Al Jazeera Journalist Sentenced To Seven Years

Three Al Jazeera journalists were sentenced to seven years in jail by an Egyptian judge on Monday for aiding a "terrorist organisation", drawing criticism from Western governments who said the verdict undermined freedom of expression, according to The Associated Press.

The three, who all denied the charge of working with the now banned Muslim Brotherhood, included Australian Peter Greste and Canadian-Egyptian national Mohamed Fahmy, Cairo bureau chief of Al Jazeera English, the AP reported.

The third defendant, Egyptian producer Baher Mohamed, was given an extra three years for possessing a single bullet at the hearing attended by Western diplomats, some of whose governments summoned Egypt's ambassadors over the case, according to the AP.

The men have been held at Egypt's notorious Tora Prison for six months, with the case becoming a rallying point for rights groups and news organizations around the world, the AP reported.

They were detained in late December and charged with helping "a terrorist group" by broadcasting lies that harmed national security and supplying money, equipment and information to a group of Egyptians, according to the AP. The Brotherhood was banned and declared a terrorist group after the army deposed elected Islamist president Mohamed Mursi in July following mass protests against his rule.

Al Jazeera, whose Qatari owners back the Brotherhood and have been at odds with Egypt's leadership since he was ousted, said the ruling defied "logic, sense and any semblance of justice," the AP reported. "There is only one sensible outcome now. For the verdict to be overturned, and justice to be recognised by Egypt," Al Jazeera English managing director Al Anstey said in a statement.

The ruling came a day after U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry met newly elected Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi in Cairo and raised the issue of the journalists, according to the AP.

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