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Egyptian Satirist Faces New Legal Action From Army-Backed Government


Egyptians watch the first episode of a show by Egypt's most prominent television satirist, Bassem Youssef, called "Al-Bernameg" (The Programme) in Cairo, Oct. 25, 2013.
Egyptians watch the first episode of a show by Egypt's most prominent television satirist, Bassem Youssef, called "Al-Bernameg" (The Programme) in Cairo, Oct. 25, 2013.
A comedian who outraged Egypt's now deposed Islamist rulers with his satirical TV show is to be investigated by the current army-backed government, a state-run newspaper reported on Monday.

Bassem Youssef, often called Egypt's answer to U.S. satirist Jon Stewart, returned to the airwaves on Friday for the first time since the army ousted Mohamed Morsi, the Islamist president he used to lampoon in jokes and song-and-dance routines.

Youssef turned his comic jibes on the new government, joking about the popularity of army chief General Abdel Fattah al-Sisi and implying that no one had heard of interim President Adly Mansour.

The program was enough for public prosecutor Hisham Barakat to launch an investigation, after a viewer complained that it had harmed the public interest and risked creating chaos in the country, Al-Ahram newspaper reported.

Youssef, who was arrested under Morsi's government and appeared in court on charges - later dropped - of insulting the president and Islam, carefully poked fun at various political camps in Friday's broadcast, but stopped short of an outright assault on Sisi, whose image adorns posters across Cairo.

His arrest under Morsi was criticized by liberals who said the 2011 uprising that toppled Hosni Mubarak was going back toward autocratic rule.

With a new military-backed government in place, activists say similar assaults on press freedom and on other civil liberties like the right to protest, seem all too likely.

“I am not with the [Islamists], who attacked us and called us heretics ... and publicly called for our imprisonment,” Youssef said on his Friday show.

“At the same time, I am not with hypocrisy, deification of individuals and creation of pharaohs,” Youssef said. “We are afraid that fascism in the name of religion gets replaced with fascism in the name of nationalism.”

Morsi's ouster on July 3 was followed by the worst violence in Egypt's modern history, including the violent clearing of Muslim Brotherhood protest camps in which hundreds of the group's supporters were killed.

Thousands more, including the movement's leadership, have been arrested.
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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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