Emad Sayed Abu Zeid, Suef Online
Medium:Internet
Charge:Anti-State, False News
Imprisoned:September 1, 2014

Security forces arrested Abu Zeid from his home in the southern governorate of Beni Suef in September 2013 and accused him of publishing false news that harmed public opinion, both on the news website Suef Online as well as on social media affiliated with the Muslim Brotherhood,according to news reports.

One month later, Abu Zeid was released pending investigation. In September 2014, he was rearrested when he appeared in court and was sentenced to three years in prison, according to his daughter, Fatma, who spoke to CPJ. According to local press freedom groups and Suef Online, he was convicted on charges of publishing false news and joining the Muslim Brotherhood, which the government has declared an illegal organization.

Abu Zeid was a correspondent for Al-Ahram Gate, the online portal of Egypt's main state-run newspaper, Al-Ahram. He also frequently wrote for Suef Online, which was critical of the July 2013 ouster of President Mohamed Morsi of the Muslim Brotherhood, the news website said.

According to Suef Online, Abu Zeid was arrested in connection with an article he wrote for the news website on September 10, 2013, that criticized the local government in Beni Suef. The journalist has written several other articles for Suef Online that criticized the military-backed government.

Abu Zeid's brother, Shaaban Abu Zeid, said at an October 2013 press conference that his brother had been interrogated about his views of Morsi and the dispersal of a pro-Morsi sit-in on August 14, 2013, in which hundreds of protesters were killed. The journalist's brother said that Abu Zeid was also asked to swear that he was not a member of the Muslim Brotherhood, according to news reports.

On December 8, 2014, the journalist denied any affiliation with the banned group in a letter he wrote from prison, which was published on social media.

Abu Zeid is being held in a prison in the city of Fayyoum, where he still writes articles critical of the Egyptian governmentfor Suef Online, according to news reports. It is unclear if he is appealing.

CPJ did not include Abu Zeid's case in its 2014 imprisoned census because CPJ was not able to determine at the time if the journalist's imprisonment was related to his work. Abu Zeid was included in CPJ's mid-2015 special census of journalists imprisoned in Egypt.

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