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Egypt court calls for death sentence for Brotherhood leader

By Reuters - Jun 19,2014 - Last updated at Jun 19,2014

CAIRO — An Egyptian court signalled on Thursday that it wanted death sentences for the leader of the Muslim Brotherhood and 13 other defendants charged with murder and firearms possession, when it referred the case to the country’s religious authorities.

Judicial sources said a judge at a court session held at a Cairo police institute had referred all 14 of the defendants to the Mufti, the highest Islamic legal official, who must give an opinion on death sentences before they can be confirmed. The court’s final decision is expected on August 3.

More than a thousand suspected supporters of Morsi and his Muslim Brotherhood have already been given death sentences this year which were referred to the Mufti. Their cases have provoked outrage among rights groups and Western governments.

Thirty-seven of the sentences have been upheld, and more than six hundred others are awaiting a final decision. But so far none of the sentences has been carried out.

The court decision came less than two weeks after former army chief Abdel Fattah Al Sisi took office as president. Sisi ousted president Mohamed Morsi of the Brotherhood last July.

Morsi’s ouster was followed by the bloodiest period in Egypt’s modern history, with widespread protests by his supporters and a crackdown by security forces in which hundreds of Islamists were killed and thousands jailed.

The movement emerged after the 2011 revolt as the country’s best-organised political force. But it has been driven underground and designated a terrorist organisation since Morsi was overthrown.

Sisi has said the Brotherhood would cease to exist in his presidency.

The Thursday ruling related to clashes during protests in July following the army’s ouster of Morsi after mass protests nine people and incitement to kill that led to 21 other deaths, judicial sources said.

Brotherhood leader Mohamed Badie, who faces charges in several other cases, was already referred to the Mufti on a separate set of charges.

A court in the town of Minya, south of Cairo, is expected to deliver a final verdict on Saturday in that case.

Among the defendants were senior Brotherhood members Mohamed Al Beltagi and Essam Al Erian and former members of the Morsi government. Six of the accused are on the run.

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