Egyptian court seeks death penalty for ex-president Mursi

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An Egyptian court on Saturday sought the death penalty for former president Mohamed Mursi and 106 supporters of the Muslim Brotherhood in connection with a mass jail break in 2011.

Mursi and his fellow defendants, including top Brotherhood leader Mohamed Badie, were convicted for killing and kidnapping policemen, attacking police facilities and breaking out of jail during the uprising against Hosni Mubarak.

The court's request drew condemnations from Amnesty International and Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan.

The final ruling is expected to be made on June 2. The court sought capital punishment in a separate case for Brotherhood leader Khairat el-Shater and 15 others for conspiring with foreign militant groups against Egypt.

The rulings, like all capital sentences, will be referred to Egypt's top religious authority, the Grand Mufti, for a non-binding opinion.

Mursi can appeal the verdict. He has said the court is not legitimate, describing legal proceedings against him as part of a coup by former army chief Abdel Fattah al-Sisi in 2013.

Many other defendants are on the run.

The Brotherhood, an Islamist movement, propelled Mursi to election victory in 2012 following Mubarak's ouster but was driven underground after the army ouster a year later following protests against his rule.

Mursi stood defiant in a court cage on Saturday wearing a blue prison outfit. He smiled and pumped his fists in the air as the judge read the sentences.

Other defendants, held in a courtroom cage separate from Mursi, flashed a four-finger salute symbolizing resistance to the state's anti-Islamist crackdown. From behind soundproof glass, they shouted: "Down with military rule!"

Wearing white, red and blue prison jumpsuits - identifying them respectively as awaiting sentencing, condemned to death, and sentenced to a lesser penalty - they seemed to form a choir momentarily, with one prisoner leading the rest in protest chants.

Sheikh Youssef al-Qaradawi, the influential Qatar-based Muslim cleric, was among those sentenced to death.

Muslim Brotherhood official Amr Darrag condemned the decision.

"This is a political verdict and represents a murder crime that is about to be committed, and it should be stopped by the international community," Darrag, co-founder of the dissolved Freedom and Justice Party, the Brotherhood's political wing, told Reuters in Istanbul.

The party said in a statement the ruling "opened all options to rid the country of this gang which seized power by force". It did not elaborate.

Amnesty International called the court decision "a charade based on null and void procedures" and demanded Mursi's release or retrial in a civilian court.

Erdogan criticized Egypt and accused its Western allies of hypocrisy, the state-run Anatolian news agency reported. "While the West is abolishing the death penalty, they are just watching the continuation of death sentences in Egypt. They don't do anything about it," it quoted him as saying.

Relations between the neighbors have deteriorated after Turkey emerged as one of the fiercest international critics of Mursi's removal. The Brotherhood has close ties with Erdogan's AK Party.

POLITICAL SUICIDE

Western diplomats say Egyptian officials have acknowledged it could be political suicide to execute Mursi and risk turning him into a martyr. The Brotherhood, the Middle East's oldest Islamist group, has survived decades of repression, maintaining popular support through its charities.

Prosecutors say the Brotherhood planned to send "elements" to the Hamas-controlled Gaza Strip for military training by Lebanon's Hezbollah group and Iranian Revolutionary Guards.

Upon their return, they would join forces with militant groups in the Sinai Peninsula, the Egyptian territory that borders Israel, prosecutors alleged.

The Brotherhood says it is a peaceful organization with no links to violence.

Hamas spokesman Fawzi Barhoum condemned the ruling, which included dozens of Palestinians, calling it "a crime against the Palestinian people". Hamas is an offshoot of the international Brotherhood movement.

Islamic militant groups stepped up bombing and shooting attacks on security forces after Mursi's fall, killing hundreds.

On Saturday, four people, including three judges, were killed in the North Sinai city of al-Arish when militants shot at their vehicle, security sources said.

The interior ministry said a policeman was also killed by gunmen near Cairo.

Security forces have killed about 1,000 Brotherhood supporters on the streets and jailed thousands of others, according to rights groups.

Some Egyptians accused Mursi of abusing power and neglecting the economy, which the Brotherhood denies, while rumors he intended to give part or all of Sinai Hamas compounded suspicions about him.

At a Cairo coffee shop, some Egyptians showed signs of political apathy after years of turbulence.

"Mursi deserves the death sentence 20 times over. He was going to give away the Sinai," said cafe employee Mahmoud Osman.

Customer Ali Hussein was ambivalent, saying Mursi deserved the sentence because he escaped from prison while also questioning Egypt's political transition.

"I don't trust the judges frankly. We used to have democracy but we don't anymore," said the accountant.

Human rights groups have accused Egyptian authorities of widespread abuses in a crackdown on Brotherhood supporters as well as secular activists, allegations they deny.

In a separate case that risks sparking anti-government backlash, a court outlawed soccer fan clubs known as "Ultras" which participated in political demonstrations and violence since the 2011 uprising.

Tags
Mohamed Mursi, Hosni Mubarak, Tayyip Erdogan, Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, Muslim Brotherhood, Hezbollah
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