Tuesday, September 3, 2013
Morsi supporters sentenced to life over Egypt unrest
The military has launched a campaign against
Mohammed Morsi's supporters
Eleven supporters of Egypt's ousted President
Mohammed Morsi have been sentenced to life
in prison after being convicted of attacking the
army.
The men were accused of wounding soldiers,
sabotaging armoured vehicles and burning churches
during riots in the port city of Suez last month.
Forty-five others received five-year sentences, while
five were acquitted.
The riots followed a deadly crackdown by security
forces on two pro-Morsi protest camps in the capital,
Cairo.
Hundreds of people, mostly members of Mr Morsi's
Muslim Brotherhood, were killed when the sit-ins
outside the Rabaa al-Adawiya mosque and at Nahda
Square were cleared on 14 August.
The unrest in Suez, 140km (87 miles) to the east of
Cairo, on 14 and 16 August left more than 30 dead.
It is not clear if those convicted on Tuesday are
Brotherhood members. But if they are, the verdicts
would be the first affecting the Islamist group since
the military launched a campaign against it after
ousting Mr Morsi.
TV channels closed
State prosecutors announced on 1 September that
after almost two months in detention at a secret
location, Mr Morsi would stand trial for inciting
murder and violence.
The charges relates to the deaths of at least seven
people during clashes between opposition protesters
and Brotherhood supporters outside the Ittihadiya
presidential palace in Cairo in December 2012.
Fourteen other senior Brotherhood figures, including
Mohammed al-Beltagi and Essam al-Erian, will be
tried on the same charge.
Also on Tuesday, a court in Cairo ordered the closure
of four television stations, including the
Brotherhood's Ahrar 25 TV and al-Jazeera's Egyptian
affiliate Mubasher Misr, saying they were operating
illegally.
The stations were seen by the authorities as being
sympathetic to the Brotherhood.
The group called for protests demanding the
reinstatement of Mr Morsi in the capital on Tuesday
under the slogan: "The coup is terrorism."
The state news agency, Mena, said security forces
had sealed off some roads in the capital. Military
vehicles were reported to be blocking the entrances
to the Rabaa al-Adawiya mosque and Tahrir Square,
the centre of the anti-government protests which
triggered the Egyptian revolution in 2011.
The resumption of national rail services after 17 days
was also delayed.
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