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Egypt court hears al-Jazeera trio Greste, Fahmy and Mohamed appeal | |
(about 2 hours later) | |
Egypt's highest court has begun hearing an appeal by three al-Jazeera journalists against their convictions for spreading false news. | |
Peter Greste, Mohamed Fahmy and Baher Mohamed were sentenced in June to between seven and 10 years in prison. | |
The trio have now spent a year in jail since they were first arrested in December 2013. | The trio have now spent a year in jail since they were first arrested in December 2013. |
The journalists deny collaborating with the banned Muslim Brotherhood and say they were simply reporting the news. | The journalists deny collaborating with the banned Muslim Brotherhood and say they were simply reporting the news. |
They were accused of aiding the banned organisation after the overthrow of President Mohammed Morsi by the military in 2013. | They were accused of aiding the banned organisation after the overthrow of President Mohammed Morsi by the military in 2013. |
The court session began at 09:00 local time (07:00 GMT). | |
Journalists were not allowed into the court to cover proceedings, and none of the defendants appeared to be present. | |
Thaw in relations | |
Mr Fahmy's lawyer Negad al-Borai told journalists he was confident that a retrial would be ordered and that the defendants would get bail. | |
"The court has the right to release them today," he said, quoted by AP news agency. | |
Previously he had said that all outcomes were possible, including an acquittal or the appeal being thrown out. | |
Mr Fahmy's brother Adel also said there was a possibility of bail. | |
Australian Foreign Minister Julie Bishop on Monday played down hopes of a release, pointing out that there had been mixed signals from the Egyptian authorities. | Australian Foreign Minister Julie Bishop on Monday played down hopes of a release, pointing out that there had been mixed signals from the Egyptian authorities. |
The BBC's Orla Guerin in Cairo says that the case has been hugely damaging for Egypt and there are strong indications that the authorities want to bring it to a close. | The BBC's Orla Guerin in Cairo says that the case has been hugely damaging for Egypt and there are strong indications that the authorities want to bring it to a close. |
A recent thaw in relations between Cairo and Qatar - which owns the TV channel - has heightened expectations, our correspondent says, and there is a growing belief here that the journalists will eventually be freed even if the time frame is uncertain. | A recent thaw in relations between Cairo and Qatar - which owns the TV channel - has heightened expectations, our correspondent says, and there is a growing belief here that the journalists will eventually be freed even if the time frame is uncertain. |
If their appeal is rejected the trio could be pardoned by President Abdul Fattah al-Sisi. | If their appeal is rejected the trio could be pardoned by President Abdul Fattah al-Sisi. |
Alternatively he could deport the two foreign nationals - Australian Peter Greste, who is a former BBC correspondent, and his producer colleague Mohammed Fahmy who holds Egyptian and Canadian citizenship. | |
President Sisi has said in the past he wished the journalists had been deported rather than being put on trial. | President Sisi has said in the past he wished the journalists had been deported rather than being put on trial. |
Relatives say they are hopeful but cautious. | Relatives say they are hopeful but cautious. |
Peter Greste's father Juris said they would not be certain of anything until they were in a plane taking their son back home. | |
The court is to examine whether the proper legal procedures were followed in the case of the journalists and four Egyptian students who were convicted alongside them. |
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