In Egypt, military harasses critical journalists

New York, June 2, 2011The Committee to Protect Journalists today called on Egypt’s ruling Supreme Council of the Armed Forces (SCAF) to stop its harassment of journalists who report critically on the military. Officers and military prosecutors have censored, harassed, or otherwise intimidated numerous critical journalists since February, and particularly in recent weeks.

“The military, and particularly the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces continues to employ censorship, intimidation, and politicized legal proceedings to cow critical journalists into silence,” said CPJ Middle East and North Africa Program Coordinator Mohamed Abdel Dayem. “The military asserts that it is the guardian of the revolution; it that’s so, it should encourage, not repress, freedom of expression.” 

Below are some recent cases:

In a March 22 letter, the Morale Affairs Directorate of the Egyptian military demanded that editors of Egyptian publications not “publish any (topics, news, statements, complaints, advertisements, pictures) pertaining to the Armed Forces or to commanders of the Armed Forces without first consulting with the Morale Affairs Directorate and the Directorate of Military Intelligence and Information Gathering, as they are the authorities specialized in reviewing such issues, [in an effort to] ensure the security and safety of the homeland.” CPJ said in April that the letter amounts to censorship.

The military’s letter came shortly before yet another violation of press freedom in Egypt. On April 10, a military court in Cairo sentenced blogger Maikel Nabil Sanad to three years in prison for “insulting the military” after a deeply flawed trial. Sanad was arrested in March after writing an article criticizing the military’s decision-making process and a lack of transparency.

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