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Americans in Egypt NGO case free to travel

CAIRO, Feb. 29 (UPI) -- An Egyptian lawyer Wednesday said seven Americans employed by U.S.-financed non-profit groups may leave the country.

Earlier, officials said the trial of 43 non-government organization workers, including 19 Americans, had been abandoned. The developments suggest the United States and Egypt apparently have worked out a way to resolve the crisis that threatened to undermine decades of friendly diplomatic relations, The New York Times reported.

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During testimony Wednesday on Capitol Hill about the State Department's budget, Secretary of State Hilary Clinton told a House appropriations subcommittee she was optimistic the matter would be "resolved shortly" so $1.5 billion in aid to Egypt would not be jeopardized. About $1.3 billion of that is military assistance.

"Once we make progress on the NGO issues, then we can have a broader discussion both with the Congress and with the Egyptian government. Of course, one of our problems is we don't really have an Egyptian government to have a conversation with," Clinton said.

Egyptian officials had kept the Americans and several European nationals from leaving the country since December, following government raids on the Cairo offices of several pro-democracy non-government organizations including Freedom House, the International Republican Institute and the Washington-headquartered National Democratic Institute.

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Hafez Abu Saada, an Egyptian human rights lawyer, told The Washington Post judicial authorities had agreed to allow the foreigners to travel out of the country if they each posted $322,000 bail.

"The case is still ongoing," he said.

Among those who were detained in the Egyptian investigation was Sam LaHood, son of U.S. Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood.

Forty-three defendants were charged by Egypt with operating local offices of international non-governmental organizations without required licenses and illegally receiving and distributing foreign funds.

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