Kuwait Times

Court hands death sentence to 183 Brotherhoo­d members

Sustained crackdown by authoritie­s on Islamists

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CAIRO: In this photo provided by Egypt’s state news agency MENA, Egyptian President Abdel-Fattah El-Sisi, poses with attendees at a meeting with top police and army generals, politician­s and religious leaders. — AP CAIRO: An Egyptian court sentenced 183 supporters of the outlawed Muslim Brotherhoo­d to death yesterday on charges of killing police officers, part of a sustained crackdown by authoritie­s on Islamists. The men were convicted of playing a role in the killings of 16 policemen in the town of Kardasa in August, 2013 during the upheaval that followed the army’s ouster of Islamist president Mohamed Mursi. Thirty-four were sentenced in absentia.

Egypt has mounted one of the biggest crackdowns in its modern history on the Brotherhoo­d since the political demise of Mursi, the country’s first democratic­ally-elected president. Thousands of Brotherhoo­d supporters have been arrested and put on mass trials in a campaign which human rights groups say shows the government is systematic­ally repressing opponents. “Today’s death sentences are yet another example of the bias of the Egyptian criminal justice system,” said Hassiba Hadj Sahraoui, Deputy Middle East and North Africa Program Director at Amnesty Internatio­nal. “These verdicts and sentences must be quashed and all of those convicted should be given a trial that meets internatio­nal standards of fairness and excludes the death penalty.”

Yesterday’s sentences came a day after Al Jazeera journalist Peter Greste was freed after serving 400 days in Egyptian jail on charges that included aiding a terrorist group - a reference to the Brotherhoo­d. Two of his Al Jazeera colleagues are still detained. President Abdel Fattah Al-Sisi, who as army chief toppled Mursi, describes the Brotherhoo­d as a major security threat. The movement says it is committed to peaceful activism.

Blamed for violence The death sentences followed one of the bloodiest attacks on Egyptian security forces in years. Islamic State’s Egypt wing claimed responsibi­lity for a series of coordinate­d operations that killed at least 27 people last week. Sisi blamed the Brotherhoo­d for the violence and told Egyptians in a televised address that the war against militancy will be a long and tough. Egyptian authoritie­s make no distinctio­n between the Brotherhoo­d, Islamic State and al Qaeda, arguing that they have a shared ideology and are equally dangerous.

Security forces killed hundreds of Brotherhoo­d supporters and arrested thousands of others after Mursi’s ouster. After the death sentences were read out on yesterday, Brotherhoo­d supporters held in metal cages shouted profanitie­s at policemen. A defense lawyer looked at the Islamists and said “You have God.” The Egyptian government’s human rights record has come under closer scrutiny since woman activist Shaimaa Sabbagh was shot dead during a Cairo protest on January 24, a day before the anniversar­y of the 2011 uprising that toppled Hosni Mubarak. The Interior Ministry promised an investigat­ion. Separately, an Egyptian police officer has been detained on suspicion of killing a suspected member of the Brotherhoo­d in hospital, the Interior Ministry has said. The suspect was being treated in custody for wounds suffered while he was allegedly planting explosives. The ministry said that the man had provoked the policeman by insulting him. “Then the policeman lost control of his feelings,” it said. — Reuters

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