Chicago Sun-Times

EX-LEADER OF MUSLIM BROTHERHOO­D

- BYMAGGIEMI­CHAEL

CAIRO — Former leader of Egypt’s outlawed Muslim Brotherhoo­d group Mahdi Akef, who had been detained since 2013, has died of complicati­ons from cancer and other health issues at age 89, a Brotherhoo­d spokesman said Friday.

Talaat Fahmy said Akef’s family had requested he be released from custody because of his medical condition but the request was declined by an Egyptian court. He said Akef had cancer, heart problems and a broken thigh.

“The Egyptian court has refused to release him and he died of intentiona­l medical negligence,” Fahmy told The Associated Press.

Akef, who headed the Brotherhoo­d from 2004 to 2010, was among hundreds of the group’s figures arrested in the heavy crackdown launched against it following the military’s 2013 ouster of President Mohammed Morsi, a Brotherhoo­d member.

Akef was initially convicted on violence- related charges and was sentenced to life imprisonme­nt. The verdict was overturned on appeal, and he was facing a retrial.

The Brotherhoo­d rose to power in elections following the 2011 uprising that ousted President Hosni Mubarak. But the military toppled the group after widespread protests against it.

A physical education school teacher, Akef joined the Muslim Brotherhoo­d in 1940 and was part of the armed wing of the group, known as the Special Apparatus. The group carried out a series of assassinat­ions and attacks against targets of British occupation in the country.

The group was accused of targeting President Gamal Abdel- Nasser in a failed assassinat­ion attempt, setting the stage for a heavy security crackdown and Akef was imprisoned from1954 till 1974.

After his release, Nasser’s successor, Anwar Sadat, embraced the Muslim Brotherhoo­d and Akef was appointed to a government post.

As relations between Egyptian leaders and the Brotherhoo­d fluctuated, Akef rose through the Brotherhoo­d’s ranks, eventually ascending to the group’s top post in 2004. A year later, the Brotherhoo­d participat­ed in the country’s parliament­ary elections, winning 20 percent of the seats.

After Mubarak’s ouster, the group won all of Egypt’s elections, parliament­ary and presidenti­al, giving it a rare moment of triumph that quickly ended withMorsi’s ouster.

Hamas, Gaza’s ruling Palestinia­n group, expressed condolence­s on a Twitter posting and described Akef’s death as “the nation’s loss and one of its most prominent figures.” Hamas originated from the Muslim Brotherhoo­d.

 ?? | NASSER NOURI/ AP ?? Former Muslim Brotherhoo­d leader Mahdi Akef speaks in 2009.
| NASSER NOURI/ AP Former Muslim Brotherhoo­d leader Mahdi Akef speaks in 2009.

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