Egypt frees two detained Canadians
John Greyson and Tarek Loubani held without charge since August
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Egyptian authorities have released two Canadians who had been held without charge in a crowded, cockroach-infested prison cell in Cairo since mid-August, Canadian officials said on Sunday.
Prime Minister Stephen Harper welcomed the release of John Greyson, a Toronto filmmaker and university professor, and Tarek Loubani, an emergency room doctor from London, Ontario.
Harper, speaking in the Malaysian capital of Kuala Lumpur, said that Ottawa “welcomes this decision by the government of Egypt” to set the pair free.
“We look forward to seeing these two Canadian citizens return home in the not-too-distant future,” Harper told reporters.
The pair, who were transiting Egypt on their way to the neighbouring Palestinian Gaza Strip when arrested, had not been formally charged.
They were arrested in Cairo on August 16 amid bloody clashes between security forces and Islamists that killed dozens of people
The two Canadians ended a hunger strike after winning small concessions from their jailers, a relative of one of the men said on Thursday.
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