AL JAZEERA JOURNALISTS RELEASED AWAY FROM JAIL IN CAIRO.
SOURCE, CNN.
- Al Jazeera applauds the two journalists' release but calls for their full exoneration
- The journalists face retrial on charges accusing them of supporting the Muslim Brotherhood
Cairo (CNN)Two
 Al Jazeera journalists who'd been imprisoned in Egypt for more than a 
year were released Thursday, with a court telling them they can await 
retrial away from jail in a case that has outraged journalists and 
activists around the globe.
An 
Egyptian court Thursday ordered journalists Mohamed Fahmy and Baher 
Mohamed freed ahead of their retrial on charges accusing them of 
supporting the banned Muslim Brotherhood.
Their
 release comes less than two weeks after Al Jazeera correspondent Peter 
Greste, a colleague who'd been convicted with them, was released and 
deported to his native Australia.
Fahmy,
 an Egyptian-Canadian and a former CNN producer, was released on a bail 
of 250,000 Egyptian pounds ($32,750). Mohamed, an Egyptian citizen, was 
not required to post bail but is barred from leaving the country ahead 
of the retrial.
The case is scheduled to resume on February 23.
Fahmy,
 who says he recently surrendered his Egyptian citizenship under 
coercion to facilitate his ultimate release, addressed the court 
Thursday, reasserting his innocence and brandishing an Egyptian flag.
Al Jazeera applauded the two journalists' release but called for their full exoneration.
"Bail
 is a small step in the right direction, and allows Baher and Mohamed to
 spend time with their families after 411 days apart," an Al Jazeera 
spokesman said. "The focus, though, is still on the court reaching the 
correct verdict at the next hearing by dismissing this absurd case and 
releasing both these fine journalists unconditionally."
Fahmy,
 Mohamed and Greste were arrested in Egypt in December 2013, accused of 
supporting the Muslim Brotherhood and broadcasting footage  -- including
 video of clashes between police and protesters -- that portrayed the 
regime falsely with the intention of bringing it down.
The journalists have said they were just doing their jobs, covering all sides of stories in Egypt.
All
 three were convicted last year on charges that included conspiring with
 the Brotherhood, spreading false news and endangering national 
security, but they have maintained their innocence. Greste and Fahmy 
were sentenced to seven years in prison and Mohamed to 10 years.
The
 three appealed their convictions, and in January their attorneys 
announced that Egypt's highest court had granted them a retrial.
Amnesty
 International and other observers have long held that Greste, Fahmy and
 Mohamed were pawns in a geopolitical dispute between Egypt and Qatar, 
the small Middle Eastern country that finances Al Jazeera.
Qatar has long been perceived as a supporter of the Muslim Brotherhood.
At the time of their arrest, Egypt was mired in political turmoil surrounding the coup of President Mohamed Morsy
 in his Muslim Brotherhood-backed government. After Morsy's ouster, the 
military, which had staged the coup, declared the longstanding political
 party a terrorist organization.
Fahmy laments giving up Egyptian citizenship
The
 deportation of Greste and Thursday's release of Fahmy and Baher Mohamed
 follow a recent improvement in Egyptian-Qatari relations.
In
 December, Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi met with a Qatari 
envoy. Days after that, Qatar shut down an Egypt-based Al-Jazeera 
affiliate, Mubasher Masr, which Cairo accused of supporting the Muslim 
Brotherhood. 
Greste, Fahmy and Mohamed didn't work for that affiliate, but accusations against the channel were featured in their trial.
Shortly after Mubasher Masr closed, the journalists' retrial was announced.
Greste
 was released as part of a new Egyptian law allowing the President to 
deport defendants. Defense lawyers also asked Egypt to deport Fahmy.
In
 court Thursday, Fahmy said that an Egyptian official told him that he'd
 have to renounce his Egyptian citizenship first -- something that Fahmy
 said he'd initially rejected.
"Then I 
got a call from a leading official in the country, and they told me: 
'Mohamed, nationality is not a piece of paper, but it is in the heart. 
And you can visit Egypt as a tourist and apply for the citizenship 
again.' "
Fahmy said he surrendered his
 Egyptian citizenship reluctantly, saying it was difficult for him in 
part because his family has long had proud ties to the military.
He again denied having any connection with the Muslim brotherhood.
"Our reports were balanced, and had no fabrication or violation," he said.
Earlier
 this month, Fahmy's family appealed for his release in part on grounds 
of his health, saying in a statement published by an Egyptian news 
outlet that he was ill with hepatitis C and had an injured shoulder.
Fahmy
 injured his shoulder before his arrest and has complained about not 
getting proper treatment for the injury while in prison.  
Criticizing their detentions
Greste
 described in a January 2014 letter how he and his colleagues were 
detained, saying that Interior Ministry officials burst into a hotel 
room that he and producer Fahmy were using. Officials rushed Mohamed's 
home, he said. 
Egypt is the sixth 
leading jailer of journalists in the world, according to a tally the 
nonpartisan Committee to Protect Journalists conducted in December.
The
 jailing and sentencing of the Al Jazeera journalists generated outrage 
from colleagues and activists around the world. A campaign led by Al 
Jazeera declared that "Journalism is not a crime."
Many
 tweeted under the hashtag #freeajstaff and journalists, including 
Christiane Amanpour, CNN's chief international correspondent, who held 
up a sign with the campaign on her show.
 
 
 
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