Egypt
queries Mursi over documents 'leaked' to Al Jazeera: security sources
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[August 28, 2014]
CAIRO (Reuters) - Egypt is
investigating jailed ex-president Mohamed Mursi in connection with
documents that judicial investigators say were leaked to the Qatar-based
Al Jazeera satellite news channel, security sources said on Thursday.
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Relations between Qatar, a Gulf Arab state, and Egypt have been
tense since mid-2013 when then-army chief Abdel Fattah al-Sisi
toppled the Islamist Mursi after mass protests against his rule.
Qatar supported Mursi and his Muslim Brotherhood.
Mursi is being questioned in connection with his secretary's
daughter who is suspected of leaking sensitive security documents to
Al Jazeera, the security sources said.
"The security officials recorded a phone call between the daughter
of Mursi's secretary and an Egyptian journalist who works for Al
Jazeera in which the woman said she wants to give him important
security documents," said a security official.
"Mursi is being investigated to find out if he knew about this phone
call or if he had leaked these documents to his secretary," the
official added. "We also know that the woman had been trying to send
the documents to the Qatari intelligence."
Officials at Al Jazeera could not be immediately reached for
comment. The satellite channel has been banned from Egypt over what
Cairo says is its support for Islamists. Al Jazeera says it aims for
balanced news coverage airing all points of view.
Sisi went on to election as president while Mursi has been jailed on
suspicion of inciting violence and various other offences. He and
other Brotherhood leaders could face a life sentence or the death
penalty if convicted.
Egyptian security forces killed hundreds of Muslim Brotherhood
supporters during street protests and thousands of others have been
jailed, and Egypt's oldest Islamist movement has been branded a
terrorist group and outlawed.
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The Brotherhood renounced violence as a means of political change
decades ago and has denied any role in recent bloodshed.
Egypt, the biggest Arab state, is deeply suspicious of Qatar and
anyone who supports the Brotherhood, once Egypt's most organized
political movement but long isolated by a military-backed
authoritarian leaders until the 2011 popular uprising.
Egypt has jailed three Al Jazeera journalists for up to 10 years on
charges of aiding "a terrorist group" by broadcasting misinformation
that harmed national security. Al Jazeera has said the charges are
baseless.
(Reporting by Yasmine Saleh; Editing by Mark Heinrich)
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