Egypt

Egyptian publisher sacks dissident Al-Dostour editor, says paper

AP– A leading independent Egyptian newspaper said Tuesday its mogul publisher has fired the daily's chief editor, an outspoken government critic–the latest development in what watchdogs say is a campaign of restricting media freedoms in Egypt.

Ibrahim Eissa's dismissal comes amid growing uncertainty over Egypt's political future, with parliamentary elections less than two
months away and constant speculation over 82-year-old President Hosni Mubarak's health.

Al-Dostour reported on its website early Tuesday that its publisher Elseyed al-Badawi fired Eissa effective Monday. Eissa,
however, claimed he is still in charge of the daily' online edition. Neither of the two could immediately be reached for comment.

In 2008, Eissa was sentenced to two months in prison on charges of insulting Mubarak after he reported about the president's health.
Mubarak later pardoned him.

The sacking also followed Monday's statement by Egypt's Journalists' Union, which said Eissa was pulled off his popular TV talk
show without explanation. The union accused the government of cracking down on media critical of the authorities, saying there was "an organized attack on media freedom…especially in light of the approaching parliamentary elections."

Egypt's media, and TVs in particular, were tightly controlled in the past, restricted to positive coverage of government activities. But
an explosion of privately owned satellite stations over the past five years has brought programming that has pushed government boundaries when discussing politics.

Business tycoon al-Badawi, who heads the opposition Al-Wafd Party and the party newspaper's board, bought Al-Dostour in August
shortly after he was elected to the party post. At the time, there was speculation he would fire Eissa in a move that would bring him and
Al-Wafd closer to the government. Al-Wafd is expected to field a large number of candidates in November election.

Al-Dostour has been sharply critical of the government and often breaks political, social and religious taboos in commentaries on
Egyptian society. Its sharp language earned the ire of censors and its copies were confiscated several times in the 1990s.

The government closed the paper in 1998 for seven years after it published a statement by an Islamist group that threatened Coptic
Christian businessmen in Egypt.

The first sign of the latest crackdown came in early September, when private and opposition newspapers were ordered to pull reports of a street poster campaign supporting the powerful intelligence chief Omar Suleiman for president. Journalists and editors were barred from writing about the story in subsequent issues and the posters were removed.

The question of who will succeed Egypt's ruler of almost 30 years has gained added urgency since Mubarak traveled to Germany earlier
this year for surgery to remove his gallbladder and a benign growth in the small intestine.

Mubarak has not yet announced whether he will run for a sixth term in 2011 presidential elections. His 46-year-old son Gamal has been
a rising force in Egyptian

Another program, the 12-year-old "Cairo Today" was also shut down Monday. Like Eissa's talk show, it was broadcast on private
television networks. But Information Minister Anas al-Fiqqi told The Associated Press the closure of Orbit TV's "Cairo Today" had no
political dimension and was only because the network had not paid its bills.

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