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Thursday 20 February 2014

Free Al Jazeera Journalists Peter Greste Mohamed Fahmy Baher Mohamed Abdullah al-Shami and All Other Journalists Detained In Egypt Today
Al Jazeera has unfortunately got caught up in a web of it's own intrigue.  A staunch supported of the Salafist Arab Spring, due to it's political naivety, the relative inexperience of it's editorial staff and the fact that it has become controlled by a Saudi-backed faction (there was a Putsch several years ago which ousted it's fiercely independent chief executive, his team, and replaced them with 'yes' men-bowing like President Obama to everything on Saudi Arabias' Wish List - especially Caliphates and Emirates- throughout the Arab world.)
I have not hesitated in coming out to support Greste, Fahmy and Mohamed but have been quite honestly reluctant to offer support in print to journalists working for a media service (Al Jazeera) in part responsible for the chaos and mayhem which has brought murderous Salafists, Wahabist and Al Qaeda affiliated networks to prominence across the Arab world in the aftermath of the Arab Spring. It is more out of respect for the victims of these butchers that I have refrained from offering public support to a Salafist affiliated and controlled network such as Al Jazeera.
I am only giving verbal support now because their lives are at risk from, yes you guessed it, the new extremists in power in Egypt today - the very extremists their own network was in part was responsible for bringing to power because of it's unflinching support for the Muslim Brotherhood butchers of Christians who preceded the military coup d'état .
At one point it was almost certain that a carnage or ethnic cleansing of the entire Christian population in Egypt was about to be organized by the Muslim Brotherhood - as they started an organized program to capture Christian women, forcing them to marry Muslim men and renounce Christianity and other barbaric practices harking back to an era before the Dark Ages.
The one good thing the military coup d'état has done in Egypt is put an end to violence and persecution against religious and other minorities - which was being systematically organized by Muslim Brotherhood fascist 'Brownshirts' with beards.
All of the above conveniently ignored in their reports for Al Jazeera by Greste, Mohamed and Fahmy.
So before I even say 'free the Al Jazeera journalists!' I need to set this record straight.
Sent back to Egypt after the military coup their sole objective was to seek alternative
(opposition) viewpoints (Muslim Brotherhood Salafist ) to the new military regime.
There is a genuine basis in unbiased (or fair and balanced) media coverage which Middle-East Muslim societies (like other non-Muslim societies in the world today) simply fail to appreciate. But this is made even more complicated when you are working for a network employer which is a known Salafist ideology supporter and in a country where media dissent is not understood nor tolerated to the extent it is in Judeo-Christian Europe and in the United States.
I never backed the Muslim Brotherhood extremists neither do I back the Military Generals.
However, the latter threw a lifeline to Coptic Christians and all other religious minorities:'if you want to live come with us'; at a time when the Christian world (including the Russian and Greek Christian Orthodox Churches) had completely abandoned them.
Russia Today (A Russian-Government part - owned news channel) also stayed on the sidelines - until it's naval base and air access facilities in Syria were at risk.
The Vatican State was the only country to speak out publicly about the atrocities being perpetrated against Christians in Muslim lands following the Arab Spring revolutions.
So I say, yes free the detained Al Jazeera and other journalists, unconditionally, but history should not forget nor forgive their employer for the misery, distress, loss of innocent lives and torn communities it has encouraged with it's reckless and unconditional support for Muslim extremism in the period preceding and in the aftermath of the Arab Spring.

Patrick Emek
http://www.smh.com.au/world/greste-and-colleagues-to-make-first-court-appearance-20140220-hvd6p.html

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