Egyptian prosecutor orders probe into New York Times’ Jerusalem report

Egyptian prosecutor orders probe into New York Times’ Jerusalem report
The New York Times said an Egyptian intelligence officer instructed TV talk show hosts and a famous actress to downplay president Donald Trump’s decision to recognize Jerusalem, above, as Israel’s capital. (Reuters)
Updated 11 January 2018
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Egyptian prosecutor orders probe into New York Times’ Jerusalem report

Egyptian prosecutor orders probe into New York Times’ Jerusalem report

CAIRO: Egypt’s chief prosecutor has ordered an “urgent” investigation into a New York Times’ report about recordings purportedly of an intelligence officer instructing TV talk show hosts and a famous actress to downplay president Donald Trump’s decision to recognize Jerusalem as Israel’s capital.
A statement by chief prosecutor Nabil Sadeq’s office, carried by the official MENA news agency, said the Times’ report, published over the weekend, “undermines Egypt’s security, public peace and hurts the public’s interest.”
Sadeq’s decision followed a flurry of widely publicized condemnation this week of the Times by Egyptian lawmakers, commentators and the State Information Service.
Michael Slackman, The Times’ international editor, was quoted as saying in an article published by the paper on Wednesday that its “story was a deeply reported, consequential piece of journalism.”
“We stand fully behind it,” Slackman said.
After the Times’ article was published, Egypt’s State Information Service denied allegations of government attempts to sway public opinion in Trump’s favor and said that no officer under the name published in the report worked for the intelligence service.
The government of president Abdel-Fattah el-Sisi, a close Trump ally, has denounced Trump’s Jerusalem decision. Also, Egypt was a major force behind a non-binding, but hugely symbolic resolution adopted last month by the UN General Assembly declaring Trump’s decision “null and void.”
Since his rise to power, el-Sisi has sought to control the media as part of his government’s campaign to silence critics.
Thousands of Islamists and secular, pro-democracy activists have been arrested since the military’s 2013 ouster of el-Sisi’s predecessor, president Muhammad Mursi, an Islamist whose year in office proved divisive.