case adjourned to Jan. 8.
The journalists, from Al-Masry Al-Youm and Al-Wafd newspapers including their two chief editors were being tried for violating the press ban on the details of the Tamim murder case.
Al-Masry Al-Youm editor Magdy El-Gallad along with reporters Yousri El-Badri and Farouk El-Dessouki had already been taken in for a five-hour interrogation by the Prosecutor General’s office soon after the press ban.
Al-Wafd editor Abbas El-Tarabili and journalist Ibrahim Qaraa also stood trial.
“This was a procedural hearing,” El-Badri told Daily News Egypt, “because we had not been officially been requested to attend the session. Our lawyers wanted to peruse the case files, and were told it would be made available at the court on the day.”
“The postponement was for us to see the case files, so we can prepare the defense. There might be a verdict in the next session if the judge wants to close the case,” he added.
Outside journalists protested when they were not permitted entry into the courtroom unless they had a permit from the head of the court Mahmoud Zaher.
Head of the freedoms committees in the Journalists’ Syndicate Mohammed Abdel-Quddous was also present and as he voiced his objections he was taken inside by security officers.
When he emerged from inside the courthouse he said, “The trial of journalists today tarnishes Egypt’s reputation abroad and shows it as an oppressive and corrupt country to the whole world.”

Mubarak renews media crackdown

Posted on 27/10/200803/01/2021 By 3arabawy

From the AFP:

An Egyptian court on Sunday fined a television agency boss LE 150,000 ($27,000) after his company broadcast images of food rioters tearing down portraits of President Hosni Mubarak in April.
The court fined Nader Gohar, who owns the Cairo News Company, LE 100,000 for operating a broadcast network without the necessary permits and LE 50,000 for operating unlicensed broadcasting equipment, Gohar told AFP.
The case was brought following a complaint by the government-owned Egyptian Radio and Television Union, which owns all broadcast signals in Egypt.
Gohar, who could have faced up to five years in prison after broadcasting images of Mubarak posters being torn down during deadly riots in April, said his equipment had been confiscated, effectively putting him out of business.
“I’m not happy with the sentence. [The judge] didn’t give me a prison sentence because they know it would be a shame for them, so they make me pay money and confiscate the equipment to stop me broadcasting.”
Gohar said the ruling meant he was “almost out of business.”

Egypt’s journalists and bloggers fight for free speech

Posted on 24/10/200829/01/2021 By 3arabawy

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