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Egypt deports jailed Australian reporter Greste

By AFP
Egypt Australian Al-Jazeera journalist Peter Greste listens to the verdict in Cairo on June 23, 2014 inside the defendants cage during his trial for allegedly supporting the Muslim Brotherhood.  By Khaled Desouki AFPFile
FEB 1, 2015 LISTEN
Australian Al-Jazeera journalist Peter Greste listens to the verdict in Cairo on June 23, 2014 inside the defendants cage during his trial for allegedly supporting the Muslim Brotherhood. By Khaled Desouki (AFP/File)

Cairo (AFP) - Australian journalist Peter Greste boarded a plane to Larnaca in Cyprus after Egypt ordered his deportation on Sunday following months of imprisonment, an airport official told AFP.

The Al-Jazeera English reporter, arrested in Cairo in December 2013, is expected to then travel to his home country.

A senior interior ministry official told AFP: "There is a presidential decision to deport Peter Greste to Australia."

Greste had been sentenced to seven years in prison along with a fellow Al-Jazeera reporter, Canadian-Egyptian Mohamed Fahmy, for allegedly aiding the blacklisted Muslim Brotherhood group.

Their Egyptian Al-Jazeera colleague Baher Mohamed was also sentenced to 10 years.

There was no immediate indication of whether Fahmy and Mohamed would be released as well.

Greste and Fahmy are eligible for deportation under a recent law enacted by President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi allowing the deportation of foreigners to stand trial or serve their sentences in their home countries.

There is no prospect that Greste or Fahmy would face trials in their home countries and Sisi's decree appears to have been formulated in a way that allows Egypt's authorities to save face.

The arrest of the reporters in December 2013 prompted a global outcry, with Washington and the United Nations leading calls for their release.

An Egyptian court had in January ordered a retrial of the three men.

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