Close X
Sunday, October 13, 2024
ADVT 
National

Mohamed Fahmy Criticizes Canada For Mistakes That Have Kept Him In Egypt: Report

The Canadian Press, 14 Feb, 2015 01:46 PM
    CAIRO — Canadian journalist Mohamed Fahmy is pulling no punches when it comes to who he blames for the 400 days he's spent in a Cairo prison — and Prime Minister Stephen Harper and former foreign affairs minister John Baird are on his list.
     
    In an interview with the British newspaper The Independent, Fahmy says it was the "geo-political score-settling" among Middle Eastern countries that put him and his two colleagues — Australian Peter Greste and Egyptian Baher Mohamed — behind bars.
     
    But the 40-year-old journalist tells the newspaper that he blames his employer, Al Jazeera English, and Canada — especially Harper and Baird — for failing to win his freedom.
     
    Fahmy says Harper did not speak with his Egyptian counterpart to secure his release — unlike Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott, who he said had intervened on Greste's behalf, speaking to the Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sissi three times.
     
    Asked Thursday in Victoriaville, Que., whether he'd spoken directly to el-Sissi, Harper wouldn't say so directly, but did suggest he'd been in touch with his Egyptian counterpart. "Our government has for some time now has been in contact with Egyptian authorities at all levels, including my level,'' Harper said
     
    Fahmy says he gave up his Egyptian citizenship because he was promised it was "the only way" to leave the country, but he says that didn't happen because of what he termed a "diplomatic error" by Baird.
     
    During a recent visit to Cairo, Fahmy said, Baird had said he wouldn't have to serve the rest of his sentence if he were to be deported to Canada, and the journalist says the statement angered the Egyptian authorities. 
     
    "Egypt is saying Peter and I are to be deported to finish our sentences abroad, there's a lot of face-saving for Egypt. Then Baird goes and says this," The Independent quoted Fahmy as saying.
     
    Asked to respond to the article in the Independent, a source who worked in Baird's office said Egyptian officials have not raised the idea of sending Fahmy home to face similar charges in Canada and that the charges don't exist in Canada.
     
    The source said the former foreign affairs minister had two conversations with the Egyptian foreign minister after Baird left Egypt in January and that both times the Egyptian minister indicated Fahmy's case would be dealt with swiftly.
     
    In his visit to Cairo in January, Baird had said that Fahmy would not be put on trial in Canada if deported from Egypt as a convicted criminal, saying that would not be acceptable.
     
    The Independent story was headlined "Freed Al-Jazeera journalist: Why can’t Canada get me home?" and it said Fahmy "angrily attacked Canada for mistakes which he said have left him trapped in Egypt."
     
    Fahmy said he wants to leave but his name is on a no-fly list at the airport and he needs Canada to get him off that list.
     
    "We will continue to press for his release and we do remain optimistic this case will be resolved," Harper said Thursday.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Give the Gift of Dine Out This Holiday Season

    Give the Gift of Dine Out This Holiday Season
    Taking place January 16 to February 1, Dine Out Vancouver Festival features 17 days of flash-in-the pan events crafted by Vancouver’s top chefs, restaurateurs and food experts. 

    Give the Gift of Dine Out This Holiday Season

    Vancouver Downtown Shooting Suspect Arrested Minutes After Police Issued Warning Of Danger

    Vancouver Downtown Shooting Suspect Arrested Minutes After Police Issued Warning Of Danger
    VANCOUVER — A shooting suspect described by Vancouver police as armed and dangerous has been arrested just an hour after a warning was issued.

    Vancouver Downtown Shooting Suspect Arrested Minutes After Police Issued Warning Of Danger

    Retired B.C. Teacher To Stand Trial On Child-porn Charges In Early 2015

    Retired B.C. Teacher To Stand Trial On Child-porn Charges In Early 2015
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — The trial of a retired teacher facing child-pornography charges will get underway in Kamloops, B.C., early in the new year.

    Retired B.C. Teacher To Stand Trial On Child-porn Charges In Early 2015

    Ontario man arrested in 1970s murders of two B.C. girls

    Ontario man arrested in 1970s murders of two B.C. girls
    VANCOUVER — Shari Greer made a promise to her 11-year-old daughter as she grieved over the girl's grave site that she would never give up the hunt for the killer.

    Ontario man arrested in 1970s murders of two B.C. girls

    Experts revise extinction theory as mastodon bones older than thought

    Experts revise extinction theory as mastodon bones older than thought
    VANCOUVER — Scientists who re-examined the fossils of mastodons that once roamed what is now the Yukon and Alaska have changed their thinking and now believe global cooling probably wiped out the ancient cousin of the elephant.

    Experts revise extinction theory as mastodon bones older than thought

    Digital divide: More doctors now keeping patient records electronically: survey

    Digital divide: More doctors now keeping patient records electronically: survey
    TORONTO — Long reliant on paper-based patient files, the majority of Canadian doctors have now moved firmly into the 21st century, using electronic medical records and other forms of information technology to run their practices, a survey has found.

    Digital divide: More doctors now keeping patient records electronically: survey