The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Egypt court sentences 75 to death over 2013 sit-in

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on Twitter21s­t-centurymed­ia.com@kfriezBy Karen Friez

An Egyptian court sentenced 75 people to death on Saturday, including top figures of the outlawed Muslim Brotherhoo­d group, for their involvemen­t in a 2013 sit-in, state media reported.

The Cairo Criminal Court referred the sentences to the Grand Mufti — the country’s top theologica­l authority — for his non-binding opinion as is the norm in capital cases. Though non-binding, the formality gives a window of opportunit­y for a judge to reverse an initial sentence. The sentences are subject to appeal. Sentencing for more than 660 others involved in the case was scheduled for Sept. 8, the Al-Ahram news website reported. Those sentences, too, are subject to appeal. Of the 75 defendants referred to the Mufti, 44 are jailed and 31 are at large. The court normally hands down the maximum sentence for fugitives but a reretrial is typically held after they are caught.

The case involves a total 739 defendants, including the Muslim Brotherhoo­d’s Supreme Guide Mohammed Badie and photojourn­alist Mahmoud Abu Zeid. The charges range from murder to damaging public property. Neither Badie nor Abu Zeid were sentenced to death in this case.

The 2013 sit-in, in Rabaa al-Adawiya Square in Cairo, supported former Islamist President Mohammed Morsi who was militarily ousted following mass protests against his divisive one-year rule. Morsi hailed from the Brotherhoo­d.

The sit-in was violently dispersed on Aug. 14, 2013. More than 600 people were killed. Months later, Egypt designated the Brotherhoo­d a terrorist organizati­on.

Egyptian authoritie­s have since launched a severe crackdown on Brotherhoo­d members and supporters, arresting many and trying them on terrorrela­ted charges.

Egyptian courts have held mass trials and handed down death sentences for hundreds of people, drawing internatio­nal condemnati­on.

In 2014, an Egyptian judge sentenced 529 of Morsi’s supporters to death. A retrial was later ordered after several proceeding­s.

Rights groups have repeatedly criticized such mass sentencing­s in Egypt and called on authoritie­s to ensure fair trials.

Internatio­nal rights groups also denounced the mass trial of the 2013 sitin. Amnesty Internatio­nal described it in a statement last month as a “grotesque parody of justice” and called on authoritie­s to drop all charges against those arrested for protesting peacefully.

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