They said the three Hamdy Mokhtar, Mohammed Hassan, and Osama al-Bishbishi were arrested September 26 and face charges of publishing false news and belonging to a banned organization, Egyptian parlance for the Muslim Brotherhood group.
A fourth journalist, Noura Nasser, was arrested September 27 as she interviewed Egyptians with postgraduate degrees protesting outside the Cabinet's office to demand jobs.
Nasser, who was released two days later, reports for an opposition news website. The New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists, or CPJ, said Nasser faced charges of publishing false news.
El-Sissi said last week he would like to see a mechanism set up that would allow Egyptians to donate fractions of checks they cash at banks, arguing that this could amount to millions of pounds. It was the latest in a series of unconventional suggestions to restore the economy, and was ridiculed by many on social media.
In a statement issued yesterday, the CPJ called on the Egyptian government to immediately drop all charges against the four reporters.
"The delusion that jailing journalists on charges of reporting 'false news' for interviewing people on the street or photographing a protest will change reality is a false hope," said Joel Simon, the group's executive director.
CPJ says 23 journalists were imprisoned in Egypt in 2015, making it the second worst jailer of journalists, after China. The government denies jailing anyone because of their reporting.
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