[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 33 (Thursday, February 27, 2014)]
[House]
[Pages H2006-H2007]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
PRESS FREEDOM DAY
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Georgia (Mr. Johnson) for 5 minutes.
Mr. JOHNSON of Georgia. Mr. Speaker, I rise today to call attention
to the continued imprisonment of journalists in Egypt, and to
restrictions on press freedoms worldwide.
Al Jazeera, the news network, has called today, Thursday, February
27, Press Freedom Day. Reporters in more than 30 cities around the
world, including in Washington, D.C., and San Francisco, are holding
vigils to remember all the journalists currently at risk from
governments that restrict the most valuable of international rights:
the right to a free press and to freedom of speech.
The military-led government of Egypt has engaged in wholesale
repression of the media, especially outlets thought to be sympathetic
to the Muslim Brotherhood, since overthrowing President Mohamed Morsi
in June 2013.
{time} 1030
This repression culminated with the arrest of three Al Jazeera
employees on December 29, 2013. On that day, Egyptian authorities
arrested three employees of Al Jazeera and accused them of ``spreading
lies harmful to State security and joining a terrorist group.''
Another 20 journalists were prosecuted this year for ``airing false
news,'' among other apparently meritless charges.
Today, four Al Jazeera reporters are currently being detained in
Egypt in the Tora Prison compound for their reporting from Egypt. They
are charged with being members of the organizations on which they were
reporting, a charge that Al Jazeera and other international media
organizations and press protection groups have rejected.
Peter Greste, Al Jazeera English's Nairobi-based correspondent;
Mohammed Fahmy, their senior producer in Egypt; and Baher Mohamed,
their producer in Egypt, are all being held in one small cell in Egypt
at that prison under difficult and, to put it gently, Spartan
conditions.
They are allowed out of their cell for only 1 hour a day, and they
have been detained since December 29. They had been separated, but I
would thank the Egyptian authorities for at least bringing them
together, so they can at least lean on each other for support.
[[Page H2007]]
Abdullah al-Shami, the Al Jazeera Arabic correspondent, has been held
since August of 2013 and has been on a hunger strike, protesting his
detention since January. Their families in Australia, Canada, and Egypt
are working tirelessly for their freedom.
I can empathize with the fear and concern their families face each
day, worrying about the physical and mental health of their loved ones.
Locking up reporters has never stopped the world from finding out
what is going on in a country, particularly in this modern world.
Egypt is a proud nation with a proud history and has been a longtime
ally of the United States of America. The Egyptian people, regardless
of which government, party, or individuals they support, have made it
clear: their choice is one of democracy and freedom.
For those goals to be achieved, freedom of the press and freedom of
speech must be respected and promoted. I encourage the Egyptian
Government and the Egyptian judiciary to immediately release these four
journalists, as well as all other journalists currently detained, and
to allow all members of the news media to operate in an unrestricted
environment that is free from harassment, censorship, and arbitrary
arrest and detention.
As White House spokesman Jay Carney has said:
The restrictions on freedom of expression in Egypt are a
concern, and that includes the targeting of Egyptian and
foreign journalists and academics simply for expressing their
views.
Earlier this month, I sent a letter signed by 15 Members of the
Congress, urging the Secretary of State to take immediate action to
help secure the release of these journalists in Egypt; and as Egypt
struggles to find its identity, it is important for the international
community to remind the Egyptian leadership--and all world leaders--of
the need for a free press.
The imprisonment and prosecution of journalists sends a clear and
ongoing message of harassment and intimidation to all journalists in
Egypt. Free those journalists. A free society requires a free press.
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