Al-Jazeera trial: Egypt gives journalists three-year sentence Published duration 29 August 2015

media caption Peter Greste: "To be sentenced to three years is just devastating"

Three al-Jazeera journalists convicted in Egypt of "spreading false news" have been sentenced to three years in prison at their retrial in Cairo.

Canadian-Egyptian Mohamed Fahmy and Egyptian Baher Mohamed were led away from court after the verdict.

Australian Peter Greste was deported back to Australia earlier this year and was on trial again in absentia.

The three are accused of aiding the banned Muslim Brotherhood group but they strenuously deny the allegations.

The three journalists were originally sentenced in July 2014, with Mr Greste and Mr Fahmy receiving seven years and Mr Mohamed getting 10 years.

image copyright AFP image caption Mohamed Fahmy (left), Peter Greste and Baher Mohamed were freed before their retrial

But their convictions were overturned in January this year and they were freed in February to await retrial.

Giving the verdict on Saturday, judge Hassan Farid said the three men were not registered journalists and had been operating from a Cairo hotel without a licence.

He handed three-year sentences to Mr Greste and Mr Fahmy but gave Mr Mohamed an additional six months.

It is unclear how long Mr Fahmy and Mr Mohamed will now serve. They were in prison for about a year before being freed.

Lawyers for the three journalists are expected to appeal against the decision.

media caption Lawyer Amal Clooney: "The verdict today sends a very dangerous message in Egypt"

The BBC's Lyse Doucet, who was in the court, said the verdict came as a shock to a room packed full of Egyptian and foreign journalists.

The expectation was that the journalists would be found guilty, she adds, but that they would be given a lesser sentence and be allowed to walk free.

'Dangerous message'

Mr Greste said in a tweet that he was "shocked" and "outraged" while Al-Jazeera said the verdict was "yet another deliberate attack on press freedom".

Outside the courtroom, Mr Fahmy's lawyer, Amal Clooney, called on Egypt's President Abdul Fattah al-Sisi to issue a pardon to the journalists.

"The verdict today sends a very dangerous message in Egypt," she told reporters. "It sends a message that journalists can be locked up for simply doing their job, for telling the truth and reporting the news."

She said she would push for her client, who has given up his Egyptian citizenship, to be deported to Canada.