Baltimore Sun

Morsi gets 20-year prison term

Egypt’s deposed leader refuses to recognize court

- By Laura King

CAIRO — Ousted Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi escaped a potential death sentence Tuesday when a criminal court handed him a 20-year prison term in connection with a deadly 2012 protest that took place during his tenure in office.

It was the first in an expected series of verdicts and sentencing­s of the exleader, an Islamist who was removed in a coup led by the then-defense minister and now President AbdelFatta­h el-Sissi.

Morsi, jailed since being deposed amid huge protests against his rule in the summer of 2013, still faces several other capital cases.

The verdict in many ways reflected the decimation of what had for decades been a powerful social force in Egypt. In the nearly 22 months since the ouster, El-Sissi has led a widerangin­g crackdown against Morsi’s Muslim Brotherhoo­d, which was once the country’s biggest political movement.

Thousands of Muslim Brotherhoo­d members or supporters are jailed. Hundreds more, including some of Morsi’s top deputies, have been sentenced to long prison terms or death in proceeding­s denounced by human rights groups as unfair.

Hundreds of other Morsi supporters were killed in street protests that erupted in the wake of his ouster. The Egyptian government has since criminaliz­ed unauthoriz­ed demonstrat­ions, and police routinely use deadly force against protesters, both Islamist and secular.

Morsi, the country’s first freely elected leader, insists he is still Egypt’s legitimate president and has refused to recognize the court’s authority.

He was allowed to speak in his own defense in a court appearance in January in an espionage case, but other than that, he has been largely muzzled, making most appearance­s in a soundproof glassed- in cage.

On Tuesday, as has been the usual practice, the former president was brought to the heavily guarded courtroom by helicopter, flown there from the highsecuri­ty prison outside the port city of Alexandria where he has been held. When the sentence was read out, Morsi and his 14 co- defendants flashed their trademark four-fingered salute in a token of defiance. The salute is a reference to the Rabaah al-Adawiya mosque, site of one bloody crackdown on pro-Morsi protesters.

The Brotherhoo­d’s leadership-in-exile denounced the legal proceeding­s as a sham. Spokesman Amr Darrag, a former Cabinet minister under Morsi who is now based in Istanbul, called Tuesday’s verdict a “travesty of justice … scripted and controlled by the government and entirely unsupporte­d by evidence.”

The intense security surroundin­g Morsi’s various trials reflects the government’s assertion — accepted by many Egyptians — that the Brotherhoo­d is a terrorist group. The group has been formally branded as such by Egyptian authoritie­s, although it has denied involvemen­t in violence.

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