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    Home News Egypt court confirms ousted President Morsi's death sentence
    Egypt court confirms ousted President Morsi’s death sentence
    News, World
    SARAH EL DEEB  
    June 16, 2015

    Egypt court confirms ousted President Morsi’s death sentence

    CAIRO (AP) — An Egyptian court on Tuesday confirmed the death sentence of ousted Islamist President Mohammed Morsi over a mass prison break during the country’s 2011 uprising, making him the first leader in Egypt’s modern history to potentially face execution.

    While this is the first death sentence for Morsi, courts have handed out hundreds of similar sentences against Islamists in mass trials since his 2013 overthrow and a mass crackdown on dissent.

    The ruling, which will be automatically reviewed by Egypt’s highest appeals court, brought no immediate outcry on the streets as thousands remain imprisoned, though the country faces threats from Islamic extremists, including an affiliate of the Islamic State group.

    It is not clear if Morsi will be executed. Egyptian President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi, who led the military’s ouster of Morsi, repeatedly has defended the independence of the judiciary, though their mass rulings have faced international criticism.

    Meanwhile, former autocrat Hosni Mubarak, overthrown in Egypt’s 2011 revolt and detained since, has eventually been cleared of corruption charges. He now only faces a November retrial on charges over the killings of protesters after initially receiving a life sentence.

    Morsi, who served a year as Egypt’s first freely elected president, appeared in court Tuesday in a blue prison uniform, enclosed in a cage separate from other defendants held in a glass-covered cage covered in mesh wire. He first raised his arms to cameras and those in the courtroom. He listened to the verdict with a slight smile, but said nothing.

    Judge Shaaban al-Shami, who led a panel of three judges, issued the ruling after he consulted with Egypt’s Mufti, a religious authority affiliated with the judiciary. The Mufti’s opinion must be sought in all capital punishment cases.

    “The court panel has unanimously agreed that there is no room for leniency or mercy for the defendants,” al-Shami said. He said the Mufti sanctioned the death sentences under crimes of “haraba,” an Islamic term for banditry, bloodshed and waging war on God and society.

    The judge also confirmed death sentences for five imprisoned members of Morsi’s Muslim Brotherhood, including Mohammed Badie, the group’s leader, and Saad el-Katatni, the head of its short-lived political party. Another 21 imprisoned defendants received life sentences, which in Egypt is equivalent to 25 years in prison.

    Another 93 defendants tried in absentia, including Egyptian-born cleric Youssef el-Qaradawi, were sentenced to death, though they will be automatically retried once they are in custody. They also include 70 Palestinians, at least two of whom were killed in Israeli airstrikes in Gaza the past years.

    Defendants were found guilty of conspiring and attempting to kill police officers in the mass breakout targeting three Egyptian prisons, enabling some 20,000 inmates to flee, causing chaos and breaching Egypt’s borders with the Gaza Strip. This was done with the help of Palestinian Hamas militant group, Lebanon’s Hezbollah and Sinai extremists, al-Shami said.

    The breakout freed Morsi, who had been arrested soon after the 2011 protests started. He later rode on the Brotherhood’s popularity among conservatives and Islamists to become the country’s president in 2012. Morsi is already serving a 20-year sentence for his part in the killings in 2012 of protesters outside his palace when he was still president.

    The verdict drew immediate international condemnation. United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon expressed deep concern over verdicts he said “may well have a negative impact on the prospects for long-term stability in Egypt,” U.N. deputy spokesman Farhan Haq said. White House spokesman Josh Earnest said the U.S., a major provider of military assistance to Egypt, was “deeply troubled” by the verdict, without saying if it would affect American aid.

    The Geneva-based International Commission of Jurists also called on Egyptian authorities to end the imposition of mass death sentences in “grossly unfair” trials.

    Earlier Tuesday, the same judge sentenced Morsi to life in prison over charges of conspiring with foreign groups, including Hamas. That sentence also can be appealed.

    Al-Shami also confirmed death sentences against 16 others, including three jailed senior Brotherhood members. The other 13 were tried in absentia, including Sondos Asem, a Morsi aide, and the only woman to receive the death sentence in the slew of trials since 2013.

    Morsi’s supporters called the ruling the “nail in the coffin for democracy in Egypt.”

    “This cannot be ignored any longer,” said Amr Darrag, a former minister under Morsi who is now in self-imposed exile. “We call the international community to realize how grossly wrong it is to support such a bloody regime.”

    Another former minister in exile, Yehia Hamed, said the verdicts and the crackdown on dissent are likely to increase the violence already plaguing Egypt.

    “We reject all violent means of protest,” Hamed said. “However, (el-Sissi) is forcing many within Egypt to believe violence is the only way to counter his regime.”

    Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu, whose country’s leadership has supported the Brotherhood, said the sentences against Morsi would be a test for Western governments who have supported Egypt since 2013 despite the crackdown.

    “We shall see what they will do, faced with the leader of a political movement which never engaged in violence, being forced to walk toward execution,” Davutoglu said.

    Egyptian rights lawyer Nasser Amin, a member of the state-sanctioned National Council for Human Rights, said he expected Morsi’s appeals to go on for a couple of years before a final verdict is issued. However, he lamented the mass death sentences issued in recent months, which by some estimates number 1,500. In 2010, there were no more than 93 death sentences issued, all in criminal cases, he said.

    “The recent verdicts have greatly harmed Egypt’s established and stable judiciary,” Amin said.

    ___

    Associated Press writers Suzan Frazer in Ankara, Turkey, Ayse Wieting in Istanbul, Darlene Superville in Washington and Edith M. Lederer at the United Nations contributed to this report.

    Tags:

    correctional systems crime general news government and politics islamism judiciary law and order legal proceedings prison breaks war and unrest

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