Egypt
sentences Muslim Brotherhood leader, others to death
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[April 11, 2015]
By Mahmoud Mourad
CAIRO (Reuters) - An Egyptian court
sentenced Mohamed Badie, leader of the outlawed Muslim Brotherhood, and
13 other senior members of the group to death for inciting chaos and
violence, and gave a life term to a U.S.-Egyptian citizen for ties to
the Brotherhood.
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The men were among thousands of people detained after freely
elected Islamist president Mohamed Mursi was toppled in 2013 by the
military under Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, who is now president.
Sisi describes the Brotherhood as a major security threat. The group
says it is committed to peaceful activism and had nothing to do with
Islamist militant violence in Egypt since Mursi's fall following
mass protests against his rule.
Egypt's mass trials of Brotherhood members and people accused of
links to the group, as well as its tough crackdown on Islamist and
liberal opposition alike, have drawn international criticism of its
judicial system and human rights record.
The sentences, pronounced at a televised court session on Saturday,
can be appealed before Egypt's highest civilian court in a process
that could take years to reach a final verdict.
U.S.-Egyptian citizen Mohamed Soltan was sentenced to life in jail
for supporting the veteran Islamist movement and transmitting false
news. He is the son of Brotherhood preacher Salah Soltan, who was
among those sentenced to death.
Mohamed Abdel-Mawgod, one of the defense lawyers, condemned the
verdicts. "The court did not differentiate between the defendants
and put them all in the same basket," he told reporters at the
courthouse. None of the defendants were present during the hearing.
Badie is the Brotherhood's General Guide and has already been
sentenced to several death and life sentences. His deputy Khairat
El-Shater was given a life sentence on Saturday.
"OPERATIONS ROOM" TRIAL
Rights groups say Egypt, where a popular uprising toppled veteran
autocrat Hosni Mubarak in 2011 and started years of political
turmoil, is now cracking down on all dissent. Sisi says stability is
needed to revive the shattered economy.
Rights advocates have criticized a U.S. decision to end a freeze on
military aid to Cairo, saying Washington is putting human rights on
the backburner. The United States has said the decision to end the
freeze was in the interest of national security.
Mohamed Soltan, 27, arrested in August 2013, had been on hunger
strike while in prison.
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"He deserves the punishment because of the money and instructions
from the Brotherhood which were found with him, and for spreading
chaos and horror in society," presiding Judge Mohamed Nagi Shehata
told reporters.
Sara Mohamed, a relative of the Soltan family, said they would
appeal the verdict. "It was a farce trial of the first class...None
of the defendants attended the session," she told Reuters by phone.
A website calling for Mohamed Soltan's release says he was not a
member of the Brotherhood, describing him as a U.S.-educated peace
activist who was involved in youth events and charities. The website
shows pictures of him lying emaciated on a stretcher while in
detention.
Saturday's case was known in local media as "The Rabaa Operations
Room" trial. This is in reference to a sit-in at Rabaa square in
2013 in which hundreds of people protesting at the overthrow of
Mursi were killed when security forces tried to clear the area by
force.
Cairo has defended its actions, saying it had given protesters the
opportunity to leave peacefully and that armed elements within the
Brotherhood initiated the violence.
Saturday's session sentenced 51 people. Those who were not sentenced
to death were given a life sentence. The long list of charges
included leading and funding an outlawed group, overturning the
constitution and planning to spread chaos, a court source said.
(Additional reporting by Ahmed Tolba, Writing by Sylvia Westall;
Editing by Mark Heinrich)
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