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Egypt Police Raid Website Office, Arrest Editor-in-Chief

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An Egyptian soldier and a policeman stand in the Dokki neighborhood of Cairo, Feb. 14, 2012. Egyptian police raided the office of a news website late Tuesday and arrested its editor-in-chief, who reportedly is being held at Dokki police station.
An Egyptian soldier and a policeman stand in the Dokki neighborhood of Cairo, Feb. 14, 2012. Egyptian police raided the office of a news website late Tuesday and arrested its editor-in-chief, who reportedly is being held at Dokki police station.

Egyptian police raided the office of a news website late Tuesday and arrested its editor-in-chief, according to three of its journalists, including its managing editor.

The raid came two days after the Supreme Council for Media Regulation, an official oversight body, told the website, Masr al-Arabia, to pay 50,000 Egyptian pounds ($2,849) as a fine for republishing a New York Times article on alleged irregularities during last week's presidential election.

Two journalists at the website quoted the site's lawyers as saying police said they had acted because the website did not have a permit to operate. The journalists said the raid was prompted by the republishing of the New York Times article.

A statement from the Supreme Council for Media Regulation, which was based on a complaint from the national election authority, had on Sunday accused the website of publishing false news.

"The website should have checked the authenticity of the news or commented on it with an opinion," the Council statement said, referring to the New York Times article, which said some voters were offered payments and other inducements to vote.

The New York Times defended its reporting. "We stand by the accuracy of our reporting and strongly condemn any arrests meant to intimidate journalists and stifle freedom of the press," Danielle Rhoades Ha, a spokeswoman for the New York Times Co., said in an emailed statement.

Adel Sabry, the website's editor-in-chief, was arrested and is being held at Dokki police station in greater Cairo, according to Mohamed Mounir, Masr al-Arabia's managing editor.

A security source at the police station said Sabry was being held prior to appearing before a prosecutor. Sabry is accused of running a news website without a permit, the source added.

The office of the website was closed and "sealed with red wax," the three journalists said.

Masr al-Arabia is one of about 500 websites that have in recent months been blocked in Egypt, although some are still accessible through virtual networks. Rights groups say the closures amount to a crackdown against freedom of expression.

Authorities say curbing fictitious news is necessary for national security.

President Abdel Fattah el-Sissi won a second term with 97 percent of the votes on a turnout of 41 percent, official results showed Monday.

Some voters have said they were offered incentives including money and food to cast their ballots, local and international media reported, without saying who had made the offers.

Officials said that if any such incidents took place, they were not state-sponsored and were extremely limited.

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    Reuters

    Reuters is a news agency founded in 1851 and owned by the Thomson Reuters Corporation based in Toronto, Canada. One of the world's largest wire services, it provides financial news as well as international coverage in over 16 languages to more than 1000 newspapers and 750 broadcasters around the globe.

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