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Al Jazeera files claim for damages against Egypt

By Editor
27 January 2016   |   11:02 pm
AL JAZEERA Media Network has lodged a claim for damages against the Egyptian government, accusing it of harassing journalists and damaging its office and equipment during repeated police raids in the country. A claim was filed with the World Bank’s arbitration body, the International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes (ICSID), last week but formally…

Al-Jazeera

AL JAZEERA Media Network has lodged a claim for damages against the Egyptian government, accusing it of harassing journalists and damaging its office and equipment during repeated police raids in the country.

A claim was filed with the World Bank’s arbitration body, the International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes (ICSID), last week but formally announced by Al Jazeera’s lawyers yesterday.
Egypt is accused by Al Jazeera of systematically and deliberately targeting the network in the aftermath of the January 25 uprising in 2011, which brought down former President Hosni Mubarak.

The case centres on the network’s claim that Egypt violated a 1999 Qatar-Egypt bilateral investment treaty, which “requires that investors be afforded fair and equitable treatment by the governments of both countries”.

The treaty also ensures treatment of Al Jazeera’s staff in a manner consistent with international human rights laws, and respect for their right to freedom of expression.

Three Al Jazeera English journalists were arrested in late 2013. Mohamed Fahmy, Baher Mohamed and Peter Greste were convicted of spreading false news and being members of a terrorist organisation. All three spent more than 400 days in an Egyptian prison.

Al Jazeera first issued a notice of its intent to file a case to Egyptian authorities in April 2014, from which the two sides had six months to resolve the issue according to the treaty.

Speaking yesterday, Saad Djebbar, an international litigation lawyer familiar with the case, said Al Jazeera delayed pursuing the case in order to avoid jeopardising the fate of its journalists put on trial by Egyptian authorities.

The organisation had chosen an arbitration process because of the politicised nature of Egypt’s judiciary, Djebbar said, adding the complaint was filed to highlight treatment of its journalists by the country’s military rulers.

“When you look at the claim, you’ll see that most of it focuses on the treatment of the journalists and freedom of press… This is a vehicle to highlight the detention of journalists and the attacks on Al Jazeera buildings and equipment,” Djebbar said.

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