An Egyptian court on Saturday convicted and sentenced 11 alleged supporters of the country’s ousted Islamist president to up to 88 years in prison on charges that include violating a protest law and assaulting police.
The case comes amid a sweeping crackdown by Egypt’s military-backed government against the Muslim Brotherhood. Authorities have killed hundreds of Islamists and arrested about 16,000 others since the army removed former Egyptian president Mohammed Morsi, a Brotherhood leader, from office in July last year.
Five of the 11 people sentenced on Saturday by the court in the southern city of Minya were tried in absentia. The charges against all of the defendants were linked to demonstrations in the town of Samallout to protest the violent dispersal by security forces of two week pro-Morsi sit-ins that killed hundreds and wounded thousands.
Photo: Reuters
The presiding judge was the same one who issued death sentences against nearly 530 suspected Islamists in a mass trial last month. The ruling stunned rights groups and drew condemnation from abroad.
Meanwhile, in Cairo hundreds of secular-minded activists and protesters rallied in front of the presidential palace on Saturday, demanding the interim president abolish a disputed protest law used extensively over the past months to imprison and prosecute activists, including leading figures of the 2011 uprising that toppled former Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak.
The law issued in November last year bans all political gatherings and protests without prior permission from police. Violators are punished by heavy fines or jail time.
Rights groups have sharply criticized the law, calling it draconian.
While marching toward the palace on Saturday, some of the protesters chanted “Freedom” and “Abolish the law, get them out of prison.” Others carried pictures of jailed activists.
A few in the crowd tore down posters of former military chief Abdel-Fattah al-Sissi, who is now the front-runner in next month’s presidential elections.
El-Sissi became hugely popular among a large sector of Egyptians after he led Morsi’s removal from power. However, harsh measures adopted by the military-backed government since then — including the jailing of several prominent activists — have opened a rift with a small segment of the secular-minded opposition.
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