An Al Jazeera Arabic reporter detained in Berlin this weekend was released Monday.
The network reported on air that Ahmed Mansour was released without charge. The journalist was on his way Saturday to Qatar, where Al Jazeera has its headquarters, when authorities apprehended him.
An Egyptian court convicted Mansour in absentia, accusing him of torturing a lawyer in Cairo’s Tahrir Square in 2011 during the revolution. Mansour was sentenced to 15 years.
In a statement, Mansour said the German officers told him the arrest was at the request of Egyptian authorities.
After the journalist was sentenced last year, Egypt asked the international police body Interpol to seek Mansour’s arrest, but according to Al Jazeera, the request was denied.
“I informed (German police) that the global police organization has rejected Egypt’s request and that I have this document from the Interpol to prove that I am not wanted in any charge,” Mansour said.
The journalist said the charges against him and his conviction were “fabricated,” and Al Jazeera characterized them as “a flimsy attempt at character assassination.”
German police confirmed that a journalist was arrested at Berlin Tegel Airport on Saturday afternoon but declined to give the detainee’s name.
Germany’s federal police also cited an Interpol request as the reason for the arrest.
It is not the first time Egyptian authorities have gone after Al Jazeera journalists.
Three journalists — Peter Greste, Mohamed Fahmy and Baher Mohamed — spent more than a year behind bars.
They were arrested in Egypt in December 2013, accused of supporting the Muslim Brotherhood and broadcasting footage that portrayed the regime falsely with the intention of bringing it down. They have consistently denied the charges or any ties to the Muslim Brotherhood, saying they were only doing their jobs.
Earlier this year, Greste was freed and deported to his native Australia, and Fahmy and Mohamed were granted bail pending a retrial.