A Farce in Egypt

The judge “bellowed” the verdict against the three journalists today, according to reports. He announced that the three were found guilty and sentenced them to three years in jail. Mohamed Fahmy, Baher Mohamed, and Peter Greste already spent more than 400 days in prison in Egypt after being arrested for “spreading false news” while working for al-Jazeera English.

The three have already been convicted, retried, acquitted, retried again. Greste, an Australian, was deported last year.

Judge Hassan Farid declared today that the court had determined that the defendants are not journalists as they are not members of Egypt’s “Journalists Syndicate,” nor had they registered with a national agency that grants foreign reporters permits to work in the country. Thus, since they are not officially journalists, they were working against the government. They had been convicted in a first trial in 2014, sentenced to seven years in prison each, retried, acquitted, retried again, and convicted again today. Another retrial is being worked on but the earliest it can start is 2016.
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In-Flight Reading

I never looked for his book online or in a bookstore. He showed it to me, or he showed me a galley proof of it. And now, a decade later, I do not remember his name or much about the book.

We were on a plane, and 98% of my personal air travel history dates from the years 2000 to 2004, when I moved from upstate New York to Cedar Rapids, Iowa, and twice a year I returned home for holiday visits. The typical route was Eastern Iowa Airport to Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Airport to Stewart International Airport (or sometimes Logan in Boston), because there are no direct flights between Iowa and anyplace else I have ever lived. The book author was across the aisle from me.
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A Shooting in Virginia

Vulnerable. Reporters are vulnerable. The camera lens and a notepad do not stop bullets. It was the first lesson I learned, inadvertently of course, when I started to work as a newspaper reporter, two decades ago.

By now, the entire country knows what happened today in southern Virginia. In an on-air moment that reads like the script treatment for a prime-time television crime show, a disgruntled former on-air personality barged into live coverage of a minor news story (an anniversary somewhere, a chamber of commerce-type story) that was being broadcast on the local station’s morning news show and shot and killed the on-air reporter and her cameraman and injured the woman being interviewed. From his position on the ground, the fallen cameraman turned his camera to face the shooter, and the image he broadcast made the shooter’s face known; it may be that the mortally injured cameraman’s last living act was one more report from the scene. Morning show viewers saw it live.

In the studio, the broadcast news staff of WDBJ7, a CBS affiliate, watched powerlessly and yet picked up the story, which now had three victims. In shock, they carried on. I watched for about an hour at noon and everyone there was doing amazing work. There will be a news conference at 2:00 p.m.

The reporter was named Alison Parker; she was 24 years old and had recently gotten engaged to be married to another young WDBJ reporter. The cameraman, Adam Ward, was 27. He was engaged to be married as well and today was to be his last day at WDBJ; his fiancee was in the production studio doing her job when she watched her boyfriend get shot.

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