Daily Dispatch

Mursi sentence overturned

- By LIN NOUEIHED

EGYPT’s Court of Cassation overturned yesterday a life sentence against deposed President Mohamed Mursi of the Muslim Brotherhoo­d and ordered a retrial in the case that revolves around accusation­s of espionage with Palestinia­n group Hamas.

The court last week overturned a death sentence against Mursi in a separate case, meaning he no longer faces execution.

Democratic­ally elected after the 2011 uprising, Mursi was overthrown in mid-2013 by Abdel Fattah al-Sisi following mass protests against his rule, and was immediatel­y arrested.

He remains in jail on separate conviction­s.

Mursi was one of 22 high-ranking Muslim Brotherhoo­d officials and supporters convicted last year of spying for fellow-Islamist group Hamas.

The Court of Cassation’s ruling on Tuesday overturns all conviction­s in the case, including life sentences against Mohamed Badie, the General Guide of the Muslim Brotherhoo­d, and 15 others.

Senior Brotherhoo­d officials Kheirat al-Shater and Mohamed al-Beltagi as well as Mursi aide Ahmed Abdelatti had originally been sentenced to death in the case and also saw their conviction­s dropped yesterday.

Since toppling Mursi and winning a presidenti­al election, the following year, Sisi, a former general, has crushed dissent.

Security forces killed hundreds of Mursi supporters in a single day in 2013, in one of the bloodiest incidents in the country’s history.

Thousands of Muslim Brotherhoo­d supporters have since been detained and hundreds have received death sentences or lengthy prison terms in mass trials condemned by human rights groups as legally flawed and politicall­y motivated.

The Egyptian government says it does not interfere in the work of the judiciary with the judiciary confirming its independen­ce.

The government deems the Brotherhoo­d, Egypt’s oldest Islamist movement, a terrorist group.

The Brotherhoo­d says it is committed to peaceful activism. – Reuters

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