An Egyptian court sentenced former president Mohammed Morsi to 20 years
in prison on Tuesday in connection with the deaths of protesters during
demonstrations against his rule in 2012. Morsi also faces charges in two
other trials.
Morsi supporters attacked opposition protesters
outside the presidential palace in December 2012, sparking clashes that
killed at least 10 people.
Judge Ahmed Youssef dropped the murder
charges against Morsi and said the sentence was instead linked to the
“show of force” against protesters and unlawful detentions.
The
Cairo Criminal Court issued the verdict as Morsi and other defendants in
the case – mostly other Muslim Brotherhood leaders – stood in a
soundproof glass cage in a makeshift courtroom at Egypt’s national
police academy.
The country’s first freely elected president,
Morsi took power after the 2011 overthrow of Hosni Mubarak. Morsi
himself was ousted by the army in 2013 and put on trial as the new
regime of Abdel Fattah al-Sisi launched a relentless crackdown on the
moderate Islamist Muslim Brotherhood.
Hundreds of Brotherhood members have since been sentenced to death and thousands more jailed.
The
Muslim Brotherhood issued a statement ahead of the verdict on Tuesday
denouncing the judiciary – calling it a tool of repression – and calling
for protests.
“The coup commander (Sisi) is exploiting the
judiciary as a weapon in the battle against popular will and the
democratic and revolutionary legitimacy represented by President Mohamed
Morsi,” the statement said.
The Brotherhood called for “non-stop
revolutionary marches and demonstrations” starting Tuesday in support
of Morsi and demanding his reinstatement.
The Muslim Brotherhood,
now blacklisted by Egypt as a “terrorist organisation”, has previously
failed to mobilise large numbers for its rallies because of persistent
fears amid a continuing crackdown.
Morsi also faces the possible
death penalty in connection with two other trials, including one in
which he is accused of leaking state secrets to Iran’s Revolutionary
Guards. He is also accused of escaping from prison during the widespread
protests that eventually ousted Mubarak.
Tuesday, April 21, 2015
Subscribe to:
Post Comments
(
Atom
)

Post a Comment