Editor accused of Morsi-linked espionage

Egyptian Interior Minister Mohamed Ibrahim speaks to the press. File picture: Mohamed El-Shahed

Egyptian Interior Minister Mohamed Ibrahim speaks to the press. File picture: Mohamed El-Shahed

Published Mar 31, 2014

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Cairo -

An Egyptian minister on Sunday accused an editor of Al Jazeera television of helping to leak classified intelligence documents in an espionage case involving deposed president Mohamed Morsi.

The accusation came a day before a trial of three journalists with the Doha-based broadcaster resumes in Cairo on charges of spreading false news and supporting Morsi's Muslim Brotherhood.

Interior Minister Mohamed Ibrahim charged that Amin El-Serafi, secretary to Morsi, leaked the intelligence documents to Ibrahim Mohamed Hilal, who he said was Al Jazeera's news editor and also a member of the Muslim Brotherhood.

Hilal allegedly facilitated a meeting between a Palestinian go-between, a Qatari official and an operative with an unspecified intelligence agency.

A source in Al Jazeera dismissed Ibrahim's accusation.

“No one is going to take this seriously,” the source told AFP on condition of anonymity.

“Instead of picking up yet another silly conspiracy theory, the Egyptian authorities should be concentrating on releasing our journalists whom they have been holding unjustly for months.”

Ibrahim's accusation comes against the backdrop of strained ties between Cairo and Doha since the ouster of Morsi last July. Gas-rich Qatar was a close ally of Morsi's government and the Brotherhood.

Egypt's military-installed authorities accuse Qatar of backing the Brotherhood, including through its Al Jazeera network.

The authorities shut down the Egyptian channel of the network on August 14 during a police crackdown on supporters of Morsi.

Amnesty International said at least 1 400 people have been killed in the crackdown, mostly Islamist supporters of Morsi.

Morsi himself has been put on trial, and his Muslim Brotherhood designated a “terrorist organisation”.

In his espionage trial, prosecutors accuse Morsi and 35 others, including Brotherhood leaders, of conspiring with foreign powers, Palestinian militant movement Hamas and Shi'a Iran to destabilise Egypt.

They face the death penalty.

The trial is currently suspended after defence lawyers requested that new judges be appointed in the case. An appeals court is to examine their request on April 9. - Sapa-AFP

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