IFEX
Reporters Without Borders
Reporters Without Borders condemns Dutch journalist Rena Netjes' arrest
on suspicion of spying on 8 April. Cairo correspondent for BNR
Nieuwsradio and Het Parool, she was released on 9 April after being held
overnight and being taken before a court in the capital. In the end,
the only charge brought against her was inability to justify her
profession at the time of arrest because she left her press card at
home.
Another Cairo-based foreign correspondent told Reporters Without
Borders that Egypt is currently awash with “spying paranoia” fueled by
government comments. Both local and foreign reporters are finding it
harder and harder to work because the authorities are doing everything
possible to silence critics and restrict freedom of information.
At the time of her arrest, Rena Netjes
was interviewing young Egyptians in a café in the eastern Cairo
district of Al-Rehab for a report on youth unemployment in Egypt. The
café's owner and other people participated in her arrest and handed her
over to the police. The owner accused her of spying and wanting to
“impose western culture on Egyptians.”
Reporters Without Borders is relieved by her release but condemns
the attitude of the authorities towards journalists. “This policy of
intimidation towards the media must stop,” the organization said.
Netjes' “citizen arrest” was encouraged by prosecutor-general Talaat
Ibrahim's recent comment urging ordinary Egyptians to cooperate with
the police and declaring that they had the right to carry out “judicial
arrests.” Although the prosecutor-general's office later denied this, it
seems that ordinary civilians cooperated in Netjes's arrest.