Egypt trials 'obscene': Pillay

UN human rights chief Navi Pillay says the charges against Australian Peter Greste and two other Al Jazeera journalists were "far too broad and vague".

UN human rights chief Navi Pillay has slammed the jailing of Australian Peter Greste and two other Al Jazeera journalists in Egypt following the death sentences handed to at least 220 Muslim Brotherhood members and supporters.

The UN High Commissioner for Human Rights said she was "shocked and alarmed" by the sentencing on Monday of Greste and his colleagues, and 11 others punished in absentia with up to a decade in prison.

The verdicts, along with the confirmation on Saturday by an Egyptian court of the death penalty for 183 people linked to the Muslim Brotherhood, are the latest in a line of court cases "rife with procedural irregularities and in breach with international human rights law", Pillay said.

The journalists had been accused of aiding the blacklisted Brotherhood and tarnishing Egypt's reputation after the ouster of Islamist president Mohamed Morsi by "spreading false news".

Such charges are "far too broad and vague," Pillay said, insisting they "reinforce the belief that the real target is freedom of expression".

"It is not a crime to carry a camera," she said, adding: "It is not a crime to criticise the authorities or to interview people who hold unpopular views."

Pillay urged the authorities to "promptly release" all journalists and media employees jailed for doing their job.

She also voiced alarm that for journalists, bloggers and activists in Egypt, "harassment, detention and prosecution ... as well as violent attacks by unidentified assailants, have become commonplace."

The charges against the journalists were based on Egypt's anti-terrorism law, also used to bring convictions in two mass trials of more than 1100 people in Minya earlier this year, resulting in more than 220 death sentences.

The UN rights chief, a former international judge, called on Egypt's government to review the laws used as a basis for the "highly contentious trials" and urged the judiciary to review the cases.

"There is a risk that miscarriage of justice is becoming the norm in Egypt," she said.

Her call follows that of the White House, which on Monday urged Egypt's President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi to pardon the Al Jazeera trio.


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