You are here
Egypt extends detention of mother held for ‘false news’
By AFP - Jan 17,2019 - Last updated at Jan 17,2019
CAIRO — An Egyptian court on Thursday extended the detention of a woman accused of spreading false news by telling the BBC her daughter had been forcibly disappeared, a judicial source said.
Mona Mahmud Mohammad, also known as Umm Zubeida, was ordered to remain in jail for 45 days after prosecutors appealed a ruling on Tuesday to release her, the source added.
Mohammad has been in custody since March 2018 over accusations that she belonged to a "terrorist group" and spread false news.
She was featured in a BBC report aired in February last year saying her daughter had been the victim of a forced disappearance.
The report, which stirred a strong backlash from the government, also detailed other allegations of people being jailed, tortured or disappeared in Egypt.
Mohammad's daughter later appeared on a local television show saying she had run away from her mother, married and had a child.
Egypt's State Information Service, which regulates foreign media, had called on the British broadcaster to retract its report or face a government boycott.
The BBC responded that it stood by "the integrity of our reporting teams".
Rights groups have repeatedly accused Egyptian authorities of carrying out a widespread crackdown on dissent, but the government denies the allegations.
Related Articles
CAIRO — The head of Egypt’s press syndicate and two colleagues were in custody Monday after being charged with harbouring journalists and pu
AMMAN — Jordan has not and shall not impose forced displacement, an informed source said.The statement came in light of recent allegations t
Reading the Agence France-Presse article “Dozens of foreign diplomats seek asylum in Canada — media” (The Jordan Times, June 29, 2014) I was astonished by the reference to my country in a statement saying that “16 diplomats from countries such as Syria, Iraq, Greece, Honduras and even an American embassy staffer”, supposedly “requested asylum in Canada, motivated by the hope of better life” or because “they are aware of rights abuses in their homeland that they can no longer support”.