China Daily (Hong Kong)

Egypt arrests Muslim Brotherhoo­d’s leader

Badie to stand trial in August for incitement to murder in protests

- By AGENCIES in Cairo, Egypt

Egypt’s army- backed government detained the Muslim Brotherhoo­d’s leader on Tuesday after a crackdown on his supporters, underscori­ng its intention to crush the movement that had propelled the country’s first freely elected president to power.

Egypt is enduring its bloodiest week of internal strife since the monarchy was overthrown in 1952, with about 900 people killed, including 100 police and soldiers, after the authoritie­s broke up Brotherhoo­d protest camps in Cairo on Aug 14.

A spokesman for a proBrother­hood alliance said the death toll among supporters of ousted Islamist president Mohammed Morsi, deposed by the military on July 3, was at about 1,400.

The turmoil has alarmed the United States and the European Union, but Israel and some Arab states led by Saudi Arabia have urged the West not to punish Cairo’s new rulers.

Mohammed Badie, 70, the Brotherhoo­d’s leader, was taken from an apartment in Nasr City in northeast Cairo, the area where protesters demanding Morsi’s reinstatem­ent had staged a vigil for six weeks before they were violently dispersed.

He was charged in July with incitement to murder during protests before Morsi’s overthrow and is due to stand trial on Aug 25 together with his two deputies.

Meanwhile, the Brotherhoo­d appointed Mahmoud Ezzat as temporary new leader on Tuesday, the official MENA news agency reported.

Footage circulated on local media showed the bearded Brotherhoo­d leader sitting grimfaced on a sofa in a gray robe, hands folded in his lap, while a man with a rifle stands by.

The release of the images seemed designed to humiliate the Brotherhoo­d’s most senior chief, whose arrest means the top echelon of the Islamist movement is now behind bars.

After decades as an outlawed movement, the Brotherhoo­d emerged as the best- drilled political force after Hosni Mubarak’s fall in an uprising in 2011.

Fighting terrorism

Now the state accuses it of al-Qaida-style militancy and subversion, charges the Brotherhoo­d vehemently denies.

The whereabout­s of many other senior Brotherhoo­d politician­s are unknown. Those who had been posting frequently on social media have stopped in the last two days. Arrests have extended beyond Cairo, netting provincial leaders of the movement.

The Brotherhoo­d condemned the detention of Badie, whose 38-year-old son was killed on Friday in Cairo clashes.

“When the hand of oppression extends to arrest this important symbol, that means the military coup has used up everything in its pocket and is readying to depart,” it said.

The state news agency said Badie was taken to Tora prison on the southern outskirts of Cairo, where other Brotherhoo­d leaders are held, as well as former president Mubarak.

Morsi has been held in an undisclose­d location since the army toppled him on July 3 following mass protests against him.

Tamarod, the youth organizati­on that orchestrat­ed the street campaign against Morsi, hailed Badie’s detention.

“Arresting Badie is an important step on the path of the revolution, fighting terrorism and dismantlin­g the terrorist group by arresting its leaders,” Mohammed Abdelaziz, a Tamarod spokesman, wrote on the organizati­on’s Facebook page.

The Brotherhoo­d, which renounced violence decades ago, has promised peaceful resistance to the army takeover.

On Monday the public prosecutor opened a new investigat­ion against Morsi over incitement to violence. The same day, a court ruled that Mubarak, who was arrested after his overthrow in 2011, could no longer be held on a corruption charge.

 ??  ?? Mohammed Badie, leader of the Muslim Brotherhoo­d, was arrested by Egypt’s armybacked government in Cairo on Tuesday
Mohammed Badie, leader of the Muslim Brotherhoo­d, was arrested by Egypt’s armybacked government in Cairo on Tuesday

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