30 Jun 2014

Petition demands journalists' release

9:31 pm on 30 June 2014

A delegation of senior Australian journalists has delivered a statement to the Egyptian consulate in Sydney calling for the immediate release of jailed reporter Peter Greste and his Al Jazeera colleagues.

Australian Peter Greste, Canadian-Egyptian national Mohamed Fahmy - the bureau chief of Al Jazeera English - and Egyptian producer Baher Mohamed were sentenced on 24 June to seven years in prison. Baher Mohamed was given an extra three years for possessing a single bullet.

The men had been found guilty of spreading false news and supporting the blacklisted Muslim Brotherhood. They had all denied the charges.

Senior journalists delivered a joint statement signed by 100 global media and human rights advocacy organisations to the consulate in Sydney on Monday.

Senior journalists delivered a joint statement signed by 100 global media and human rights advocacy organisations to the consulate in Sydney on Monday. Photo: AAP

Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi said last week that the independence of the judiciary must be respected and he would not interfere with the verdicts despite condemnation from Western leaders.

Egyptian Vice-Consul Ahmed Farid was handed the campaign letter on Monday, signed by more than 100 news organisations and non-government organisations around the world, as well as petitions with more than 150,000 signatures, the ABC reports.

Petitions by Amnesty International Australia and Change.org were also presented. Combined, the petitions were signed by 153,696 people.

The letter was organised by the Media, Entertainment and Arts Alliance in partnership with the International Freedom of Expression Exchange, the International Federation of Journalists Asia-Pacific, Arabic Network for Human Rights Information, Association for Freedom of Thought and Expressionand Canadian Journalists for Free Expression.

It is being presented at several Egyptian diplomatic missions around the world on Monday.

The Muslim Brotherhood was banned and declared a terrorist group after the army deposed elected Islamist president Mohamed Morsi in July following mass protests against his rule. The Brotherhood says it is a peaceful organisation.