• 08:27
  • Thursday ,09 September 2010
العربية

Pro-ElBaradei journalist faces criminal trial over minister insult

By-Egypt News

Home News

00:09

Thursday ,09 September 2010

Pro-ElBaradei journalist faces criminal trial over minister insult

 A prominent opposition journalist is to go on trial for allegedly libeling Egypt's foreign minister in a newspaper, a judicial source said on Sunday

Hamdy Qandil could face prison or a fine if found guilty of the charge of "insulting and libeling a public servant or citizen performing their work," the source said.
 
Egypt's Foreign Minister Ahmed Abul Gheit filed a complaint against Qandil alleging that he insulted him in a piece he wrote in the independent daily Shorouk last May.
 
Qandil could not be reached for comment, but the official MENA news agency reported prosecutors as saying that he did not intend to insult the minister. It quoted Qandeel as saying that “Abul Gheit’s statements during the last years were uncalculated.”
 
In his article, Qandil criticized statements made by Abul Gheit, saying that "words usually drop from his (Abul Gheit's) mouth like garbage from a perforated rubbish bag."
 
Qandil, long known for his pan-Arabism sentiments, used to host a number of television shows including several programs on state-controlled television stations.
 
Qandil joined earlier this year ranks with the National Association for Change, a loose opposition coalition headed by former head of UN nuclear watchdog Mohamed ElBaradei. Later, several media outlets quoted Qandil as criticizing ElBaradei’s “short stays in Egypt.”     
 
Media experts have recently voiced concerns over referring a growing number of Egyptian journalists to criminal courts.
 
In June, the Committee to Protect Journalist (CPJ) appealed to Egypt's Minister of Finance Boutros Ghali to drop criminal charges against two journalists from a weekly independent newspaper.
 
Ghali had filed the charges against Wael el-Ibrashy, editor-in-chief of Sawt al-Umma, and Samar el-Dawi, a reporter, whom he accused of inciting the public to reject a new property tax law drafted by the government in 2009.
 
According to the New York-based media watchdog, el-Ibrashy is to be trialed under a penal code article that has been mainly applied to “prosecute armed and militant groups in the past”.