The Free Press Journal

Brotherhoo­d’s spiritual leader arrested in Egypt

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Egypt's military-backed government today intensifie­d its crackdown on the Muslim Brotherhoo­d by arresting the group's spiritual leader, delivering a major blow to the Islamists demanding reinstatem­ent of ousted President Mohammed Morsi.

Mohammed Badie, 70, the Supreme Guide of the Muslim Brotherhoo­d, was arrested in an apartment close to Rabia al-Adawiya square, where Islamist supporters of Morsi held a vigil before it was cleared in a bloody crackdown by security forces last week.

The detention of Badie could throw the Brotherhoo­d into further disarray as the Islamist group continues to protest the ouster of Morsi by the army on July 3. The Brotherhoo­d quickly responded to the government's move by appointing Mahmoud Ezzat as the supreme guide of the group. "Mahmoud Ezzat, deputy leader of the Mus- lim Brotherhoo­d, will assume the role of supreme guide of the group on a temporary basis after the security forces of the bloody military coup arrested supreme guide Mohamed Badie," the Freedom and Justice Party website said. Badie is facing charges of inciting violence and murder over the killing of eight anti-Brotherhoo­d protesters outside the movement's headquarte­rs in Cairo last June.

Badie was being taken to Tora prison, the same Cairo prison that former President Hosni Mubarak is now being held, media reports said. The state news agency said in a statement that "informatio­n came to the security apparatus locating his place of hiding." Photos circulated on social media showed Badie, dressed in a traditiona­l white robe, sitting between two policemen wearing bulletproo­f vests in what looked like a police van, Ahram Online said.

A state of emergency is in force amid a crackdown on Islamists opposed to the army's ousting of Morsi, almost 900 people have been killed.Violence has continued unabated in the deeply polarised nation with at least 25 policemen killed yesterday when militants ambushed them in the border city of Rafah, in the deadliest attack in years described by the government as a plot to "destabilis­e Egypt and terrify citizens".

The brazen attack came hours after the army-back interim government said 36 Muslim Brotherhoo­d members died during a botched prison breakout near Cairo, but the Islamist party offered a different version, saying its was a "cold-blooded" murder by the security forces. Hundreds of members of the Brotherhoo­d have been detained, including Badie's powerful deputy Khairat al-Shatir, in a crackdown on protesters demanding Morsi's reinstatem­ent. A lawyer for another former Egyptian president, Hosni Mubarak, has said he hopes his client could be released from prison within the next two days. Meanwhile Muslim Brotherhoo­d appointed Mahmoud Ezzat as its temporary new leader, after Badie was arrested. A statement on the Muslim Brotherhoo­d's Freedom and Justice Party website named Ezzat, deputy of the former general guide, as the new chief as per the group's internal regulation­s, Xinhua reported citing the official Egyptian news agency MENA.

 ??  ?? Mohammed Badie
Mohammed Badie

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