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Marwa, fiancee of Al Jazeera journalist Mohamed Fahmy, reacts at a court in Cairo, February 12, 2015. The two remaining Al Jazeera journalists, Fahmy and Baher Mohamed, were released from an Egyptian jail on Thursday after more than 400 days, but the court said the case against them was still pending. Fahmy, who is a naturalised Canadian citizen who gave up his Egyptian citizenship, was released on bail of 250,000 Egyptian pounds ($32,765). Mohamed, who has only Egyptian citizenship, was released without bail. Judge Hassan Farid said the next hearing would be on February 23. REUTERS/Asmaa Waguih (EGYPT - Tags: POLITICS MEDIA CRIME LAW TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY) Image Credit: REUTERS

Cairo: An Egyptian court ordered the release of two jailed Al Jazeera journalists on Thursday pending retrial, after they spent more than 400 days in prison in a case that sparked worldwide outrage.

Mohammad Fahmi, who is Canadian and whose family hoped he would be deported, must pay 250,000 Egyptian pounds (Dh120,256) bail while his colleague, Egyptian Baher Mohammad, was freed on his own recognisance along with other defendants.

The case was adjourned until February 23, the court said.

Fahmi and Mohammad appeared in white prison uniforms before the Cairo court, after Australian colleague Peter Greste was deported home earlier this month.

The three were accused of supporting the blacklisted Muslim Brotherhood and originally jailed for between seven and ten years each.

The case has been a major source of embarrassment for President Abdul Fattah Al Sissi as he seeks to shore up international support following a widely condemned crackdown on the opposition.

Fahmi had renounced his Egyptian citizenship to benefit from a law that allows the deportation of foreign defendants and which led to Greste’s release.

On Thursday’s first session of their retrial, Fahmi’s defence asked the court to free him.

Fahmi himself was then allowed out of the caged dock to address the judge.

“I didn’t ask to drop my [Egyptian] nationality,” he said, his arm in a blue sling from an accident he had suffered before his arrest in December 2013.

“A security official visited me and asked I drop my citizenship because the state wanted to get this case done with, it had become a nightmare,” Fahmi said before pulling out a large Egyptian flag.

Greste was on the judge’s roll-call of defendants at the start of the trial.

“He’s not here sir,” responded a police officer when the judge called out his name.

The three journalists had spent more than a year in jail before an appeals court ordered a retrial saying the prosecution had failed to prove its case.

‘Huge step forward’

Al Sissi passed a law by decree last year allowing foreigners to be deported to their home countries to stand trial or serve out their sentences.

Canada last week said Fahmi’s release was “imminent”, but voiced concern that he had not been freed upon renouncing his nationality.

“We are in shock and we feel that the Canadian government has failed in getting Mohammad out,” Omara said.

The Canadian ambassador was inside the courtroom before the start of the trial.

Greste congratulated his two colleagues after their release was announced.

“This is a huge step forward. Not time to declare it over, but at least you get to go home!” the Australian wrote on Twitter.

The three journalists of Qatar-based Al Jazeera English were arrested in December 2013 and charged with spreading false news about Egypt and supporting the Muslim Brotherhood.

Their arrests and continued detentions sparked widespread condemnation and calls for their release led by Washington and the United Nations.

The retrial was ordered after Egypt’s Court of Cassation ruled in January that the lower court “lacked evidence to support its ruling” in the original verdict.

The journalists were among 20 defendants initially tried by the lower court.

Of the rest, 12 were Egyptians found guilty of belonging to a “terrorist organisation”.

Two defendants were acquitted, while the other three — also foreigners — were convicted in absentia.

The journalists’ initial trial came against the backdrop of strained ties between Egypt and Qatar, which supported ousted president Mohammad Mursi.

The Islamist leader was toppled by then army chief Al Sissi in July 2013, before Al Sissi was himself elected president.

While Fahmi may still be deported — although that appears less likely once the trial starts — Mohammad’s only hope is for an acquittal.

Al Sissi’s office has said the president will not consider a pardon before the courts have finished their work.

Mohammad’s wife Jihan Rashid said the family is “paying the price for being Egyptian”.