New York, May 13, 2005Authorities in Cairo today detained
six Al-Jazeera employees and two freelance technicians covering a national
gathering of judges, a station editor told the Committee to Protect
Journalists.
Hussein Abdel Ghani, Al-Jazeera's bureau chief in Cairo, said four Al-Jazeera
staffers and the two technicians were preparing for a live transmission
outside the Judges Club general assembly in downtown Cairo at about
11 a.m. when security forces took them into custody.
Abdel Ghani said that he and two Al-Jazeera staffers, including chief
Cairo correspondent Samir Omar, went to the scene to get more information.
Security agents forced Omar and the other staffer into a taxicab, he
said. Omar later called by mobile phone to say that he and his colleague
were being taken to the headquarters of State Security Investigation,
Abdel Ghani said.
Abdel Ghani said security forces did not give a reason for the detentions.
The meeting is being closely monitored because several judges have made
bold demands seeking full judicial control over Egypt's September presidential
elections and a law asserting judicial independence. Near the meeting
site, protesters who back President Hosni Mubarak faced off against
members of the Kifaya (Enough) movement, which opposes a fifth term
for Mubarak
"We are deeply troubled by these detentions," CPJ Executive Director
Ann Cooper said. "Detaining journalists does not square with the Egyptian
government's proclamations about political reform. These journalists
should be released immediately."
The other journalists detained were identified as Mohamed Ezzedin, Yasser
Selime, Nasri Youssef, Ahmed Anwar, Raymon Aziz, Moataz Sawi, and Mahmoud
Meligy.
