AFP
Cairo



An Egyptian court yesterday postponed for a second time its verdict in the retrial of three Al Jazeera journalists, rescheduling it to August 29 in a move that sparked widespread criticism.
The court had already put off its much anticipated verdict last Thursday because the presiding judge Hassan Farid was reportedly ill.
Another judge yesterday said the verdict was again delayed because other defendants in the trial could not be brought to the court from their cells.
Australian Peter Greste, Canadian Mohamed Fahmy and Egyptian Baher Mohamed were jailed last year for “spreading false news” in support of the blacklisted Muslim Brotherhood during coverage of the turmoil after the army ousted Islamist president Mohamed Mursi in 2013.
Fahmy and Greste received seven-year prison terms in the original trial, while producer Mohamed was jailed for 10 years.
While Greste has since been deported, Fahmy, Baher and several other defendants were released on bail at the start of the retrial. But at least three other defendants have been jailed in separate cases.
“Verdict postponed until August 29th. The audacity & continuous disrespect to our rights is unprecedented!” Fahmy tweeted after yesterday’s postponement.
Defence lawyer Shaaban Said said there was no political reason for postponing the verdict.
“The (presiding) judge is ill and he cannot come. Legally the verdict cannot be delivered by a new judge,” he said.
Al Jazeera expressed frustration at the delay.
“It’s a long-running saga, it just seems to keep going on and on and on,” Giles Trendle, Al Jazeera English managing director said. The three all worked for the English channel.
“We are exasperated, frustrated. We just want justice to be done and justice keeps getting delayed. Justice delayed is not justice done.”
Producer Mohamed said the postponement was yet another insult to the three.
“It’s really annoying that my life is still on hold... It will be another month of suffering,” he told reporters.
“I fear a guilty verdict.”
The case has deeply embarrassed President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, who has said he wishes the reporters had never gone on trial.
“If the judges fail to acquit, President Sisi must promptly intervene to rectify this injustice,” Fahmy’s lawyer Amal Clooney said in a statement yesterday.
“He rejected calls to intervene while the retrial was pending, but it will be over when the verdict is announced.”
Paris-based media watchdog Reporters Without Borders also criticised the delay.
“This latest of many postponements just increases the tension surrounding the Al Jazeera trial and prolongs the agony for the station’s three journalists,” it said.
“It also defies the entire world, which is awaiting the outcome of the trial with such interest.”
A guilty verdict may further embarrass the government as it resumes close ties with Washington after a diplomatic rift in 2013.
On Sunday, US Secretary of State John Kerry and his Egyptian counterpart Sameh Shoukry launched strategic talks in Cairo to repair ties.

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