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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Award-winning Egyptian photojournalist freed from jail

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CAIRO: Award-winning Egyptian photojournalist Mahmoud Abu Zeid was released on Monday after spending nearly six years in prison following his arrest while covering a bloody crackdown on protests.


The photographer, widely known as Shawkan, faces five years of strict supervision and will be required to spend every night sleeping at his local police station, but he vowed to resume his work.


Last year Shawkan received Unesco’s World Freedom Prize for his “courage, resistance and commitment to freedom of expression,” dismaying the Egyptian authorities who accused him of “terrorist and criminal acts”.


Speaking at his home in Giza, he said the first moments of his release felt “as if I was flying.”


Imprisonment “was an experience that I can never forget,” the 31-year-old said.


“It’s bitter but it lets one look at life from a different perspective, a new perspective that one can’t see except from this place,” he said.


He is determined to return to his career despite the restrictions placed on him, saying: “I will continue my work as a photojournalist in Egypt.”


His mother fears his journalism will expose him to more risk.


“As a mother I always urge him to stay out of trouble... but he always says journalism is in my blood,” said 61-year-old Reda Mahrous.


The Committee to Protect Journalists called on the Egyptian authorities “to end their shameful treatment of this photojournalist by removing any conditions to his release”.


Shawkan said he would take legal steps to try to end the restrictions.


He was detained in August 2013 while covering clashes between security forces and supporters of ousted president Mohamed Mursi that turned into a bloodbath in which hundreds of demonstrators died.


“We were arrested in the first 30-40 minutes (after the clashes started). We were stripped of our equipment,” he said.


“The others were released two hours later... I left my home to take photos and I didn’t return for five and half years.”


Shawkan was put on trial along with 739 defendants, most of them charged with killing police and vandalising property.


It was one of the largest mass trials since the 2011 uprising that toppled veteran president Hosni Mubarak.


In September an Egyptian court upheld death sentences against 75 defendants and gave Shawkan a five-year jail term — which covered the time he had already served — but he remained in jail awaiting his release.


Shawkan was accused of “murder and membership of a terrorist organisation” — charges that can carry the death penalty — sparking condemnation from international rights groups which demanded his release. — AFP


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