Egyptian Court Says Jailed Al Jazeera Journalists Were Under The Influence Of 'The Devil'

Egyptian Court's Unbelievable Remarks About Jailed Al Jazeera Journalists
Defendants in the Marriott terror cell case in Cairo stand in cages in an Egyptian courtroom Monday, March 31, 2014, as they await their turn to speak about their request for bail. From left, Suhaib Saeed, a university student who donned a white t-shirt to cover one that compared his prison conditions to Guantanamo, Al Jazeera English correspondent Peter Greste, an Australian, Al Jazeera English bureau chief Mohamed Fahmy, who holds dural Canadian-Egyptian citizenship, and cameraman Baher Mohamed, an Egyptian. The three journalists are accused of falsifying news about Egypt and running a terror cell out of their temporary offices at the Marriott Hotel in Cairo. The judge again denied bail for the men, who've been held since Dec. 29. (Amina Ismail/MCT via Getty Images)
Defendants in the Marriott terror cell case in Cairo stand in cages in an Egyptian courtroom Monday, March 31, 2014, as they await their turn to speak about their request for bail. From left, Suhaib Saeed, a university student who donned a white t-shirt to cover one that compared his prison conditions to Guantanamo, Al Jazeera English correspondent Peter Greste, an Australian, Al Jazeera English bureau chief Mohamed Fahmy, who holds dural Canadian-Egyptian citizenship, and cameraman Baher Mohamed, an Egyptian. The three journalists are accused of falsifying news about Egypt and running a terror cell out of their temporary offices at the Marriott Hotel in Cairo. The judge again denied bail for the men, who've been held since Dec. 29. (Amina Ismail/MCT via Getty Images)

Journalists around the world are outraged by Egypt's sentencing of three Al Jazeera journalists, and the latest statement from the Egyptian court that jailed them is sure to provoke more outcry.

Al Jazeera journalists Peter Greste, Mohamed Fahmy and Baher Mohammed have been sentenced to seven to ten years in prison. They were arrested in December, and found guilty of spreading false news and conspiring with the Muslim Brotherhood. The court said in a statement on Tuesday that the journalists were in cahoots with the devil.

"The defendants took advantage of the noble profession of journalism … and turned it from a profession aimed at looking for the truth to a profession aimed at falsifying the truth," the statement read.

"The devil guided them to use journalism and direct it toward activities against this nation," it added.

People expressed their dismay at the remarks on Twitter:

The court's statement came after a months-long trial that ignited international protest. The evidence that the prosecution presented against the journalists included an audio clip of a Gotye song and a report about sheep farming. At one point, the judge even donned sunglasses to watch pieces of video evidence.

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