For more than a year, the three jailed al-Jazeera journalists did their best to prepare for the unsettling possibility that one of them would be released from the Egyptian prison, while the others were forced to stay. However, when that day actually came, journalist Peter Greste struggled to leave behind the men who had become his brothers.
“See you when I see you,” Greste said he told his colleagues, Canadian-Egyptian Mohamed Fahmy and Egyptian Baher Mohammed, just before he left the prison on Sunday after 400 days behind bars in a case widely condemned as a sham by human rights activists.
Greste yesterday returned to Australia, relieved and jubilant, but still grappling with the reality that Fahmy and Mohammed remained in their cells.
Photo: Reuters
“You can imagine after 400 days in prison with these guys, we’re very close and it was very difficult to leave them behind,” Greste, 49, told reporters in Brisbane, flanked by members of his family. “But I’m grateful to be out; I trust that they will follow in due course... It’s going to take some further efforts, but we’ll see them out. And when we do, I’m going to party with them very, very hard indeed.”
The three journalists were arrested in 2013 over their coverage of the violent crackdown on Islamist protests following the military overthrow of former Egyptian president Mohamed Morsi. Egyptian authorities accused them of providing a platform for the Muslim Brotherhood, now declared a terrorist organization, though officials did not provide concrete evidence.
The three were stunned by the judge’s decision to convict them, Greste said. However, as they waited out their sentences, they focused on staying physically and mentally healthy by working out regularly and supporting each other through the darker days. They were not abused, and were treated with respect, he said.
Greste also began pursuing a master’s degree in international relations while in jail, working with materials mailed to him by an Australian university. At no point, he said, did he believe he would have to serve his full seven-year sentence.
“Then as now we were confident of our position, of our innocence,” Greste said. “And we were confident that the process, if it was followed through to its logical conclusion, could only see us free.”
Greste often meditated, letting his mind drift to happier days spent at the beach with his family. When he and his brother Mike arrived in Cyprus, where they spent two days recuperating before returning to Australia, he could not wait to feel the sand between his toes.
Greste said his priority now is ensuring his colleagues’ release.
In response to media inquiries about his future plans he said: “Mum, would you mind closing your ears for the moment?” to his mother, Lois, who laughed and then moaned, “Oh dear, I know what’s coming!”
“I don’t want to give this up; my job up. I’m a correspondent, it’s what I do,’’ Greste said. “How I do it, whether I actually do go ahead with it, I don’t know. That’s the way I feel right now.”
For her part, Lois — who, along with her husband Juris and their sons have spent a year tirelessly fighting for Greste’s release — said she has always believed her children should follow their passions.
“At the same time,” she said, pausing to laugh, “he’s got to know that we are not going to go through this again!”
Meanwhile, the families of Fahmy and Mohammed remained hopeful their loved ones would also be home soon. Relatives of Fahmy, said authorities had demanded he give up his Egyptian citizenship as a condition for his release.
Egyptian President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi issued a decree in November last year granting him the power to deport foreign defendants convicted or accused of crimes.
However, Mohammed, 31, who received the longest sentence in the case — 10 years — has no second citizenship and his family worries that his fate as an Egyptian is less clear.
Married and a father of three, he lived in Cairo before his arrest. He covered the 2011 Libyan uprising before joining al-Jazeera, and his father was at one point the manager of the Muslim Brotherhood’s television channel, named January 25, which was launched after Egypt’s 2011 uprising.
Al-Haqanya legal center Cairo-based lawyer Mohammed Abdelaziz said Mohammed’s case is still pending in Egyptian courts.
“His situation is different because he only has Egyptian citizenship,” Abdelaziz said. “He is now awaiting proceedings with a different court, and his freedom depends on that case being finished.”
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